Hi, I'm Andie.

I live near the Swiss Alps, in Bern, and I love not only melting cheese, but all kinds of Swiss cooking. 

En Guetä!

Kafischnaps Torte
 
kafischnaps torte
 

While many people open the fondue season at the first flake of snow in the mountains, I was delighted to see Kristin over at Swiss Family Travel open the Kafischnaps season instead.

Kafischnaps (basically boozy coffee) is an important part of Swiss identity in many central regions (especially in the Entlebuch, where Sam is from—see post here), and it makes getting up early for events (Alpabzug, Fasnacht) bearable.

My book Drink like the Swiss featured the following guide on how to order a boozy coffee in Switzerland:

 
 

I’ve been working on a recipe for a Kafischnaps cake since 2018, but couldn’t quite manage to get it right until now.

Here are some of the prototypes:

Cake 1: I needed to test it out the cake on typical Kafischnaps-drinking Swiss, so I brought it to my local calligraphy class (with the amazing Schönschreiber Fritz Tschanz). It says Schrift ist Kunst, writing is art.

Verdict: not enough Schnaps.

Cake 2: Sam’s birthday cake was misspelled (!!!) and I have not yet lived it down. (I always forget that ‘t’!)

Verdict: not enough coffee.

I finally tailored the recipe to my liking—very boozy and intensely coffee-flavoured owing to a generous addition of instant coffee (not fancy espresso, which I was initially stuck on).

Elisabeth Fülscher

My go-to sponge is a standard from Elisabeth Fülscher (I love how she lists a lower sugar variation for either Petit Fours or Kranke (sick people)).

I do a very simple buttercream (just butter and icing sugar) heavily flavoured with coffee and Schnaps.


Kafischnaps Torte
 

For the cake:

4 eggs, room temperature

150 g sugar

pinch salt

1 tbsp instant coffee

1 tbsp Schnaps

140 g flour, sifted

½ tsp in baking powder

For the frosting:

180 g butter

150 g icing sugar

1 tbsp instant coffee

1 tbsp Schnaps

more Schnaps to assemble


Preheat oven to 180 C / 350 F / gas mark 4.

Line the bottom of a 24 cm (9 inch) spring form with parchment paper, then grease and flour the sides.

Using a stand mixer with a whisk attachment, whip the eggs until frothy, then add the sugar and the salt. Keep whipping until it is thick and pale and the whisk makes ribbons in the mixture. Alternately, you can do this by hand, it will just take much longer.

Dissolve the coffee in the Schnaps and whisk this in too.

In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour and baking powder.

Sift in one third of the flour mixture, folding it in gently. Sift in the next third, fold gently, then sift and fold in the final third of the flour.

Gently spread into the prepared pan, then bake for about 25-30 minutes or until the top springs back when you (gently) press it and the sides come away from the sides of the pan.

Once the cake is out of the oven, let cool completely.

For the frosting:

In a large bowl, beat the butter until soft and fluffy. Add the icing sugar and beat until smooth.

Dissolve the coffee in the Schnaps and beat into the frosting.

To assemble:

Slice a very thin layer off the top of the cake, then slice it in half.

Put a few strips of parchment or wax paper along the border of your serving plate, and a small blob of buttercream in the centre (this will hold the cake in place).

Place one half of the cake on top of the buttercream blob.

Brush with a bit of Schnaps, then cover with buttercream.

Put the second half of the cake on top, then cover with buttercream.


  • Make sure your eggs are really room temperature, or they won’t whip up enough. You can also warm them slightly in a water bath.

  • The word Schnaps in German refers to any strong, distilled spirit. Although Schnaps can be flavoured, it typically has a higher alcohol content (around 40%).
    The cherry or peach “schnapps” often sold in the English speaking realm are actually liqueurs, heavily sweetened and flavoured, with a lower percentage of alcohol (around 15-30%).

  • Use whatever fruity (Swiss) high-proof Schnaps you have on hand—Williams (pear), Träsch (apple/pear), Zwetschgen/Pflümli (plum), or Kirsch (cherry) all work well.

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Kafischnapps torte
Zuger Kirschtorte.jpeg

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