Unlike some of my Alpha Baker friends, I get pretty excited when I see recipes containing raisins. I love raisins. I would happily order, eat, cook anything with raisins in it, sweet or savory.
Of course now that I've declared my love of raisins, I will tell you that I ended up making 1/2 recipe of these Rugelach without raisins. I wanted to try something different but I could not decide whether to choose the Chocolate Raspberry or Cran-Raspberry so I made a mixture of both. Mine is Cran-Raspberry Chocolate. And as you will see from the step by step photos below, I did not use seedless raspberry jam - the one we have is seeded and I don't bother straining them.
Everyone I shared this with love them and I had fun trying to pronounce Rugelach, which to me sounds very similar to Arugula and at some point when someone asked what it is, I happily answered: "Arugula!"
I've made the rugelach from Rose's Christmas cookie book back in 2012 (you can read the post here). I don't remember any details about that experience, only that it was positive and yummy. As I re-read my post back then, written by Jenn circa 2012, it sounds like I was confused by the explanation to roll the dough into a circle. Well, I can proudly tell you guys that I am not confused about this anymore so I think we can safely say that 4 years of baking since then have paid off? :)
These arugula rugelach are easy to put together and very yummy. I love that I can make the dough ahead as I made it one day then it sat in the fridge for a couple days. The combo filling is really good too, I can taste a bit of everything, though I think the chocolate overpower the cranberries a bit even though I didn't use the full amount of chocolate pearls. I think next time if I use chocolate at all I will only put a couple of pearl in each rugelach.
And the next day, our crab apple tree looks like this.
And this past weekend, our tulips bloomed!
Step by step photos:
Cream cheese and butter.
Creamed.
Dough rolling!
Applied seeded raspberry jam, sprinkle the cinnamon sugar.
Then sprinkle almonds and cranberries.
Sliced into somewhat evenly parts.
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Yours didn't stick to your Silpat, and Evil Cake Lady's didn't stick to her parchment, so I am really thinking that aluminum foil is to blame when the cookies won't come off the pan. Of course, there's still the chance that it's just user error. I wish mine had turned out as pretty as yours.
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ReplyDeleteI think it's the foil, Marie! All those juice coming out is a bit sticky. Mine feels a bit sticky too but since it's silpat it peels off.
DeleteI think it is the foil too. I recall many Betas were complaining about the foul which is why I did one batch with parchment. Anyways, Jenn, I like the idea of chocolate cranberry almond raspberry rugelach. I kept thinking of them as arugula too! Your crab apple tree is so pretty! Did the blossoms survive the snow?
ReplyDeleteThey did survive - the temperature never dropped to freezing. We're getting another storm this weekend I'm hoping it'll be less snow and no freeze (whyyy is it happening on weekends!!!!).
DeletePerfect rugelachs! Your pictures are just so gorgeous. It's interesting what four years of baking have taught.
ReplyDeleteI made these last night, and they were awesome!
ReplyDeleteThank you for the good and very useful info. I like your article. Thank you for sharing it as a beautiful and very delicious dessert.
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