This is not a difficult recipe, but there are a few steps. The good news is that the steps could be spread out over a couple of days. The first step is to make the dough. I did mine in the food processor. I like doing that because I can use cold dairy. In this case it was three sticks of butter and one brick of cream cheese. Not so low fat, this recipe. It calls for a minimal amount of sugar because the filling is sweet. Once the dough came together, I separated it into two disks and put it in the fridge overnight. This recipe calls for homemade filling called levkar. The traditional versions are apricot and prune. I'll fully cop to being lazy on this one, and I used jam for my filling. The dough rolled out pretty easily with only a small amount of flour. The key here is keeping it cold. I rolled a bitand put it back in the fridge. Then I rolled again and was ready to fill. This version is pretty quick because of the jelly-roll style of filling. I spread apricot jam on the dough and sprinkled it with a cinnamon sugar mix and toasted almonds. The second version used raspberry jam, cinnamon sugar, mini chocolate chips, and toasted pecans. The rolled up dough went back in the fridge for another chill.
Then it was slicing time. Dorie's version calls for a pretty substantial slice. I've made this style before following Smitten Kitchen's recipe. She uses a thinner slice. I like the thinner cookie as opposed to a thicker pastry, so that's how I sliced these. They got a sprinkle of coarse sugar and went into the oven. I had to watch my baking time.
These came out just great. I love the cream cheesy pastry swirled with the sweet jam and nutty fillings. I didn't venture out of my comfort to make these thicker, but I am sure they would have turned out really well. I will note that the Smitten Kitchen recipe uses one less stick of butter. I'm not sure that it was really necessary in the finished product for me.
Here they are side by side.
Here's the apricot/almond version.
And the raspberry/chocolate/pecan version.
Go visit Jessica of My Baking Heart or Margaret of The Urban Hiker for this week's recipe.
Fantastic!! I didn't even know they were Jewish until I read your blog!!!
ReplyDeleteI love the look of these with the color contrast! I also love the idea of a thinner cookie, maybe next time. :)
ReplyDeleteI love how everyone's look so different and delicious!
ReplyDeleteLove the flavors you chose!
ReplyDeleteGorgeous! I think you were smart to hold back on the filling, mine unraveled all over. :)
ReplyDeleteI like the thin version. Your combos sound great!
ReplyDeleteVery, very nice - they look part cookie/part pastry. Love it!
ReplyDeleteI'm coming over to help you eat them all. I'll bring the coffee. My god, they're gorgeous!! Well done.
ReplyDeleteI also sliced them thinner and thought they were pretty good that way.
ReplyDeleteVery pretty pictures. I wish my spiral had looked so nice!
ReplyDeleteThey look lovely
ReplyDeleteYour rugelach look great! I like the variation.
ReplyDeleteSo pretty! Love the two colors and how you cut them. Must try this next time I make rugelach :)
ReplyDeletethinner seems to be the way to go - yours turned out beautifully
ReplyDeleteBoth of the versions look great!
ReplyDeleteI like your method of cutting them thinner. They look yummy. I made the recipe as written right down to the prune levkar. Great TWD recipe.
ReplyDeleteI think I will make mine thinner next time...good idea!
ReplyDeleteI think I will make mine thinner next time...good idea!
ReplyDeleteYours look fantastic! I wish I'd rolled mine into a bigger roll like yours, they may have actually held up in the oven!
ReplyDeleteThe thin slices look so pretty. I like how so many people found ways to change it up.
ReplyDeleteI also sliced mine thin = more cookies :) Great job!
ReplyDeleteThey look fabulous!
ReplyDeleteOh yeah, I'm totally slicing mine thinner next time I make them, and omitting the cinnamon-sugar on top. Yours are beautiful!
ReplyDeleteI love seeing all the variations. Yours look great.
ReplyDeleteLovely; the apricot almond is calling my name! With how much I love Jewish baked goods, I'm pretty sure I was Jewish in a past life. ;)
ReplyDeleteyour rugelach looks absolutely amazing!
ReplyDeleteThe thin swirls are pretty. I can't believe I didn't use my plum jam. Great idea.
ReplyDeleteLooks great! I like the idea of the thinner cookies.
ReplyDeleteRaspberry Chocolate Pecan - Apricot Almond....I am glad they are not at my house. They look delicious!
ReplyDeleteI actually did really love them--they are one of my favorites...have been eating them all of my life. It is just that anything with sugar or gluten does not agree...which I guess is nuts that I am even doing this!
ReplyDeleteJules:
ReplyDeleteThese look perfect. Now I wish I'd made a few in this fashion. Sliced thin as they are, you can really see the filling ingredients.
-Lisa
Thank goodness for Deb at Smitten Kitchen! I like the thinner cookie version that you successfully created. This made a lot of cookies, rich cookies. They were great but intensive. I might have ate the lekvar right out of the jar with a spoon....
ReplyDeleteVery pretty rugelach...your thin cuts with the beautiful fillings are so inviting. Also enjoyed reading your write-up for this recipe. Nice baking.
ReplyDeleteFrom a fellow TWD baker, I LOVE that your combination using the chocolate chips! That never even crossed my mind but oo, I be that would be fabulous. I need to start thinking outside the box ;)
ReplyDeleteLove your big ol' pinwheels! They're gorgeous, Jules! :)
ReplyDeleteYours look great!!! It was my first time making them and I loved them!!
ReplyDeleteYour rugelach look delicious! I love that you used coarse sugar and sliced them thin. Great photos!
ReplyDeleteYour pinwheel version looks great! :)
ReplyDeleteLove your pinwheels! They turned out great :)
ReplyDeleteYes, they were butter laden- I gulped when I saw 3 sticks + the cream cheese; but they were most enjoyable!
ReplyDeleteI would be all over that raspberry/chocolate/pecan version. Fantastic.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! The filling sounds great
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