Rugelach

Makes 32 cookies. Published September 1, 1997.

If the dough gathers into a cohesive mass around the blade in the food processor workbowl, you have overprocessed it. Make sure to stop processing at the point where the mixture is separate and pebbly. If at any point during the cutting and rolling of the crescents the sheet of dough softens and becomes impossible to roll, slide it onto a baking pan and freeze it until it is firm enough to handle. Once the crescents are baking in the oven, start checking them for doneness at eighteen or nineteen minutes, especially those on the top-level rack. Feel free to substitute an equal quantity of chopped pitted prunes, chopped dried apricots, dried currants, dried cherries, or dried cranberries for the raisins in the filling. Chocolate-and-walnut rugelach are excellent without preserves altogether or with seedless raspberry preserves in place of the apricot.

Cream Cheese and Sour Cream Dough
2 1/4 cups unbleached all-purpose flour
1 1/2 tablespoons granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon table salt
1/2 pound unsalted butter (2 sticks), chilled and cut into 1/4-inch pieces
8 ounces cream cheese , chilled and cut into 1/2-inch chunks
2 tablespoons sour cream
Filling
(I cheated, I used Chocolate Schmear (http://www.lovenbake.com/ProductCart/pc/viewPrd.asp?idproduct=20&idcategory=4)
And a cinnamon sugar mix that I bought)
1 cup granulated sugar
1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
1 cup semisweet chocolate minichips
2 1/4 cups walnuts , chopped fine (about 2 cups)
Egg Yolk -and- Milk Glaze
2 large egg yolks
2 tablespoons milk

Instructions

  1. 1. For the dough: Pulse flour, sugar, and salt to combine in food processor fitted with steel blade. Add butter and cream cheese pieces and sour cream; pulse until dough comes together in small, uneven pebbles the size of cottage cheese curds, about sixteen 1-second pulses. Turn mixture onto work surface, press into 9-inch-by-6-inch log, divide log into four equal portions, (see illustration 1) and press each into 4 1/2-by-3/4-inch disk. Place each disk between two sheets plastic wrap; roll out to form 8 1/2-inch circle (illustration 2). Stack dough circles on plate; freeze 30 minutes (or up to 1 month if stored in zipper-lock freezer bag). Meanwhile, mix sugar and cinnamon in small bowl; set aside with other filling ingredients.

  2. 2. Working with one dough round, remove from freezer and spread 1/4 cup minichips, 2 tablespoons cinnamon sugar, and 1/2 cup walnuts, in that order, over dough; pat down gently with fingers (illustration 3). Cut dough round into eight wedges. Roll each wedge into crescent shape and place at 2-inch intervals on parchment paper-lined heavy rimmed baking pans (illustration 4). Freeze crescents at least 15 minutes. (Frozen crescents, if well-wrapped, can be frozen in a zipper-lock bag up to 6 weeks.) Repeat with remaining dough rounds.

  3. 3. Adjust oven racks to upper- and lower-middle positions and heat oven to 375 degrees. Whisk egg yolks and milk in small bowl until smooth. Brush top and sides of frozen crescents with egg-milk mixture. Bake crescents, turning baking pans from front to back and top to bottom halfway through baking time, until pale gold and slightly puffy, 21 to 23 minutes. Immediately sprinkle each cookie with scant teaspoon cinnamon sugar; carefully transfer hot, fragile cookies to cooling rack using thin-bladed spatula. (Can be stored in an airtight container up to 4 days.)

Filling and Forming Rugelach

1. Cut the dough into even quarters. Press each quarter into a round, flat disk about 4 1/2 inches in diameter for crescents; or an 8-inch by 4-inch rectangle for roulades.

2. Place each disk between two pieces of plastic wrap and roll it into an 8 1/2-inch disk, or an 11-inch by 7-inch rectangle. Leave in the plastic wrap and stack on top of each other on a large plate.

3. Remove the dough from the freezer, place it on a work surface, peel off the top layer of plastic wrap, and cover the dough with preserves, raisins, cinnamon sugar, and walnuts.

4. For crescents, cut the dough into eight pie-shaped wedges. Starting with the wide side opposite the point, roll up the wedges to form crescents. Freeze them for 15 minutes, then bake as directed.

5. For roulades, starting from the long side, roll the dough tightly into a cylinder, taking care not to squeeze any filling out the sides as you roll.

6. Cut off a 1/4-inch section from each end of the cylinder and discard it. Cut the roll into 1-inch pieces. Place them seam side down on parchment paper-lined baking pans or cookie sheets. Freeze them for 15 minutes, then bake as directed.

South Seas Cookies

From The King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion Cookbook

Yield: 32 cookies
Baking Temp: 300’F Baking Time: 25 minutes

Dough:
4 1/4 cups (12 3/4 oz) sweetened shredded coconut
1 can (14 oz) sweetened condensed milk
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
3 large egg whites, at room temp. (I used cold and it was fine)
1 teaspoon lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon salt

Topping:
1 2/3 (10 oz) semisweet chocolate chips
1/3 cup (3 oz) caramel (about 10 individual caramels)
2 Tablespoons (1 oz) milk or heavy cream (I used heavy cream)

~ Preheat oven to 300’F. Lightly grease (or line with parchment) two baking sheets
~ To make the dough: In a large bowl, combine the coconut, sweetened condensed milk, and vanilla. In a seperate bowl, combine the egg whites, lemon juice, and salt and beat (whip) at medium speed until medium to stiff peaks form. Fold half of the beaten egg whites into the coconut mixture, then add the remainder.
~ Drop the batter by the tablespoon onto the prepared baking sheets. Bake the cookies for 25 minutes, until they are golden brown. Remove them from the oven and transfer to wire rack to cool.
~ When cookies are cool, to make the topping: Melt the chocolate chips in a saucepan set over very low heat or in the microwave, stirring frequently. When the cookies are completely cool, dip the bottoms into the chocolate (I found it easier to just take a knife and spread it on the bottoms) and set them on a rack upside down to let the chocolate set up (harden, putting them in the fridge helps speed this up). Keep any left over chocolate warm.
~ In a saucepan set over low heat, melt the caramel with the milk or heavy cream. Drizzle stripes of caramel over the tops of the cookies. Repeat the stripes with any of the left over chocolate.