Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Caramel Apple Pie Hamantaschen for Pi Day!!!

Today is Pi Day!!! Well, in Israel it technically isn't because we put the day before the month, so it is 14.3, not 3.14, but why ruin the fun? Pi Day also just so happens to be my birthday and this year is a big one - 30. Honestly 30 doesn't feel any different than 29 and 364 days. This past year has been a great one - I love my job, bought an apartment, and after 11 years finally live without room mates. None of my former room mates reading this should take that as a slight, I love you all, but living on my own has always been a dream and goal of mine and now it has finally happened.

Now about a week and a half ago I made a pledge to make 7 hamantaschen for Purim and while I did make a million hamantaschen, I fell behind a bit. I managed to make 5 different kinds before Purim (one of which I haven't posted yet) and I thought "Maybe I'll just leave it at 5." But then the day after Purim I remembered that even if I didn't manage to make them all before Purim doesn't mean I can't follow through and finish them. Pi Day offers a unique opportunity to combine pie and hamantaschen and thus I present:

Day 5: Caramel Apple Pie Hamantaschen



These ones were pretty labor intensive. I made dulce de leche from scratch, using condensed milk, and also made an apple pie filling from scratch. Add that to the fact that I basically had no time and I was pretty busy. I've seen plenty of recipes where you make dulce de leche from a can of condensed milk. The easiest way is by putting it in a pot of water and boiling it for 3 hours. It may be easy but this freaks the hell out of me because every recipe I saw had in bold MAKE SURE THE CAN IS ALWAYS COVERED BY THE WATER. This is because if the water level goes below the top of the can it can explode. Yeah, definitely not doing that. My experience with things possibly exploding or breaking always ends with things exploding or breaking so I had to find another way. I ended up going with a double boiler. It took quite some time, about 3 hours, but there was no risk of explosion or injury to myself or my brand new apartment. Also let me tell you, this stuff is liquid gold! It tastes so good! Now I need to go find more recipes that use it so that I have an excuse to make it again...

Look at all that golden goodness
I used Tori Avey's recipe for the apple filling and the hamantaschen. The apple filling also took some time to make. I needed to peel, grate and boil four apples with some water and sugar. This filled my house with some of the best smells. 

It almost looks like spaghetti
Once I had everything made, including the dough, I threw it all in the fridge to chill and made them the next morning. 

Look at that beautiful morning light peeking through the blinds
This morning I had plans to have brunch with my friend Racheli at Cafe Shalva in honor of my birthday. Cafe Shalva is a cafe at the Shalva Children's Center in Jerusalem which employs adults with special needs. If you have a chance you should go check it out, their new center is beautiful! Anyways, Racheli happens to work with a bunch of my friends at Nefesh B'Nefesh so I gave her a bag of the hamantaschen so that they could all celebrate Pi Day and my birthday as well!

And as usual here are the links to the recipes:
Double Boiler Dulce De Leche
Caramel Apple Filling
Buttery Hamantaschen

Monday, March 13, 2017

Days 3 and 4 of Hamantaschenpalooza

After day 2 of my Hamantaschen bonanza I realized that I didn't really have a plan for which ones I wanted to make. I went over to good old Pinterest and lo and behold they had endless suggestions! After a quick check of my inventory I knew what to do. 

Day 3: Thin Mint Hamantaschen




Any Expat who lives in Israel can tell you that one of the most depressing times of the year is when all of your friends are getting their Girl Scout cookies in America, but alas said cookies never make it over here. Add that to the fact that most Israelis have an aversion to mint and chocolate and you realize that there really is no hope for Thin Mints ever becoming a thing here. So I had to take matters into my own hands and make Thin Mint Hamantaschen. 




It wasn't hard to find a recipe for these, seeing as Americans LOVE mint and chocolate together. It used to be quite difficult to find mint extract here, to the point that I would have to bring it in from America whenever I visited, but in the past few years I haven't had a problem finding it here. I asked the shop owner where I buy it why he started carrying it and he said that French Olim have asked for it quite often, so I guess I have the influx of French Aliya to thank for that. 




Anyways, back to the cookies. I had everything I needed so I made the dough. This is hands down the hardest dough I have ever worked with. I don't know what it was but somehow it was both dry and sticky at the same time. It would crack every time I rolled it out, yet it still stuck to the rolling pin. Maybe I should feel bad for all those poor little Girl Scouts slaving away to make thin mints. 


Big lump of difficult deliciousness
Either way I managed to make a few trays of it before I gave up and threw the remaining dough in the trash. 


I know it looks all easy and manageable from this pic but it's a LIE
Perhaps its only redeeming quality is the fact that it was DELICIOUS. Really tasted like thin mints and the cookie had the same texture as well. Unfortunately my students didn't share my enthusiasm and in true Israeli form turned their noses up at the thought of mint and chocolate. Oh well, just meant more for my friends!

Here's a link to the recipe: Midnight Mint Hamantaschen

Day 4: Homemade Strawberry Jam



Right now we are at the peak of strawberry season here in Israel. Berries in general are hard to come by here. I can't remember the last time I had a fresh blackberry, but strawberry season brings with it an abundance of sweet, juicy strawberries and dropping prices. This week I found myself at the supermarket looking at a mountain of strawberries for a great price so I jumped on it. 


Cute strawberry strainer courtesy of my friend Leora
I've been wanting to try my hand at making jam for a while so I figured this was the perfect opportunity. One small snag, couldn't find pectin. While Israel has come a long way when it comes to hard to find ingredients, it certainly still has a long way to go. I'm sure pectin exists somewhere in this country, but I didn't have the time last week to go on a quest. Luckily jam hasn't always been made with pectin so I found myself a recipe that left it out. This recipe uses only three ingredients: fresh strawberries, sugar, and lemon juice. The jam I made is not so much a jam as a thick sauce, though once baked in the hamantaschen it firms up a bit more. Its runniness led to some trouble when it came to shaping the hamantaschen so in the end I had to form the empty hamantaschen and then drip the "jam" into them.





Please keep the untoward comments to yourself...
Of course it wouldn't be a true hamantaschen baking experience if some of them didn't pop open. I used the same dough I used for the cookie butter hamantaschen because it's easy to work with and delicious. 



I am now left with an abundance of runny jam. Please comment with ideas for what else I can use it for. Seeing as I don't yet have any canning supplies I need to use it up quick. 

Here's a link to the jam recipe: Old Fashioned Strawberry Jam

I know that Purim has come and gone by now but stay tuned for the last 3 hamantaschen!!!

Monday, March 6, 2017

Take Two

Like any good new years resolution I instantly failed at mine. Hehe. But just because I failed once doesn't mean it can't be done so here I am giving it another try. In just under a week we will celebrate my favorite holiday, Purim. Now I'm partial to Purim because it happens to also be my birthday as well as the day I decided to become religious almost eleven years ago (WOW). This year is especially exciting as it is also my 30th birthday! Man am I old. 

As many of you know, us Jews love food and any true Jewish holiday is centered around copious amounts of it, and Purim is no exception. Not only do we give each other gifts of food (mishloach manot), have a giant meal together (seudah), and drink until we drop, we also celebrate the holiday with a lovely cookie called a Hamantaschen (cue the multiple spellings of any Yiddish word). It is triangular, like the hat of the holiday's villain Haman, and stuffed with some kind of filling.

The Hamantaschen is a wonderful cookie because it is so versatile. You can make the traditional poppy seed, which frankly I've never understood the appeal of, or you can change it up. Different doughs, different fillings, even savory, the combinations are endless. So this holiday season I have, for whatever reason, taken it upon myself to make seven different hamantaschen for each day during the week before Purim. I don't think I'll have time to post every day so I'll put a few into each post. 

Day 1: Cookie Butter Hamantaschen (IT'S MADE OF COOKIES!!!!!)

Last year I made hamantaschen for my ESL students and to this day they still talk about them! I made a few different types last year but the cookie butter filled hamantaschen were their favorite so I figured it's a good place to start this year!



I remember having a great pareve dough recipe last year but of course I didn't save it anywhere and had no idea where to start looking for it this year. In the end I used Tory Avey's pareve hamantaschen dough recipe. This recipe uses oil, not margarine, which is a huge plus. Not only is it healthier, to some extent, but I also didn't have to wait for anything to soften or pull out my Kitchenaid to make it. The dough comes together easily and doesn't need to be refrigerated. Also, because it's a pretty neutral flavor, you can add basically any filling. I filled mine with about half a teaspoon of cookie butter. It's important to really make sure the sides are smushed together so that they don't pop open while baking. I baked mine for around 12 minutes, even though the recipe calls for 20-25, and they came out chewy with crispy corners.

Here's the recipe I used for the dough: Dairy Free Hamantaschen Dough


Day 2: Funfetti Cheesecake Hamantaschen with Chocolate Drizzle




So I didn't really plan my cookies. I decided on the first day that I was making seven different hamantaschen but I only really had plans for one. This led to me frantically searching for a recipe that I had the ingredients to at 9:15 PM when I got home from tutoring. Apparently I had stocked up on blocks of Philadelphia cream cheese a few weeks ago so I decided to go the cheesecake route. I found a recipe for Funfetti Cheesecake Hamantaschen that looked good, only problem was I didn't have rainbow sprinkles, only chocolate. Can it still be called funfetti if it doesn't look like it came out of a unicorn's butt? Either way the chocolate sprinkles did the trick. 



The dough recipe for these cookies is also an oil recipe, which I felt was a bit of a shame as I was making a dairy filling so I could also make a dairy dough, but it was late and I wasn't about to go searching for another recipes and I definitely wasn't willing to wait for butter to soften seeing as I don't have a microwave. As an English teacher the previous run-on sentence is making me cringe.



I also baked these for about 12 minutes. After baking I felt they needed a little something extra so I melted some Hershey's Mini Kiss chocolate chips and drizzled it on top. 


Here's the recipe I used: Funfetti Cheesecake Hamantaschen