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February 05, 2009 Hungarian Pastry - Kipfel By Harvey Pearlman, The KITCHENer Rebbe Submit a Comment
Here is a recipe I came across.
INGREDIENTS • 2 1/8 cups all-purpose flour • 1 pinch salt • 7/8 cup butter or Margarine • 1/2 cup confectioners' sugar • 1 egg • 3 teaspoons vanilla sugar • 1 1/4 cups ground almonds DIRECTIONS 1. In a large mixing bowl, combine the salt and the flour. Cut in the butter or margarine, and mix in with your hands. 2. Add the confectioners' sugar, the egg, the vanilla sugar, and the ground almonds to the flour mixture. Place the dough in the refrigerator for 30 minutes. 3. Divide the dough into several parts. Make rolls that are approximately 1 inch thick. Cut the rolls into 1 inch pieces, and bend the pieces into the shape of a semicircle (just like a croissant). Place the kipferl on a baking tray, and leave them in the refrigerator for 15 minutes. 4. Bake at 400 degrees F (200 degrees C) for 10 to 15 minutes. When done, remove kipfel carefully from the tray. 5. While still warm, dip the kipfel in a mixture of confectioners' sugar and vanilla sugar. Don't forget to send us a sample. The KITCHENer Rebbe!! COMMENTS Chana wrote: I tried making this Kipfel, and ended up tossing the whole mixture in the trash. It was a disaster. I could not get the flour and the butter to make the dough. I thought I followed the directions carefully, what could I have done wrong, and what should I do to try to correct whatever I did.. Any suggestions ? Harvey replied: I don't know what happened since I wasn't at the scene of the crime ;-) Here is a different recipe which I know others have had good luck with. Please let me know how they turn out. 1 cup unsalted butter, softened 1/2 cup sugar, ground 1-3/4 - 2 cups sifted flour 1 cup ground unblanched almonds 1 teaspoon vanilla essence 1/2 teaspoon salt Icing sugar Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add 1/2 a cup flour at a time to butter. Then add the nuts, vanilla essence and salt. Continue to beat until dough becomes slightly stiff. You may add more flour if needed. Shape dough into a ball, wrap well and refrigerate for an hour. Pinch off walnut-size pieces of the chilled dough; place them on floured board. Roll each one into a strip 1" wide x 1/2" thick. Shape into crescents. Arrange on baking sheets covered with baking paper at least 1/2" apart. Bake in a preheated 350°F hot oven for 15-20 minutes, or until lightly browned. Cool about 5 minutes and dust with icing sugar. Ethel wrote: Harvey, I appreciate your answering my query about Hungarian Kipfel, but as I stated in my request, it is a yeast dough and the recipe you printed doesn’t have any yeast. Alas, my family won’t have any for this Rosh Hashanah and Break Fast but perhaps all is not lost for next year. Harv responded: Sorry, I don't. But my friend Lisa did a bit of research on the Internet and found two recipes, listed below. But I haven't tried them out to be able to verify how good they are. If you do try them, please let me know! HUNGARIAN KIPFEL (found on foodreference.com, from Divine Kosher Cuisine: Catering to Family and Friends by Rise' Routenberg, Barbara Wasser) This recipe makes a lot of cookies so you may want to freeze some dough for later use. GERMAN TEA KIPFEL (from The Cutting Board forum, source listed as CAI The Canadian Family Cookbook) These yeast rolls, a German favorite, are usually filled with chopped nuts, dried or candied fruit, jam, or other fillings. Bobbie wrote: one of your readers asked for a yeast kipfel recipe. It always surprises people when they find out that there is no cheese in it: Lemon Dipped Kiplach 2½ lbs flour 1 lb marg 4 eggs 6 tblsp sugar 2 oz yeast 1 ½ c water 1 tbl salt Mix all; knead well. Let rise 1 hr. Make 8-9 balls. Roll into circles. Cut each to 16 triangles Roll up. Brush with egg. Bake 30 min, 375. Immediately after baking, dip for 1 minute into: Mix: 4 c water 3 c sugar ½ c lemon juice 6 caps vanilla let dry before storing. Can be frozen
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