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KingSC
 
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Default Streisel?

Was it some type of strudel?

"mingv" > wrote in message
...
> When I was in college (a long time ago) the chef at the faculty club
> made a breakfast coffee cake-like thing he called "streisel." (His
> spelling, btw.) I would love to find a recipe for this.
>
> Whenever I ask, people always say, "Oh, you mean 'streusel'." No, it
> wasn't streusel - at least, not like any streusel I've ever had, which
> is always crumby and usually fruit-filled.
>
> This was a relatively flat, chewy, sweet thing, cut into bars. Not
> really cake-y, but not bread-y either. And definitely not crumb-y. As I
> recall, there was a sugar icing drizzled over the top. There were no
> nuts, as I recall, but there might have been a hint of marzipan - I'm
> not sure.
>
> Does anyone know what this was? If it helps, the chef's name was Marcel,
> but he wasn't French. His last name (and his accent) sounded Germanic.
> He might have been Swiss or Alsatian or Belgian or something like that.
>
> Thanks in advance!



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TCM
 
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Default

Maybe this will work for you:
http://www.jewish-food.org/recipes/streisel.htm

STREISEL CAKE

Source: This comes to me from my Mother who got it from her Mother.

Ingredients (Dairy):

CAKE BATTER:

* 3 cups flour
* 2 cups sugar (scant)
* 3 teaspoons baking powder
* 1 teaspoon salt
* 1 cup milk
* 2 teaspoons vanilla or lemon extract
* 4 eggs

STREISEL TOPPING:

* 8 tablespoons sugar (white or brown)
* 2 tablespoons flour
* 2 tablespoons solid vegetable shortening

1. Preheat oven to 300-degrees F.

2. Line a 13 x 9 inch pan with wax paper only

3. Mix dry ingredients with 1 cup spry (solid vegetable shortening). Add
milk with vanilla and eggs.

4. Pour batter into pan lined with wax paper.

5. Mix streisel topping in a separate bowl.

6. Sprinkle streisel topping on batter in pan.

7. Bake at 300-degrees F. for one hour

From: Walter H. Horowitz )

[

KingSC wrote:
> Was it some type of strudel?
>
> "mingv" > wrote in message
> ...
>> When I was in college (a long time ago) the chef at the faculty club
>> made a breakfast coffee cake-like thing he called "streisel." (His
>> spelling, btw.) I would love to find a recipe for this.
>>
>> Whenever I ask, people always say, "Oh, you mean 'streusel'." No, it
>> wasn't streusel - at least, not like any streusel I've ever had, which
>> is always crumby and usually fruit-filled.
>>
>> This was a relatively flat, chewy, sweet thing, cut into bars. Not
>> really cake-y, but not bread-y either. And definitely not crumb-y. As I
>> recall, there was a sugar icing drizzled over the top. There were no
>> nuts, as I recall, but there might have been a hint of marzipan - I'm
>> not sure.
>>
>> Does anyone know what this was? If it helps, the chef's name was Marcel,
>> but he wasn't French. His last name (and his accent) sounded Germanic.
>> He might have been Swiss or Alsatian or Belgian or something like that.
>>
>> Thanks in advance!

>
>

  #3 (permalink)   Report Post  
TCM
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Maybe this will work for you:
http://www.jewish-food.org/recipes/streisel.htm

STREISEL CAKE

Source: This comes to me from my Mother who got it from her Mother.

Ingredients (Dairy):

CAKE BATTER:

* 3 cups flour
* 2 cups sugar (scant)
* 3 teaspoons baking powder
* 1 teaspoon salt
* 1 cup milk
* 2 teaspoons vanilla or lemon extract
* 4 eggs

STREISEL TOPPING:

* 8 tablespoons sugar (white or brown)
* 2 tablespoons flour
* 2 tablespoons solid vegetable shortening

1. Preheat oven to 300-degrees F.

2. Line a 13 x 9 inch pan with wax paper only

3. Mix dry ingredients with 1 cup spry (solid vegetable shortening). Add
milk with vanilla and eggs.

4. Pour batter into pan lined with wax paper.

5. Mix streisel topping in a separate bowl.

6. Sprinkle streisel topping on batter in pan.

7. Bake at 300-degrees F. for one hour

From: Walter H. Horowitz )

[

KingSC wrote:
> Was it some type of strudel?
>
> "mingv" > wrote in message
> ...
>> When I was in college (a long time ago) the chef at the faculty club
>> made a breakfast coffee cake-like thing he called "streisel." (His
>> spelling, btw.) I would love to find a recipe for this.
>>
>> Whenever I ask, people always say, "Oh, you mean 'streusel'." No, it
>> wasn't streusel - at least, not like any streusel I've ever had, which
>> is always crumby and usually fruit-filled.
>>
>> This was a relatively flat, chewy, sweet thing, cut into bars. Not
>> really cake-y, but not bread-y either. And definitely not crumb-y. As I
>> recall, there was a sugar icing drizzled over the top. There were no
>> nuts, as I recall, but there might have been a hint of marzipan - I'm
>> not sure.
>>
>> Does anyone know what this was? If it helps, the chef's name was Marcel,
>> but he wasn't French. His last name (and his accent) sounded Germanic.
>> He might have been Swiss or Alsatian or Belgian or something like that.
>>
>> Thanks in advance!

>
>

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