Rugelach cookie fillings

Every year I try some new cookies. I flip through half a dozen cookbooks and pick out something to try. This year I landed on rugelach. A traditional Jewish cookie that is frequently served around Hanukkah, which is conveniently happening right now.

I picked these because I love their cute crescent shape and the fact that you can fill them with just about anything.

In my research, I landed on an article from The Kitchn that encouraged experimenting with fillings. I used their method for the dough but got creative with my own fillings. Out of this came two delicious cookies, Mango Macadamia, and Cinnamon Raisin Walnut. Cinnamon Raisin is a little more traditional, but Mango Macadamia holds a unique spot of its own.

The dough made of butter, flour and cream cheese tastes horrible until you bake it. This isn’t one you will be licking the spoon, however, makes a delicious flaky cookie. Since you are going for a flaky cookie you will want to make sure to leave little chunks of butter in your dough just like you do when you make a pie crust.

These delicious recipes are just a couple of many that you can find during The Sweetest Season Cookie Exchange Week.

60+ blog friends are sharing gorgeous cookie recipes from today through next Saturday, and today, I’ve teamed up with 50 other bloggers to bring you The Sweetest Season’s Sweetest Cookie Giveaway! We’ve put together an incredible cookie baking prize package, and we can’t wait to tell you more about it.

The Sweetest Season 2015 Sweetest Cookie Giveaway // The Speckled Palate

row one: Wit Wisdom Food | Beth Cakes | Alyssa and Carla | The Rustic Willow | Chez Catey Lou | Joybilee Farm | Arousing Appetites | The Food in My Beard | Lizzy is Dizzy | Lemon Sugar

row two: The Speckled Palate | The Gift of Gab | think fruitful | Majorly Delicious | Sugar Dish Me | An Oregon Cottage | A Savory Feast | The Foodie Patootie | Twin Stripe | Hidden Fruits and Veggies

row three: Appeasing a Food Geek | DC Girl in Pearls | Bessie Bakes | Brunch with Joy | Cooking With Libby | 2 Cookin Mamas | Lou Lou Biscuit | Me and My Pink Mixer | Wetherills Say I Do | The Little Epicurean |

row four: The Emotional Baker | Cake ‘n Knife | Glisten and Grace | Meredith Noelle | The Secret Ingredient [is love] | SammaSpot | Hey There Sunshine | Natasha Red Blog | Flavors & Sabores | Macheesmo

row five: Beer Girl Cooks | My California Roots | Butchers Niche | The Skinny Pot | Sustaining the Powers | Feast + West | Not Your Average Southern Belle | Vanilla And Bean | Our Life Inspired | That Square Plate

 

Be sure to check out our blogs to see all of our cookie recipes throughout the week! We’re using the hashtag #sweetestseasoncookies on social media this week, and we’re joining even more bloggers baking cookies, so it’s going to be a grand time!

Now, on to the giveaway!

A whopping 51 bloggers teamed up to bring you an awesome cookie-centric giveaway! We picked out a stand mixer and other goodies to make baking this season go smoothly. And, a big thank you goes out to the generous sponsors who helped with The Sweetest Season by organizing, as well as providing products to the participating bloggers and donating some incredible prizes for our giveaway! Be sure to check out Imperial Sugar, Dixie Crystals, Bob’s Red Mill, Cabot Creamery and The Crumby Cupcake for lots of great recipe ideas. And check out Garnishing Co., who designed our graphics.

The Sweetest Season Sweetest Cookie Giveaway 2015 // The Speckled Palate

We’re giving away The Sweetest Cookie Prize Pack, and it is worth $690! See the Rafflecopter below to enter to win this amazing set of cookie baking goodies. The prize pack includes:

Giveaway rules:

  1. Enter the giveaway through the Rafflecopter widget below. Everyone gets a free entry! You can enter multiple times, up to 65 total entries by following the giveaway sponsors on social media. (If you’ve followed in the past, that counts! Just enter the information as prompted.) All entries will be verified. No purchase is necessary to win.
  2. The giveaway is open until Saturday, December 19, 2015 at 11:59 p.m. CST. One winner will be chosen at random and e-mailed within 48 hours. Winners must claim prize within 48 hours of initial contact. The retail value of the prize is $690. Prizes listed above are the only ones available.
  3. Open to U.S. residents with a valid shipping address only. Must be 18 years of age as of December 5, 2015.
  4. To read all giveaway terms and conditions, visit the giveaway terms and conditions page or click the option in the Rafflecopter below to review them.

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Rugelach
Print Recipe
Adapted from a recipe from The Kitchn
Servings
64 cookies
Servings
64 cookies
Rugelach
Print Recipe
Adapted from a recipe from The Kitchn
Servings
64 cookies
Servings
64 cookies
Ingredients
rugelach dough
mango macadamia nut filling
Cinnamon Raisin Walnut filling
Servings: cookies
Instructions
dough
  1. Put 2 cups of flour and salt into food processor and pulse to mix. Add butter and cream cheese to the top of flour and pulse until pea-sized pieces form, 15-20 times. Add egg yolk and vanilla and pulse until the dough starts coming together in larger chunks. It will still look a little crumbly.
  2. Dump dough onto a cutting board or counter and divide into 4 equal pieces. Form 1-inch rounds, wrap in plastic wrap and place in fridge for a couple hours or overnight to chill.
  3. When ready to make the cookies roll out dough in a circle to about 1/8 inch thick. Edges will crack and that is ok. Leave rest of dough in fridge while working so the dough doesn't get warm before rolling.
Mango Macadamia Nut
  1. Place nuts and coconut in food processor and pulse until finely chopped.
  2. Melt jam and sugar over the stove. Allow to cool just a bit and then spread on rolled out dough. Sprinkle nut filling on top of jam.
  3. Cut the dough into 16 even triangles like you would cut a pizza. roll each piece from the outer edges to the point forming little crescent shaped cookies.
Cinnamon Raisin Walunt
  1. Place nuts, raisins and cinnamon in food processor and pulse until finely chopped.
  2. Mix melted butter, honey, sugar and vanilla in a bowl. Add chopped nut mixture. Spread filling on rolled out dough
  3. Cut the dough into 16 even triangles like you would cut a pizza. roll each piece from the outer edges to the point forming little crescent shaped cookies.
Baking
  1. Place rolled cookies on parchment lined cookies sheet and bake in a 375° oven for 20-25 minutes, until golden brown. Filling will ooze out and burn and that is fine don't worry. Cool cookies on sheet for 5 minutes and then remove to cooling rack. Cookies will keep in airtight container for up to a week.
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Cookie Butter Cheesecake Brownies

There are only a handful of reasons you might not have heard of cookie butter…

  • you don’t use pinterest
  • you don’t live near a Trader Joe’s
  • you don’t have a sweet tooth

If it isn’t one of those reasons you are an anomaly. I wouldn’t consider that a horrible thing when it comes to cookie butter. Some days I wish I had never heard of it too. When it first came to the store it was all the rage with people buying it by the case. Stories about eating it straight out of the jar with a spoon. I never got bit by the cookie butter craze, but the addition of cookie butter cream cheese to the dozens of products that have cookie butter in their title gave me an idea.

I am going to back up a second and describe cookie butter for those of you that don’t know what it is or haven’t had the chance to try it. Cookie butter is the consistency of peanut butter and is made from crushed up speculoos cookies. Speculoos cookies are a spiced shortbread cookie from the Netherlands. These crushed up cookies give cookie butter a flavor that might remind you of gingerbread. I think we can all agree that the smells and flavors of gingerbread are pretty alluring. If you can’t agree on that you might need to get your sniffer checked out, cause I think it might be broken.

Back to the idea I had with the cookie butter cream cheese.

The first thing I think of with cream cheese is bagels. I don’t care for bagels and cookie butter just doesn’t strike me as a morning food. Way too sweet. Now as a dessert cream cheese takes on new forms, primarily that of cheesecake which I love. But a cheesecake made of just cookie butter cream cheese sounded horrible too. Then I remembered cheesecake brownies and it all came together.

I have to admit the photos on the internets of cheesecake brownies have much more distinguished layers of cream cheese. I think I fell victim to over thinking swirling the layers together. Less swirl = better look. However, the taste doesn’t change. I could have eaten the entire tray of these. I was lucky to have some Lindt Dark chocolate from #Choctoberfest that made the brownies even better. Quality ingredients always have a way of improving things. Which is also why I used some of my supply of Imperial Sugar on this recipe as well. If you want to get some of these ingredients be sure to enter the #Choctoberfest giveaway.

I am looking forward to multiple projects using the Imperial sugar. If I could enter the giveaway for any product it would be to see more of this sugar show up at my doorstep.

Enjoy the brownies. They are sure to be a hit at your house. If you are one of the unfortunate souls that doesn’t have a Trader Joe’s try another cream cheese…maybe pumpkin.

I received Imperial sugar and Lindt chocolate as part of my participation in #Choctoberfest. All opinions are my own.


Cookie Butter Cheesecake Brownies
Print Recipe
Servings
12 brownies
Servings
12 brownies
Cookie Butter Cheesecake Brownies
Print Recipe
Servings
12 brownies
Servings
12 brownies
Ingredients
cheesecake layer
brownie layer
Servings: brownies
Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line a 8x8 pan with foil so it hangs over the edge and spray with cooking spray.
  2. Make the cheesecake topping: In a bowl use an electric mixer to beat the cream cheese until smooth and creamy. Beat in the sugar, and vanilla until smooth. Beat in egg until well combined and set aside.
  3. Melt chocolate, butter and oil together either in the microwave or over a pan of boiling water.
  4. In a separate bowl combine the flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, and salt.
  5. Combine the brown sugar and granulated sugar in a large bowl. Combine the milk, egg whites and vanilla. Add the cooled chocolate mixture and whisk until fully combined. Gradually add the flour mixture and stir until just combined.
  6. Set aside 1/2 cup of brownie mixture. Pour remaining brownie mixture into prepared pan. Pour cheesecake mixture over the top of brownie mixture. Put dollops of the resereved brownie mixture over the top. Swirl through only the top two layers to create the swirled pattern.
  7. Bake until set, 40-45 minutes depending on oven. Let cool completely before lifting brownies out of the pan.
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try it this weekend: rhubarb

Last week I tried posting an ingredient on Tuesday and a recipe on Friday and I failed. Didn’t get the recipe up until yesterday. So this week I am combining both. After you find out the fun facts about rhubarb you will get my favorite recipe for rhubarb

Rhubarb: Once I had my first rhubarb tart I was hooked. I savor rhubarb as a spring ingredient. Though you can find it in the winter because it is a cold winter crop I prefer it with strawberries so I wait until those two season overlap. I had a pleasant surprise this spring when a strange plant started sprouting in a corner of my yard. I was so excited to realize that it was rhubarb. I waited patiently for it to get big enough to harvest and through it into a crisp. If you want to have it in the winter try is as a pear rhubarb crisp when pears are at their height. It is another delicious combination.

Season: late winter-early summer, height of the season is April-June

What to look for when you buy: Cherry red stalks and green leaves (if the leaves are still attached) will indicate field grown rhubarb vs hothouse rhubarb. Field grown supposedly has a stronger flavor. The stalks should be crisp like celery and not flimsy when you pick it up.

How to store it: It doesn’t last long so buy or pick it the day you are going to use it for best results. You can wrap it tightly in a plastic bag and it should hold for 3 days.

How to prepare it: Because of its extreme tartness, think sour patch kid on steroids, it will need lots of sugar. Either add a large amount of sugar or pair with a very sweet ripe fruit like strawberries.

Links to some great recipes I want to try:

My favorite recipe for rhubarb:

strawberry rhubarb crisp
Print Recipe
Servings Prep Time
4 people 30 minutes
Cook Time
45 minutes
Servings Prep Time
4 people 30 minutes
Cook Time
45 minutes
strawberry rhubarb crisp
Print Recipe
Servings Prep Time
4 people 30 minutes
Cook Time
45 minutes
Servings Prep Time
4 people 30 minutes
Cook Time
45 minutes
Ingredients
filling
topping
Servings: people
Instructions
  1. preheat oven to 375 degrees
  2. Combine filling topping and stir until mixed well and transfer into a buttered dish, preferably an 8-inch square
  3. In a large bowl, use a mixer, beat butter and brown sugar on medium until light , fluffy and blended.
  4. Add flour, crushed ginger snaps and salt. With your hands mix until pea-sized pieces form.
  5. Scatter over the top of the filling and bake for 30 minutes. Tent loosely with foil and cook for 10-20 minutes more, until center is bubbling.
  6. Let cool for 20 minutes before serving
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