Apple strudel (Apfelstrudel) is an iconic Austrian pastry consisting of paper-thin, hand-stretched dough wrapped around a filling of sliced apples, raisins, cinnamon, sugar, breadcrumbs, and sometimes walnuts. Baked until the exterior shatters into crisp, flaky layers while the interior becomes a fragrant, juicy compote, apple strudel is the defining dessert of Viennese café culture and one of the most recognized pastries in Central European cuisine.
Popular Recipes and Regional Variations
Classic Viennese Apfelstrudel uses a hand-pulled strudel dough (Strudelteig) made from high-gluten bread flour, water, oil, and a small amount of vinegar. The dough is stretched by hand over a floured cloth until thin enough to read a newspaper through — a benchmark of skill that Viennese bakers take seriously. The filling combines tart cooking apples (Boskoop, Braeburn), raisins soaked in rum, cinnamon, sugar, lemon zest, and toasted breadcrumbs that absorb excess juice during baking.
German and Bavarian versions often use puff pastry or phyllo dough instead of hand-pulled strudel dough, producing a different texture — more uniformly layered and buttery, but lacking the paper-thin translucency of authentic Viennese stretching. Some German recipes add vanilla custard cream (Vanillecreme) between the dough layers alongside the apple filling, creating a richer dessert closer to an apple-cream pastry.
Hungarian rétes uses an identical hand-stretched dough technique but may include different fillings: sour cherry (meggyes rétes), poppy seed (mákos rétes), or sweet cheese (túrós rétes) alongside the apple version. Czech štrúdl and Slovak štrúdla follow similar traditions, each with subtle regional variations in spicing, fruit combinations, and dough handling that reflect local tastes and seasonal availability.
Preparation Technology
Prepare the dough: combine 250 g bread flour (high gluten content is essential), 1 egg, 2 tablespoons vegetable oil, 1 teaspoon white vinegar, 1/2 teaspoon salt, and 120 ml warm water. Knead vigorously on an unfloured surface for 10–15 minutes until the dough is completely smooth, elastic, and no longer sticky. The extended kneading develops the gluten network that allows the dough to stretch paper-thin without tearing. Form into a ball, brush the surface with oil, cover with a warm bowl, and rest for at least 30 minutes (up to 2 hours).
While the dough rests, prepare the filling: peel, core, and thinly slice 1 kg tart apples (3–4 mm thick). Toss with 100 g sugar, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, the juice and zest of 1 lemon, and 80 g raisins (pre-soaked in 2 tablespoons rum for 30 minutes). In a separate pan, toast 60 g fresh breadcrumbs in 40 g butter over medium heat until golden and crisp — these absorb excess moisture from the apples during baking, preventing a soggy bottom.
Cover a large table (at least 80×60 cm) with a clean tablecloth and dust with flour. Place the rested dough in the center and roll out to approximately 30 cm diameter. Then, using the backs of your hands (remove rings and watches), gently stretch the dough from underneath, working from the center outward, walking around the table to stretch evenly in all directions. The dough should stretch to approximately 60×80 cm and be thin enough to see the cloth pattern through it. Trim any thick edges with scissors.
Brush the stretched dough with 30 g melted butter. Sprinkle the toasted breadcrumbs over two-thirds of the surface (leaving one short end bare for sealing). Distribute the apple-raisin filling evenly over the breadcrumbs. Using the tablecloth as a guide, roll the strudel away from you into a tight log, starting from the filled end. Seal the edges by pressing and tucking underneath. Transfer carefully (seam-side down) to a parchment-lined baking sheet curved into a slight horseshoe shape if needed to fit. Brush the top with melted butter.
Bake at 190°C for 35–40 minutes until deep golden brown and crisp, brushing once more with butter at the 20-minute mark. The strudel should sound hollow when tapped and the visible apple filling through the translucent dough should be bubbling. Cool for 10–15 minutes, dust with powdered sugar, and serve warm with vanilla sauce, whipped cream, or vanilla ice cream.
Tips and Common Mistakes
The resting period is non-negotiable. Freshly kneaded dough has too much elastic tension to stretch thin — it springs back and tears. A minimum 30-minute rest allows the gluten strands to relax, making the dough pliable and extensible. Warmer dough stretches more easily; if your kitchen is cold, rest the dough in a slightly warm oven (turned off, with just the light on).
Stretching is the most intimidating step but becomes natural with practice. Work from underneath using the backs of your hands, not your fingertips — fingertips create pressure points that tear the dough. The dough should drape over your fists and stretch under its own weight as you gently move your hands apart. Small holes are acceptable and will not be noticeable after rolling; large tears can be patched by overlapping.
Apple variety determines filling quality. Mealy, soft apples (Red Delicious, McIntosh) dissolve into mush during baking. Firm, tart varieties (Boskoop, Braeburn, Granny Smith) maintain distinct slices and provide the acidity needed to balance the sugar and cinnamon. For more on Austrian pastry and world dessert traditions, see our A-Z Encyclopedia of Food Products and Dishes.
History and Cultural Significance
Apple strudel’s origins trace to the Ottoman Empire, where thin-layered pastry techniques (baklava, börek) spread westward through the Balkans into the Habsburg domains during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The earliest known strudel recipe dates to 1696, found in a handwritten cookbook in the Vienna City Library. Austrian bakers adapted the Ottoman stretching technique to local fillings — apples, cherries, cheese — creating the strudel family that became Central Europe’s signature pastry.
Apple strudel became inextricably linked with Viennese café culture during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when the city’s Kaffeehäuser (coffeehouses) established themselves as centers of intellectual, social, and culinary life. A warm slice of Apfelstrudel with Schlagobers (whipped cream) and a Melange (Viennese coffee) became the definitive afternoon experience in Vienna — a tradition that continues unchanged today.
The pastry’s cultural significance extends beyond Austria. Apple strudel is recognized as a culinary symbol of the entire former Habsburg Empire, shared across Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, and parts of Italy (South Tyrol). UNESCO’s recognition of Viennese café culture as intangible cultural heritage implicitly encompasses strudel as one of its defining elements.