Citations:spekulatius


 * 1913, Clement A. Miles, Christmas in Ritual and Tradition: Christian and Pagan, Library of Alexandria:
 * Any one who has witnessed a German Christmas will remember the extraordinary variety of them [cookies], lebkuchen, pfeffernüsse, printen, spekulatius biscuits, &c. In Berlin a great pile of biscuits heaped up on your plate is an important part of the [holiday].
 * 2018, Jane Knuth, The Prayer List: ...and Other True Stories of How Families Pray, Loyola Press (ISBN 9780829446661)
 * The biggest and best is a spekulatius (speculoo[s], or spice) cookie in the image of St. Nicholas himself. Next to the plates are three oranges, which represent the three bags of gold that Nicholas threw over the wall to save the impoverished girls.
 * 2020, Christin Geweke, Fairytale Baking: Delicious Treats Inspired by Hansel & Gretel, Snow White, and Other Classic Stories, Simon and Schuster (ISBN 9781510755543):
 * For the topping:
 * 100 ml (31⁄2 fl oz) single (pure) cream
 * 1 tsp sugar
 * 2 German spekulatius cookies (or ground cinnamon, for dusting)
 * 1. To make the bases, combine the flour, ground almonds, salt, sugar, vanilla sugar and spices. Dice the butter ...
 * 2020, Laura Fleiter, Kerstin Niehoff, Advent: Recipes and crafts for the countdown to Christmas, Allen & Unwin (ISBN 9781761060519):
 * 2 tsp almond butter
 * 3 pitted dates
 * 2 spiced spekulatius cookies
 * 1 tsp dried cranberries
 * Peel and slice one banana.
 * Peel and slice one banana.