Showing posts with label filling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label filling. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Buckwheat Hamantaschen with Sweet Cheese Filling



This is one of those kitchen experiments I entirely expected to fail. I was thinking about riffs on the delicious jam-filled hamantaschen, those three-cornered cookies baked up to celebrate Purim. Hamantaschen can be hard enough to get right on their own, especially if you want a rich, flaky, cream cheese-laden dough (and, trust me, you do). But, I decided, why not make things more difficult? So I gave my beloved rich dough a nutty edge with buckwheat flour, whose flavor I love, but with whom I am not acquainted in enough non-pancake contexts to really know how it would behave. And instead of jam, I made a soft sweet cheese filling. Flaky, nutty dough wrapped around a tender trembly filling? Sounds great, right? It also sounded like I could fully expect to open my oven and find a tray full of dough circles swimming in a gooey cheese bath.

But, lo, in a sort of of Ashkenazi Oven Miracle, this recipe worked out. And it worked out deliciously. Yes, it took a lot of fussing — sort of a Level II hamantaschen. The filling is too runny to just dollop on as you would jam — youve got to pinch a corner first to create some retaining walls, then spoon the filling in and fold in your remaining dough to keep it there. And then youve got to freeze them solid, so that they set in the oven before that filling comes cascading out. So yes, fuss. But worth it.

These hamantaschen mix old world grains and butterfat with new world sophistication. Grown-up little bites, they have an almost bitter-coffee edge and whole grain heft from the buckwheat, which pairs perfectly with a rich, sweet-yet-tangy filling. Of course it worked out — this combination seems meant to be.

And if youd like another taste of Eastern European goodness (this one of a more traditional bent), you can check out my recent story on Weekend Edition. What do the Middle East, a Lithuanian shtetl, and a 1950s kitchen appliance have in common? Find out over at NPR!
 

Buckwheat Hamantaschen with Sweet Cheese Filling

yields ~30 cookies

Dough:
1 stick butter (4 oz), softened to room temperature
4 oz cream cheese, softened to room temperature
zest of 1 orange, if desired (Im still not sure how I come down on that one — I may prefer it without)
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/2 teaspoon coarse salt
1/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup buckwheat flour
3/4 cup all-purpose flour

Filling:
1/2 cup cottage cheese
1/4 cup cream cheese
1/4 cup sugar
squeeze lemon
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 egg yolk

To Finish:
egg wash of 1 egg lightly beaten with a splash of water
a few spoonfuls of sugar

To make the dough: Cream together the butter and cream cheese until well-combined and fluffy. Add the vanilla, salt, and sugar, beating until combined. Add the flours, and mix gently until the dough just comes together (try not to over-mix — a few streaks are okay). Form the dough into a chubby disc, wrap in plastic or waxed paper, and refrigerate for at least an hour (preferably at least two) and up to two days. Mix all of the filling ingredients in a blender or food processor until combined, and refrigerate. 

When the dough has chilled and relaxed, lightly flour a countertop and a few plates or a cookie tray (one that fits in your freezer), and have your egg wash and filling handy.

Roll the dough out on a lightly-floured surface until it is fairly thin — about 1/8-inch or so. Cut out circles with a 3" cutter (mine was slightly smaller), and brush the edges with the egg wash. I tend to do about half a dozen at a time, covering the remaining dough with a clean tea towel so it doesnt dry out. Pinch shut one corner of the dough to make one point of your hamantaschen triangle, then fill with a teaspoon or so of the cheese filling (after doing a few cookies, youll get a sense of how much filling you can fit). Pinch shut the remaining edges, sort of pinwheeling them over each other in this fashion if you like, or just pinch them, leaving just a little dime-sized bit of filling peeping through in the center. Repeat with remaining dough and filling (any scraps can be mushed back together and re-rolled).

Place the shaped cookies on your prepared plate, and freeze until solid (at least a few hours, or overnight). Place the remaining egg wash back in the refrigerator.

When ready to bake, preheat the oven to 375° Fahrenheit. Line a few cookie sheets with parchment.

Remove the cookies from the freezer, and place on the lined cookie sheets. Brush the top sides of the dough with the egg wash, and sprinkle lightly with sugar. Bake until set, ~20-30 minutes (the buckwheat flour makes it difficult to see color changes, but they should be beginning to turn golden on the edges. Let cool on a rack, and enjoy. These are best served the day theyre made, but leftovers can be stored in the freezer to good effect.
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Thursday, May 8, 2014

How to Make Danish Medal Cookies With A Pastry Cream Filling Medaljer Kage Opskrift

These cream cakes (Medaljer) are very common in Danish bakeries and homes.  These are made in countless variations.  The primary ingredients are the cookies, custard, whipped cream, and icing.  Below is the recipe for each of the primary ingredients.  Once each item is made it just requires assembling to make a delicious treat.  First step is make the cookie

Cookie Ingredients:
  • 1 1/4 cups of flour
  • 3 tablespoons of powdered sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 5 tablespoons of softened butter
Kitchen utentils
  • bowl wooden spoon 
  • pastry blender
  • measuring cup
  • rolling pin
  • baking tray
  • parchment paper

Cookie Preparation
Combine sifted confectionery sugar and flour in a large mixing bowl. Mix well by hand or with a wooden spoon. Add softened butter and knead with either a wooden spoon or a pastry blender.   Next add one egg and mix the mixture with a wooden spoon  Continue mixing the dough.  Use your hands to form a smooth round ball of dough.  Wrap in plastic wrap and chill in the refrigerator for one hour.
Preheat oven at 400F. Roll dough on lightly floured work surface to 1/4 or 1/8" thickness. Cut into round cookie shapes with medium-sized wineglass or a cookie cutter.    Bake on a greased baking sheet or lined with parchment paper for about 8 minutes or until pale golden brown. Place on the center of the oven rack and bake at 4oo degrees 
Remove to a wire rack to cool.  Can be kept in an airtight container until needed.


Custard As a Pastry Cream for the Medal Cookies - Creme budding opskrift

Custard Ingredients:

  • 2 cups of milk
  • 2/3 cups of flour
  • 2 eggs
  • 3/4  cup of sugar
  • 1 teaspoon of vanilla
  • 1 tablespoon of butter
  • pinch of salt
 Kitchen Utensils
  • kitchen pot
  • large bowl
  • measuring cup
  • wooden spoon

Custard Preparation 
Heat milk over the stove at medium heat.  Do not boil the milk. Combine sugar, flour, salt and the two eggs in a bowl  Mix the mixture in the bowl. Add a little of the egg-sugar-flour mixture to the warm pot of milk that is on the stove.  Pour a little more of the mixture into the warm milk, stirring constantly.  Stir constantly to avoid the custard becoming lumpy and to prevent it from burning.  When the custard has thickened pour it into a bowl.  Next add the butter and stir it into the warn mixture.  Then add vanilla into the milk mixture. You dont want the vanilla to boil. So the vanilla should be added last.

Cover over the bowl of custard with plastic wrap.  Place the bowl in the fridge at least two hours. You can sprinkle sugar over the custard while cooling so that a skin will not form too. Cool custard completely in the refrigerator - a minimum of 2 hours. 

 
Icing Ingredients:
  • 1 cup of confectionary sugar
  • a glass of water
  • almond flavoring (optional)
  • food coloring (optional)

Kitchen utensils
  • bowl
  • spoon
  • measuring cup
Icing Preparation
Sift powdered sugar into a bowl.  Add a couple of tablespoons of water into the sugar.  Stir until a smooth mass is obtained.  If need be, add a couple more drops of water.  Optional add flavoring or food coloring. Color and taste can be varied by mixing in lemon flavoring, cocoa. etc. 

Assembly:
When the cookies and the custard are cool, we are ready to assemble all of the primary ingredients.

Choose half of the nice cookies to be the tops. Glaze half of the cookies with the sugar icing using a knife.  Let the glaze stiffen.

Next on the other cookie use a pastry bag to pipe out whipped cream to create a circular boarder or a ring on the edge of each cookie. Fill the center of the cookie with the custard using a spoon. The whipped cream ring holds the custard in. 

Place the glazed cookie glazed side up on top of the custard.  Garnish with a dab of whipped cream over the glazed cookie.  Add a fresh fruit such as strawberries or blueberries on top.
  
 

Refrigerate until serving. Serve the same day !










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