When you think of the Christmas season, various things come to mind: the advent wreath, the candles, the scent of cookies, cinnamon stars, marzipan and gingerbread, but one thing must not be missing... Spekulatius- the spiced biscuits!
In Germany you can find it, together with all the other Christmas treats, on the shelves already in autumn. In the Netherlands and Belgium, it is not eaten until St. Nicholas. The Netherlands, as well as Belgium, are also considered for the role of the origin of this short pastry. However, a few German regions such as the Lower Rhine and Westphalia - whose geographical proximity to the Netherlands or Belgium is certainly a given - also report that spiced biscuits were invented there.
Most frequently in Germany the spiced biscuits are consumed, which gets its unique taste from the just already mentioned short pastry, cardamom, cloves and cinnamon. Furthermore, there is the butter spiced biscuits, which obviously uses a much larger amount of butter, and the almond spiced biscuits, whose underside is decorated with almond slivers and in the production of which almond flour is used.
In the Netherlands and Belgium, a caramel note is added to the spiced biscuits - similar to the small cookies that are always served with warm drinks in a café.
Spiced biscuits are always baked in a mould and provided with a motif. The most common motifs in this country are the windmill, the elephant, the house and the ship. But you can also find people, snowmen and all kinds of imaginative shapes on the plate.