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The Classic Rugelach

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Dairy, Grains American Cookies 64 Servings

INGREDIENTS

8 oz Cream cheese, at room
temperature
1 c Unsalted butter, at room
temperature
2 c Unbleached all-purpose flour
Confectioners' sugar
1 c Thick apricot preserves
3/4 c Walnuts, roughly chopped
1 c Shaved bittersweet
chocolate preferable
imported
1/4 c Sugar
1/4 c Unsalted butter, melted
1/2 c Sugar
2 t Cinnamon

INSTRUCTIONS

The dough:  Place the cream cheese and the butter in an electric mixer
fitted  with the paddle. Cream at a low speed until combined, about 2
minutes. Add the flour and mix until a very soft dough is formed,
about 2 more minutes. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at
least 2 hours.  Filling and baking the rugelach:  2. Preheat the oven
to 350 degrees and line 2 cookie sheets with  baking parchment. 3. Mix
the ingredients for the apricot or chocolate  filling and divide the
dough into 4 balls. Roll the balls out into 4  circles about 1/8 inch
thick and 9 inches in diameter. Spread the  apricot or chocolate
filling over the dough. If using the  cinnamon-sugar filling, brush the
melted butter on first, then the  combined cinnamon and sugar. 4. Using
a dull knife, cut each circle  of dough into 16 pie-shaped pieces about
2 inches wide at the  circumference. Roll up from the wide side to the
center. Place the  rugelach on the parchment-lined cookie sheets. Bake
in the oven on  the middle and lower racks, switching after 12 minutes,
also  switching back to front. Continue baking about 13 more minutes,
or  until golden brown. Remove the rugelach to racks to cool. Sprinkle
the apricot and chocolate rugelach with confectioners' sugar just
before serving.  Yield: 64 rugelach  Formated by suechef@sover.netNOTES
: Ffrom Ann Amernick  Probably the most popular of American Jewish
cookies, this horn-shaped  treat was made in Europe with butter; cream
cheese was added in this  country. I love Ann's version: it has no
sugar in the dough but a  sprinkling on top of the finished cookie. She
also uses this dough to  make hamantashen.  Recipe by: from The Jewish
Holiday Baker, Random House, 1997  Posted to JEWISH-FOOD digest by
"dogsmom@cinci.infi.net"  <dogsmom@cinci.infi.net> on Oct 11, 1998,
converted by MM_Buster  v2.0l.

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Nutrition (calculated from recipe ingredients)
----------------------------------------------
Calories: 127
Calories From Fat: 74
Total Fat: 8.4g
Cholesterol: 25.7mg
Sodium: 25mg
Potassium: 77.8mg
Carbohydrates: 8.9g
Fiber: <1g
Sugar: 4.7g
Protein: 4.3g


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