Due to genealogical reasons, like many people, I have various different traditions associated with the holiday season.
Lebkuchen are a particularly delicious part of Christmas for me. The original Elisen-Lebkuchen came from Nuremberg. Elisa, Elizabeth, was a nun who had something to do with saving Nuremberg from Swedish (!?) invaders during the Thirty Years War, if I have it right. Nuremberg had a large forest and thus was an important source for honey in Germany. At any rate the Lebkuchen are mainly made of gingerbread. But gingerbread is too soft to make a cookie, so they have this large communion wafer and they put the gingerbread on top of the wafer before baking it. Then they generally coat the whole thing with delicious chocolate. There are often almonds included somehow. It is a complex and delicious taste.
My mother and I went to Germany in 1988 and visited Nürnberg. We went to the Schmidt-Lebkuchen store and got a large bag of "factory seconds." These were pretty incredible and we were working our way through them until we visited some fifth cousins I had found via my genealogical research. They had a 20 year old son and he polished off the bag in no time.
A couple of times including this year I have ordered Lebkuchen from Schmidt. Part of the tradition is that the Lebkuchen are packed in elaborately decorated tins. Sometimes you get maybe six big cookies in something that looks like a coffee can but it has polychrome views of Nuremberg printed on the sides. This year for my neighbors I got a chest that had the image of Gustav Klimt's portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer which is currently in the Neue Galerie in New York. Beautiful.
I've noticed little six packs of Lebkuchen in local "gourmet" shops. Have you seen them, have you tried them?
F
PS here is the website, beware it is written in "Germlisch"
http://ww2.lebkuchen-schmidt.com/eng_index.php
