Gingerbread & Pīrāgi

DECEMBER 2025

Latvian Style Christmas Treats

Some of the most popular Latvian foods around the world are those prepared and enjoyed at Christmas. During this festive season, Latvians in every corner of the globe – from Riga to Chicago, from Costa Rica to New Zealand – bake and savor both pīrāgi and piparkūkas. These warm, comforting little pastries filled with bacon, along with the fragrant, spiced gingerbread cookies, help create a sense of home and belonging even far away from Latvia. As families prepare them together, conversations flow, stories and memories are shared, and the beautiful moments of togetherness that connect generations come alive. The aroma of pīrāgi and gingerbread fills homes with a feeling of celebration and warmth.
In many diaspora communities, piparkūkas and pīrāgi can not only be bought as homemade treats but even ordered by mail. Often, hundreds of pastries are baked in group efforts at Latvian schools or community organizations to raise funds for local activities and to bring a touch of Latvian Christmas spirit to countless Latvian homes around the world.

YOUR STORIES

  • Visi
  • Argentina
  • Audio
  • Australia
  • Bashkortostan
  • Books
  • Brazil
  • Bread
  • Cabbage
  • Canada
  • Catering
  • China
  • Costa Rica
  • Cucumber
  • Denmark
  • Fermentation
  • Festive table
  • Germany
  • Hostesses
  • Italy
  • Mushrooms
  • New Zealand
  • Norway
  • Photo
  • Piparkūkas
  • Pīrāgi
  • Quote
  • Recipe
  • Romania
  • Soup
  • Story
  • Switzerland
  • Uncategorized
  • United Kingdom
  • USA
  • Video
Maija: Me and my friend Maris helping to make piparkukas at Christmas, in 1956, when I was 6 years old.

December 18, 2025

My mother Lauma taught me to make piparkukas when I was a little girl, and I still make them now that I am 75. I was born in Brisbane, Australia, in December 1950, and lived there all my life until moving 100km north to the Sunshine Coast in 2016. I still use my mother’s piparkuka recipe, with only a couple of variations. Where my mother used Golden Syrup,...

One recipe in three versions (Ilma Wilkinson)

December 4, 2025

Ilma explains: “The basis of the recipe comes from M. Krone-Balduma’s cookbook Everyday and Holiday Table: A Handbook for the Latvian Homemaker (Daugava: Stockholm, 1956). My mother received that book as a gift from her own mother for Christmas in 1964 (my parents’ first Christmas as a married couple). We don’t follow the recipe to the letter and we change a few things (what kind of fat to...

It’s not Christmas without pīrāgi (Anda Cook)

December 4, 2025

For as long as I can remember, pīrāgi held a place of honor at the Christmas table, and also at Easter. The necessary ingredients were not always easy to find, but my mother made sure to get them in time. In Cleveland, she had discovered a stall at the Westside Market, where she would go after work on Fridays. Her pīrāgi were not only delicious, but she always...

It smells of braised sauerkraut! (Juris Sinka)

December 4, 2025

Juris Sinka arrived in the United Kingdom in 1950, where he studied at the University of Oxford. In his diary entry of December 20, 1950, Juris describes how the smell of cabbage filled the recently purchased Daugavas Vanagi house in Queensborough Terrace: ‘I am truly very glad that this house now belongs to Latvians. At the moment it smells of braised sauerkraut! It’s a pity I didn’t talk...

The decorating process takes seven hours (Anita Kupcis-Clifford)

December 4, 2025

Anita writes: "After seeing some videos of cookies being decorated I was intrigued. That was seven years ago and since then I have decorated many cookies. My sense of design for my cookies might be attributed to my years of embroidery, specifically Latvian designs. My piparkukas are different from my mom’s, hers were rolled very thinly and glazed with egg yolk. I recall when my mother would come...

Grandma’s pīrāgi in Rome (Austra Muižniece)

December 4, 2025

Austra Muižniece tells about baking Oma’s pīŗagi in Rome: “They turn out quite well, but for me the dough made with Italian tipo 00 flour tastes a bit sweeter. I didn’t have caraway seeds, and pancetta or guanciale are different from our smoked meats. But at least the yeast worked perfectly — the dough rose beautifully, which made me happy. Complete nostalgia, feels like grandma’s food.”

Skatīt vairāk

End of Content.