• Lebkuchen Spice Mix

    From Ben Collver@1:124/5016 to All on Wed Aug 6 09:42:33 2025
    MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.06

    Title: Lebkuchen Spice
    Categories: Christmas, German, Spices
    Yield: 1 Batch

    8 ts Cinnamon (15 g)
    1 ts Cloves (2 g)
    1 ts Allspice (1 g)
    1/2 ts Coriander (1 g)
    1/2 ts Cardamom seeds (1 g)
    1 ts Ginger powder (1 g)
    1/4 ts Ground nutmeg (1/2 g);
    - up to 1/2 ts
    1/4 ts Mace powder (1/2 g);
    - up to 1/2 ts
    1 1/2 Star anise (2 g); up to 2
    1/2 ts Dried orange zest (1 g)
    1/2 ts Dried lemon zest (1 g)
    1/2 ts Fennel seeds (1 g)

    Simply grind all spices together using a spice grinder or something
    similar.

    Notes:

    * Everything always tastes better when whole seeds are used, but you
    should be able to replace the spices with pre-ground versions as
    well. I actually used pre-ground coriander when I made this.
    Pre-ground cardamom is utterly horrible, though.

    * Note that my scales are cheap and not properly calibrated, so the
    gram measurements may not match the teaspoon measurements exactly.
    Also, there are a lot of different factors that determine the
    correspondence between teaspoons and grams, so it's impossible to
    give an exact conversion anyways. It really doesn't matter if it
    isn't very exact, though, because the recipe is fairly flexible. You
    really need to experiment by yourself to find out what tastes the
    best.

    * There has been some confusion regarding the teaspoon measurements,
    since they can be done using the seeds or pre-ground spices,
    resulting in differing amounts of actual spice. If I remember
    correctly, I originally measured cloves, allspice, cardamom, and
    fennel using the whole seeds, although I later also used whole
    coriander seeds.

    Note that the measurements aren't very exact, for instance, since the
    allspice seeds are fairly large, I just filled the teaspoon and had
    them go a bit over the top. I measured cinnamon, ginger, orange zest,
    lemon zest, coriander, nutmeg, and mace as powder, although there
    shouldn't be much of a difference for the coriander. One important
    detail is that I used freshly ground nutmeg, which is much stronger
    than the pre-ground versions. I mainly did it this way because those
    are the formats I had each of the spices in. Ideally, whole seeds
    should be used as much as possible, as already mentioned in the last
    note. I have also used whole dried mace pieces instead of mace
    powder. If they are broken into small enough pieces, they can also be
    measured with a teaspoon like the powder. In one measurement I took,
    1/4 ts of small mace pieces weighed the same as about 1/2 ts powder,
    but it really doesn't matter if it isn't that exact.

    * It probably is better to just add orange and/or lemon zest when
    making the Lebkuchen, but it's easier to put it directly into the
    spice. The Lebkuchen also tastes fine without any orange or lemon
    zest, just maybe not quite as good. Honestly, this spice can be
    changed a lot and still called Lebkuchen spice--back in the day,
    everyone had their own special mixture. Just follow your heart.

    * On second thought, don't, that's what killed Romeo and Juliet.

    Recipe by lumidify

    Recipe FROM:
    <gopher://lumidify.org/0/recipes/spice_mixes/lebkuchen_spice.md>

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