Is Coppenrath & Wiese Halal?
ℹ️ Varies by ProductCoppenrath & Wiese cream cakes contain beef gelatine that is not halal-certified, and the company confirms alcohol is used in some flavourings — the popular Sahnetorten are therefore not halal by mainstream Sunni standards. Only gelatine-free, alcohol-free bakes escape the gelatine issue, and even those remain Mushbooh due to undeclared emulsifier sources.
Country
Germany
Product Types
Frozen cream cakes, Tortes, Strudel +1 more
Halal Certification
No halal certification. Manufacturer has confirmed beef gelatine (non-halal slaughter) in cream tortes since 2014 and alcohol use in some flavourings. Note: Coppenrath Feingebäck (the biscuit maker) is a separate company with some halal-logo products.
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Is Coppenrath & Wiese Halal?
Coppenrath & Wiese is Germany’s biggest name in frozen cream cakes — the Dr. Oetker-owned bakery whose Sahnetorten fill supermarket freezers across Europe. For Muslim consumers the brand has one defining fact: since around 2014 the gelatine in its cream tortes is beef gelatine — but from conventional, non-halal slaughter, with no halal certification behind it.
Under the mainstream Hanafi position (shared in practice by the other schools’ cautionary rulings), bovine gelatine from an animal not slaughtered Islamically remains impermissible — the istihāla (transformation) argument is not accepted for gelatine by the major fatwa bodies. That places every cream torte in the range outside the halal column, even though the gelatine is not porcine.
There is a second issue: the company has confirmed that alcohol is used in the production of some products to round out flavour, stating that none remains in the end product but that cross-contamination cannot be fully ruled out. Some lines are openly alcohol-flavoured — the Eierlikör (egg liqueur) torte contains liqueur as a named ingredient.
Which Coppenrath & Wiese Products Are Acceptable?
- Cream tortes / Sahnetorten (the flagship range) — beef gelatine from non-halal slaughter — not halal.
- Liqueur varieties (Eierlikör and similar) — alcohol as a named ingredient — haram outright.
- Gelatine-free bakes (some fruit strudels, cakes in the “Lust auf Kuchen” line, bread rolls) — no gelatine per the company’s vegetarian guidance, but flavouring alcohol and undeclared E471 sources keep these at Mushbooh. Check the individual ingredient panel for “Speisegelatine” and “Alkohol”.
Don’t confuse the two Coppenraths: Coppenrath Feingebäck — the biscuit company from Geeste — is a legally separate business (same founding family) and does run a halal programme, with several biscuit SKUs carrying a halal logo on-pack. This page covers the frozen-cake maker Coppenrath & Wiese, which has no such programme.
Key E-Codes in Coppenrath & Wiese Products
| E-code | Name | Status | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| E441 | Gelatine | Haram (as used here) | Beef, but from non-halal slaughter and uncertified |
| E471 | Mono and Diglycerides | Mushbooh | Present in sponges and creams; source not declared |
Summary
| Factor | Details |
|---|---|
| Halal certification | None |
| Gelatine | Beef (non-halal slaughter) in all cream tortes |
| Alcohol | Used in some flavourings; named ingredient in liqueur lines |
| Least problematic | Gelatine-free fruit bakes and rolls (still Mushbooh) |
| Verdict | Varies — cream tortes not halal; gelatine-free bakes Mushbooh |
How we reached this verdict
We checked the following Tier-1 sources before publishing this verdict:
- Halal certification bodies (HMC, HFA, JAKIM, MUI): no Coppenrath & Wiese certification in any directory.
- Manufacturer statements: consumer-inquiry responses reproduced in German consumer forums and ingredient databases confirm beef gelatine (alkaline process, cattle hide) since ~2014, alcohol use in some flavourings, and that all gelatine-free products are ovo-lacto vegetarian.
- Sunni fatwa scholarship: IslamQA (fatwa 219137) and Islamweb (fatwa 275287) — gelatine is only permissible from halal animals slaughtered Islamically; the dominant position rejects istihāla for gelatine.
Madhab note
The four Sunni madhabs broadly converge on the rules applied in this guide:
- Bovine gelatine from non-halal slaughter — impermissible per the Islamic Fiqh Council and the dominant Hanafi position (Darul Iftaa line). A minority of contemporary scholars accept istihāla (transformation) for gelatine; anyone following that minority view would treat the beef-gelatine tortes as permissible — we publish the majority position.
- Alcohol in flavourings — where alcohol is a named ingredient (liqueur tortes), haram across all schools; trace processing alcohol claimed to evaporate is excused by some scholars, which is why gelatine-free bakes are Mushbooh rather than haram.
Key E-Codes in Coppenrath & Wiese Products
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