Christmas in Germany can’t be without Christmas Markets. Find out what it’s like to stroll the German Christmas Market and cook along with a bunch of holiday recipes, sweet or hearty, that are inspired by the German Christmas Market. Or make German DIY food gifts for your loved ones this season! –
Have you ever been to Germany in winter? Then I put my betting pants on and say you were on a German Christmas Market, too! Am I right??
If your answer to both questions is no, don’t fear! I got you covered with this post on the German Christmas Market. Obviously, Germany is famous for having Christmas Markets.
Look at what happens if you search Pinterest for “Christmas market”:
So, let’s stroll the German Christmas Market together, shall we?
Wait! Want to leave your own recipe legacy and publish recipes on your blog? Download the free insider-exclusive quick-guide on how to write better recipes with 13 recipe writing hacks!
Read my terms of service here and my privacy policy here.
Wait! What is a German Christmas Market?
Oookaay. First things first. Most German towns hold a special market in Advent. It can go for weeks or – in small towns – a weekend or Sunday only. On any German Christmas Market, you’ll find a lot of wooden booths that sell handmade goods or food.
To be honest: It’s the food that has me going to the Christmas Market each year. But you can take home many handmade items, clothes, or delicious food gifts for your loved ones or yourself, too!
For years, the two German cities Dresden and Bautzen have been fighting about where the very first Christmas market was held. They both won, kind of. But officially, Bautzen was named the first place that ever held a Christmas market. That was in 1384 when Bautzen had an Advent meat and food market.
Most Christmas Markets come to an end a few days before Christmas Eve. If you don’t have a German Christkindlmarket near you to stroll, I got you covered with this epic post that contains a ton of tasty recipes to bring the German Christmas Market to your home this season! Guten Appetit!
There is a huge list of recipes coming.
>>> Pin this post for later reference and to share the love for yummy Christmas treats <<<
Or click through to each recipe you fancy to save a single recipe from the blogger who shared it!
Preparing for the Christmas Market
Well, as Christmas is in winter around here it can get pretty chilly if you hang around in the open all day. You better have your winter clothes ready! Wrap up in fine warm winter clothes and you are well-prepared to spend a few hours in the cold, moving slowly at best. Or standing at one of the many market booths.
Go late to see those lights glowing in the dark!!
If not, have breakfast. Why not try eggnog pancakes usingthis recipe shared by Mission To Save?
Photo by Mission To Save.
Maybe you prefer something hearty. I love spiced butter, especially with herbs and lots of garlic. This would not be a great start to a day strolling the crowded Christmas market.
Better choose one of these two delicious spiced butter recipes, one sweet, one spicey, shared here by Mom Foodie. She provides printable labels for your homemade spiced butter, too, which make them a cute food gift! (-> Last minute DIY Christmas gift alert.)
Photo by Mom Foodie
Warning. Don’t eat too much as there are so many delicacies on the Christmas market, both sweet and hearty! You don’t want to miss out on these foods, right?
The first deli you’ll see (and smell) everywhere on the Christmas Market in Germany is Lebkuchen, or gingerbread. I just love Lebkuchen. I only wish they had these hearts without the crunchy sugar decoration.
Lebkuchen Recipes inspired by The German Weihnachtsmarkt
Maybe I should make gingerbread at home! For disclosure, German gingerbread is soft and chewy. When we make spiced cookies we use another spice mixture similar to gingerbread spices and make sugary crunchy cookies calledSpekulatius. Anyhow, I love both.
Here are some ideas to try this season, including gluten-free options:
Vegan and gluten-free Gingerbread cookies, a recipe shared by Vegannie. Some folks will be so grateful to have their gingerbread men back!!
Photo by Vegannie
This Gingerbread cookie recipe by My Poppet is quick and easy!
Photo by My Poppet
Vegannie has anothervegan, gluten-free, oil-free, sugar-free, and even low-calorie gingerbread cake bars recipe here!
Photo by Vegannie
These chewy German Cinnamon Ginger Lebkuchen bars with orange-ginger-glaze by The Monday Box remind me of the famous Nuremberg Lebkuchen.
Photo by The Monday Box
Another gluten-free Gingerbread cookie recipe for the good old gingerbread men is shared by Raising Generation Nourished.
Photo by Raising Generation Nourished
Crunchy Gingerbread Biscotti are usually not to be found on a German Christmas Market. But if you love biscotti this might be the holiday treat for you. Recipe shared by The Olive Blogger.
Photo by The Olive Blogger
Once, and once only I was given a gingerbread house when I was young. And I even had to share it. But it’s still a vivid memory. I loved this gingerbread house. Not enough though to not eat it.
But still. If you want to give someone special a special tasty gift this season learn how to make your own gingerbread house, with printable templates for cutting the pieces, at Tikkido. If your kiddos are anything like little me (or adult me) you will be their hero if you put a gingerbread house together. Just make sure to “glue” some sweets to it, too!
Some strange generic gingerbread is Swiss Magenbrot (translates to stomach bread), a recipe to make your own can be foundhere at MarliesRecipes. This food is to be found in (probably) every Christmas Market in Germany.
Festive treats to take home
You will find many booths that sell Christmas gifts, such as decoration, nutcrackers, wollen scarfs, and such. But I always skip these. Instead, I invest in tons of sweet stuff to take home. I love almond truffles that I can only find in our local Christmas Market!
Why not impress everyone on your gift list with homemade German Christmas Market inspired food gifts?
The Olive Blogger shares a recipe for homemade Chocolate Caramels, just 3 ingredients needed.
Photo by The Olive Blogger
Fudge is also a nice treat and gift to take with you. You can make your own fudge with the Eggnog Fudge recipe by Thrifty Jinxy.
Photo by Thrifty Jinxy
Aren’t these gingerbread man shaped fudge pralinés adorable?? I love them and really need to find the gingerbread man mold ASAP! Get the gingerbread fudge recipe here at Thrifty Jinxy.
Photo by Thrifty Jinxy
Talking about adorable food gifts: This is one of the cutest I have ever seen! Learn how to make the uber-popular reindeer hot chocolate gift kits at ThriftyJinxy.
Photo by Thrifty Jinxy
This is another cute DIY Christmas gift from the kitchen: Candy Cane Marshmallows by Mom Foodie.
Photo by Mom Foodie
These homemade no-bake date balls by Two Healthy Kitchens also make a great DIY gift and are gluten-free paleo-friendly sweet treats.
Photo by Two Healthy Kitchens
Another favorite of mine: Coconut Macaroons. Learn how to make them at home at Once Upon A Chef. Did you know that coconut macaroons are a traditional Christmas cookie recipe in Indonesia? So, we have a German-Indonesian Christmas treat here. World food.
What to eat on the German Christmas Market
After strolling the Christmas market in the cold it will soon be time for a hot snack. Sausages, fries, and cheese bread are very popular. But I like baked potatoes best with sour cream sauce.
If you don’t fancy waiting for a huge potato roasting in your oven for hours you might prefer crunchy German fried potatoes with the famous sour cream sauce. Emily ofInside The Rustic Kitchen created this recipe for Fried Potatoes with Sourcream sauce after missing this treat from the Edinburgh Christmas market.
Photo by Inside The Rustic Kitchen
Another great hot snack are Reibekuchen, the German version of hash browns. They are usually made by scooping some potato dough into a huge bowl of boiling oil. So, oily they’ll be. While some people swear by oily Reibekuchen, I don’t really fancy them.
Instead, you could try these healthy low carb radish hash browns, a recipe shared by Low Carb Yum. And yes, I said healthy. Christmas Market inspired recipes can be healthy.
Photo by Low Carb Yum
Sweet tooth? No worries. The German Christmas market offers a ton of desserts and pastries, freshly made. For example, crepes, waffles, churros or ..
Germknödel. Big fat steamed yeast dumplings filled with yam and topped with poppy seeds, sugar, and butter. In my opinion, they are strange and a misconstruction. There are so many great things you can do with yeast dough, why steam a fat lump of it and eat it with poppy seeds?! Yuck. Ok, enough rambling. Here is a photo if I got you curious:
Instead of Germknödel, I want something more tasty: Churros! They are newbies on the German Christmas market. They appeared some years ago and were not there when I was young and hungry. Nevertheless, I’m a fan of fried pastries! But I rarely make them at home. Too much hassle. If you want to make churros at home but you fear the hassle and mess, try this shortcut recipe for Easy Homemade Churros by Thrifty Jinxy.
Photo by Thrifty Jinxy
Don’t leave without…
Candied nuts!!! So good, so tasty, so crunchy!Oh, candied nuts, you are so good and my very favorite treat on each Christmas Market … as well as any place I find you in.
You can easily make them at home, a recipe for candied almonds is shared on AllRecipes. You can make them in the microwave, too! Super easy. Throw everything in a heat-proof bowl and heat. Check often and mix until sugar is melted and nuts are candied well.
They also keep fresh so get a ton of them. Or make a large batch of candied almond as a treat for yourself and others. Learn how to make Gingerbread Spiced Candied Nuts at Tikkido.
Photo by Tikkido
Paleo Vegan Candied Nuts by Texanerinis another option.
Photo by Texanerin
If you don’t love thick sugar crusts around your food, try these Healthy Caramelized Nuts by Rhian’s Recipes. (There is was again: Healthy!)
Photo by Rhian’s Recipes
And how beautiful those glossy candy apples are! They have the glossy red ones on the German Christmas Market. They were the only option when I was little and I LOVED them! They look so nice and taste so sweet. I could lick on one for hours and would never ever chew the candy crust. Today, they have chocolate covered apples, too, black, brown, white, sprinkled. Whatever you may fancy. Different fruits, too. They sure are a tasty treat.
But you know those things you loved as a child. (Even those that are actually a little bit gross when you look at it as an adult.) They are still the best and can never be beaten. You can make the traditional red glossy candied kermis apples at home! Learn how at Just A Taste. These candy apples will definitely stand out on the dessert table! Just look:
If the German Christmas Market has you chilled
Beverages on the Christmas Market are hot! In Germany, mulled red wine, Glühwein, is ultra popular. Many Christmas markets have a unique set of mugs for each season that some people collect. (Althought they are most often ugly if you ask me.) Nowadays, there are many great booze-free options, too. There is mulled hot juice or spicey hot chocolate.
Here are a few ideas for you to try at home:
Traditional English Wassail Hot Mulled Cider, shared by Pink Fortitude. I love to use apple and cherry juice!
Photo by Pink Fortitude
Here is another Wassail recipe for mulled juice based on apple cider and cranberry juice, shared by Raising Generation Nourished.
Photo by Raising Generation Nourished
Spiced Hot Chocolate by Healing Harvest Homesteadis made with cocoa and includes a Keto option, too. If you prefer Hot Chocolate made with chocolate, check out my recipe for homemade hot chocolate here.
Photo by Healing Harvest Homestead
What else?
Travel blogger Amanda from Ohio shares her experiences with German Christmas Markets and the 5 Must-Do’s here on her blog. It’s so worth reading! Even I, who goes to see the Christmas Market herself every year ever since, devoured it. So, be sure to check it out. She also shares a picture of hercollectible market mug and says, some of them were “beautiful and festive“.
Even more in depth is this guide to German Christmas markets by travel blogger Annemarie that even has a guide to download and take with you.
So, now you not only know what a German Christmas Market is, but you can also germanize your holiday food with these lovely recipes! Enjoy Christmas in Germany… in your home.
Woah. Did this post all of a sudden mushroom into a 30+ (thirty!) picture odyssey?? Well, I guess this topic had to go down like that!
Let me know, what is your Christmas favorite?