Kringles in Racine, Wis.
Employee Dustin Woodward prepares to stack a tray of kringles at Larsen’s Bakery. This batch is bound for a Wisconsin chain of supermarkets.
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A Danish tradition lives on in the bakeries of Racine, Wis.
Bendt Bendtsen, a fourth-generation kringle maker, holds a long sheet of layered dough. When it’s baked two days later, the dough will form into 48 thin, flaky layers.
(Jay Jones/Chicago Tribune )Bendt Bendtsen holds a sheet of layered kringle dough. (Jay Jones/Chicago Tribune )
A kringle filled with tart cherries from Door County, Wis., awaits sale at Bendtsen’s Bakery in Racine. (Jay Jones/Chicago Tribune )
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Cindy Bendtsen packages a fresh-baked kringle at the family-run bakery in Racine, Wis. The Bendtsens have been made kringles since 1934.
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Matt Horton of O&H Danish Bakery gives guests a behind-the-scenes peek at how kringles are made during demonstrations that explain the complicated process.
(Jay Jones/Chicago Tribune )The many layers of dough are visible as Bendt Bendtsen begins to make kringles at the family-owned bakery in Racine. (Jay Jones/Chicago Tribune )
Baker Wayne Palmer-Ball holds a kringle ready for packaging inside Lehmann’s Bakery in Racine. The business sells its kringles at Sam’s Club stores in a dozen states, including Illinois.
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A pecan-bourbon kringle is one of the special orders available at Lehmann’s Bakery. Wayne Palmer-Ball, a Louisville native, adds Maker’s Mark Kentucky bourbon to the icing.
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Christmas ornaments surround a kringle at O&H Danish Bakery in Racine. The commemorative ornament, which features two kringles and the Danish and American flags, was sold as a fundraiser for local Kiwanis clubs.
(Jay Jones/Chicago Tribune )Kringles in a variety of tempting flavors are made daily at Bendtsen’s Bakery in Racine. (Jay Jones/Chicago Tribune )
Reflecting the bakery’s Danish roots, the checkout stand at O&H on Washington Avenue in Racine is shaped like a Viking ship. (Jay Jones/Chicago Tribune )