Showing posts with label Greek Christmas Cookies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Greek Christmas Cookies. Show all posts

Friday

Τραγανοί κουραμπιέδες κλασικοί και αγαπημένοι


Υλικά (για περίπου 1 κιλό):
  • 250 γρ. βούτυρο γάλακτος ή τύπου Κερκύρας ή αγελάδος 
  • 1/2 κούπα ζάχαρη άχνη + μπόλικη επιπλέον, για την επικάλυψη
  • 2 κουτ. σούπας κονιάκ
  • 3 κουτ. σούπας ανθόνερο
  • 3-3½ κούπες αλεύρι για όλες τις χρήσεις
  • 1 κουτ. γλυκού μπέικιν πάουντερ
  • 2 βανίλιες
  • 1/2 κούπα αμύγδαλα, καβουρδισμένα και χοντροκομμένα
Διαδικασία:
Χτυπάμε πολύ καλά στο μίξερ το βούτυρο μέχρι να ασπρίσει και να αφρατέψει αρκετά (περίπου 10 λεπτά). Προσθέτουμε τη ζάχαρη άχνη και συνεχίζουμε το χτύπημα.
Στη συνέχεια ρίχνουμε το κονιάκ, το ανθόνερο και σιγά-σιγά το αλεύρι με το μπέικιν πάουντερ και τη βανίλια (όχι όλο μαζί το αλεύρι γιατί μπορεί να μην χρειαστεί). Τέλος προσθέτουμε τα αμύγδαλα και σταματάμε το χτύπημα.
Προθερμαίνουμε τον φούρνο στους 170° C. Πλάθουμε τους κουραμπιέδες σε ό,τι σχήμα θέλουμε (στρογγυλό, μισοφέγγαρο κ.λπ.) και τους βάζουμε στη λαμαρίνα του φούρνου που έχουμε ντύσει με λαδόκολλα. Ψήνουμε τους κουραμπιέδες για περίπου 30 λεπτά. Τους βγάζουμε από τον φούρνο και τους βάζουμε σε μια μεγάλη πιατέλα. Τους πασπαλίζουμε με μπόλικη κοσκινισμένη ζάχαρη άχνη όσο είναι ακόμη ζεστοί.

Μυστικά:
  • Σε αντίθεση με τα μελομακάρονα που δεν χρειάζονται σχεδόν καθόλου ανακάτεμα (ίσα-ίσα να ενωθούν τα υλικά γιατί αλλιώς σφίγγουν), οι κουραμπιέδες θέλουν πολύ χτύπημα. 
  • Επιλέγουμε ένα καλό βούτυρο για να γίνουν πιο αρωματικοί.
  • Για πρωτοτυπία αντικαθιστούμε τα αμύγδαλα με φουντούκια ή φυστίκια τύπου Αιγίνης.

Traditional Kourampiedes / Kourabiethes (Greek Christmas Butter Cookies)

 Related image
Our very best recipe for Kourampiedes (Kourabiethes)! Traditionally made to celebrate Christmas, these sweet little butter cookies will definitely set you on a festive mood! Infused with rose water and the aromas of melted butter and topped with luscious layers of icing sugar, who can resist eating a few more than they should

Ingredients

  • 250g cow milk butter, at room temperature (9 ounces)
  • 100g icing sugar (3.5 ounces)
  • 100g almonds, whole or roughly chopped, with the peel (3.5 ounces)
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2 tbsps ouzo (Greek drink)
  • 1 tbsp rose water
  • 450-500g all-purpose flour, sifted (16-18 ounces)
  • 6g baking powder (1 1/2 tsp)
  • 1kg icing sugar for powdering (35 ounces)

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven at 200C. Place the almonds whole or roughly chopped (depending on whether you prefer the cookies to have whole or chopped almonds inside) on a baking tray and sprinkle with some water. Bake them for 7-8 minutes, being careful not to burn them.
  2. Use an electric mixer, to mix the butter and the icing sugar (100g/3.5 ounces), for about 20 minutes, until the butter is creamy and fluffy, like whipped cream. (It is very important that the butter is at room temperature.) Add the vanilla extract, the rose water and the ouzo and blend; add the baked almonds and blend again.
  3. In another bowl, blend the sifted flour and the baking powder. (It is very important to sift the flour, so that the cookies will become light and smooth.) Gradually add the flour into the butter mixture (from step 2) and work the mixture with your hands, until the ingredients are combined and the dough is soft and easy to work. You will need 450-500g of flour, depending on the flour.
  4. Preheat the oven to 200C; layer the bottom of 2 baking trays with parchment paper and form the kourampiedes. Roll 1-2 tbsps of the dough into a ball, place on the baking tray and push with your finger in the middle, to form a little dimple. Continue with the rest of the dough.
  5. Place the baking trays with the kourampiedes in second and fourth grill of the oven and turn the heat down to 180C. Bake for approx. 20 minutes, until they have a very faint golden tint and are cooked through. Be careful not to overcook them. Leave them aside to cool down for a while. If you try to lift them, while still warm, they will break.
  6. In a large bowl, add 500g/18 ounces of icing sugar and dip the kourampiedes (in batches) in the sugar, rolling them around, so that the sugar sticks on all sides. Place on one or two large platters. When done, sift the extra 500g/18 ounces icing sugar over the kourampiedes.

Christmas Kourampiedes

Related image

Ingredients

  • 500 g butter
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 2 cup toasted blanched flaked almonds
  • 1 orange zested
  • 1 kg plain flour sifted
  • 3 cup icing sugar sifted *to decorate
  • 3 drops vanilla essence *optional 

Method

  • STEP 1 Preheat oven to 180C or 160C for fan forced. Grease 2 baking trays.
  • STEP 2 With an electric mixer beat the butter until fluffy and adding the sugar gradually.
  • STEP 3 Add the orange zest and flour until mixture is smooth and a little tight. Stir through the toasted almonds.
  • STEP 4 Bake until golden brown for about 15-20 mins.
  • STEP 5 After baking sift extra icing sugar over them.
  • STEP 6 To shape the cookies, take a small piece of dough in your hands and press into shape of cookie cutter. Make sure there is enough to place the cookie cutter in the centre of the dough. You can shape whichever way you like at Christmas type I use Christmas Cookie Cutters shaping them as Trees, Bells, Gingerbread Man. Otherwise shape them into a round ball and with the one of your palms press down on them slightly.

Notes

You can add vanilla essence or rosewater essence to the biscuit dough too - add the essence with the flour mixture before making the dough.

Kourampiedes , Greek Christmas butter cookies

 Traditional Kourampiedes / Kourabiethes (Greek Christmas Butter Cookies)
Kourampiedes recipe, a traditional Greek Christmas cookie full of butter aromas, covered in icing sugar. Sure to please everybody this festive season!



Ingredients
  • 1.6 lb / 750 g. cow butter cold diced
  • 2 oz / 60 g. icing sugar
  • 2 egg yolks preferably organic
  • 1/2 tsp clove ground
  • 2 tbsp cognac
  • 2.2 lb / 1 kg all purpose flour
  • 2 tbsp baking powder
  • 12 oz / 350 g. almonds chopped roast for 15-20 minutes at 320oF / 160oC
  • plenty of icing sugar to dust


Instructions


  1. Preheat the oven to 350oF / 180oC.
  2. In a standing mixer, beat the butter with the icing sugar on high speed, for 15 minutes, until pale and frothy.
  3. Add the egg yolks, clove, cognac, and beat for another 2 minutes.
  4. Remove the bowl from the mixer and slowly add the flour and the baking powder. Knead the dough during the addition, until all ingredients are fully incorporated. Avoid over kneading unless you crave stiff kourampiedes!
  5. Add the roasted almonds and knead.
  6. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  7. With your hands, form medium-sized round cookies. Put on the baking sheet, leaving some space between each cookie.
  8. Bake for 20 minutes, until golden.
  9. Allow to cool down completely before dusting with icing sugar.
    =================================
    Kourampiedes recipe, a traditional Greek Christmas cookie covered in icing sugar, sure to please everybody this festive season!

    If you have a Greek heritage, you absolutely know that Christmas is a highly divisive period. Team- melomakarona and team- kourampiedes is an ongoing rivalry, with devoted fans from across the country, or the globe even!
    Kourampiedes are incredibly delicious butter cookies, soft, fluffy with a crunchy bite and rich almond (or pistachio if you are feeling adventurous) and incredible aroma. Savvy cooks know that the traditional recipe requires time and effort. Well, this kourampiedes recipe changes everything! 
    A few tips for kourampiedes success. Firstly and most importantly, use good quality butter. Most cooks in Greece use sheep butter or a combination of sheep and goat butter. As you can imagine, this brings a milky, deep and intense flavor to the cookie. Not to mention the aroma… divine! But, I have to warn you, it’s not a subtle or soft feeling, so you should consider opting for regular cow butter as my recipe suggests. Cold butter works best for cookies and gives a luscious and refined texture.
    Next, you need to master your kneading skills! Too much mixing will make the cookie dough stiff. To little kneading and the ingredients will not incorporate well. Find the rhythm that works best for you. Better yet, add each ingredient little by little, so you can ensure that all tasted do blend well. 
    Now, it’s time for the hardest part. Baking! As I’ve mentioned before, when you bake, you have to constantly keep an eye on the oven. A good friend of mine is always saying the oven is heating, the baker is baking. That’s because the oven is such an unreliable way of cooking. After it reached the designated temperature, it still keeps climbing to higher temperatures. That’s why the first batch of baked goods is beautiful, golden-crusted and the next batches turn out brown-is. Should you notice that your cookies are browning suspiciously fast, lower the temperature.

Wednesday

Melomakarona (A Greek Christmas Cookie)

 

 

These are a coarse-grained cookie soaked in a honey syrup (the semolina achieves this), popular throughout Greece during the Christmas Holidays. They are wonderful and are THE recipe that makes my house smell like Christmas - orange peel and cloves and cinnamon. The most unbelievable perfume wafts through the house for a couple of days after baking!

 Ingredients 



  • 1 12 cups light olive oil or 1 12 cups corn oil
  • 12 cup butter, at room temperature
  • 1 cup beer (or more) or 1 cup orange juice (or more)
  • 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 12 teaspoons ground cloves
  • 2 oranges, zest of, grated
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 2 cups fine ground semolina (cream of wheat or farina)
  • 6 cups flour
  • 12 teaspoon baking soda
  • 12 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • Syrup

  • 1 12 cups sugar
  • 1 12 cups greek thyme honey
  • 1 cup water
  • 34 cup walnuts, finely chopped
 

Directions


  1. Put the corn oil, butter, beer (or orange juice), cinnamon, cloves, orange peel and sugar in a mixing bowl and beat until they are thoroughly blended.
  2. Sift about one cup of flour with the baking soda, baking powder and salt and blend into the oil mixture.
  3. Add the semolina, a cup at a time, into this mixture.
  4. Add enough of the remaining flour, a cup at a time, until you get a rather firm dough (you may need a bit more or less than the amount of flour mentioned in the ingredients list).
  5. Use your hands to do the mixing, as an electric mixer will be useless after the first two or three cups of flour have been added.
  6. Roll the dough into cylinders, about two inches long and one inch in diameter, flatten them with your hands, and place them on cookie sheets that have been greased with a little olive oil.
  7. Bake at 350 degree Fahrenheit for half an hour.
  8. Remove the cookies from the oven and pour hot syrup over them.
  9. Lay the cookies out in a rimmed baking pan large enough to contain them and pour the hot syrup over the cookies, sprinkle them with the chopped walnuts and let them soak overnight.
  10. (Alternatively, if you do not have enough rimmed baking sheets to accommodate all the cookies, you can dip them in batches directly into the hot syrup - keeping the syrup at the lowest possible simmer - and allow to soak in the syrup for 8-10 minutes; remove with a slotted spoon).
  11. For the syrup: mix the sugar, honey and water, and bring to a boil.
  12. Cook on low heat for four minutes and skim off the foam that forms on top.
  13. The next day put them on your prettiest platter, sprinkle each layer evenly with the finely chopped walnuts and wrap with plastic wrap (or put in an airtight container) and serve.
  14. These are great keepers and will last for months (my Mom's 'big' batches sometimes made it nearly up until Easter!).

Melomakarona recipe (Greek Christmas Honey Cookies)



Making these sweet little cookies always makes me realise that it’s Christmas time! Melomakarona (Greek honey cookies) are one of the most popular treats throughout Greece during the Christmas Holidays and their intense homely smell makes every house smell like Christmas.. These sweet little Greek honey cookies (melomakarona) are super quick to bake, so much fun to make and highly addictive to eat! So consider yourself warned! This easy to follow traditional Greek melomakarona recipe makes 60 of these delicious festive Greek Christmas cookies, plenty for everyone to try. Serve over a hot cup of coffee and you have a match made in heaven…

For the melomakarona


  • 150g thin semolina (5.3 ounces)
  • 500g flour (soft) (17.6 ounces)
  • 1/2 tbsp baking powder
  • 100g orange juice (3.5 ounces)
  • 3 tbsps cognac
  • 100g sugar (3.5 ounces)
  • 1 flat tbsp powdered cinnamon
  • 1/3 tsp nutmeg (powder)
  • 1/3 tsp clove (powder)
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/2 tbsp baking soda
  • 90g water (3.2 ounces)
  • 125g olive oil (4.4 ounces)
  • 125g vegetable oil (4.4 ounces)
  • 50g honey (1.8 ounces)
  • zest of 2 oranges

For the syrup

  • 300g water (10 ounces)
  • 600g sugar (20 ounces)
  • 90g glucose (3 ounces)
  • 2 cinnamon sticks
  • 3 whole cloves
  • 1 orange, cut in half
  • 180g honey (7 ounces)

To garnish

  • 200g chopped walnuts (7 ounces)
  • powdered cinnamon (optional)
  • powdered clove (optional)

Instructions


  1. To prepare this melomakarona recipe start by making the syrup first. In a pot add all the ingredients for the syrup, except the honey and bring to the boil. Boil for 3-4 minutes, until the sugar has dissolved and remove from the stove. Stir in the honey and  set aside to cool completely.
  2. Prepare the dough for the melomakarona. In a bowl add the semolina, flour and baking powder and blend with a whisk to combine.
  3. In another large bowl add the orange juice, the cognac, the sugar and spices (nutmeg, cinnamon, clove, vanilla). At the end add the baking soda and whisk immediately the ingredients for 5-10 seconds, until the ingredients combine and the baking soda dissolves and starts to foam. Pour in the bowl the water, the oil, the orange zest and honey and whisk to combine.
  4. Now it’s time to combine the two mixtures. Add the mixed flour, semolina and baking powder (from step 2) in the bowl with the rest of the ingredients from step 3 and start kneading the dough for the melomakarona. Knead the dough for the melomakarona using your hands, until the ingredients combine and the dough is smooth and soft. When preparing a melomakarona recipe, it is very important not to overwork the dough. Knead lightly with your hands (like working with a meringue) until the flour has incorporated the mixture and the dough is really soft. Be careful not to add any more flour than this melomakarona recipe calls for, as this will make them tough.
  5. Preheat the oven at 180C. Layer the bottom of 2 baking trays with parchment paper and start shaping the melomakarona. Pinch a portion of dough about the size of a walnut/ 50g (or bigger, if you prefer) and shape with your palms into a smooth oblong shape, like a small egg. Place on the baking tray, push lightly the top with a fork and make some holes on top (not all the way down). Continue with the rest of the dough.
  6. Place the baking trays with the melomakarona in the oven and bake for approx. 20 minutes, until the melomakarona are lightly browned and cooked through.
  7. When the melomakarona come out of the oven, place them in the cold syrup, flipping them with a slotted spoon to absorb the syrup for approx. 10-20 seconds, depending on how syrupy you like them. (When syrupying the melomakarona it’s best do so in 2-3 batches). Remove the cookies using a slotted spoon, place on a platter and sprinkle with chopped walnuts.
  8. Store the melomakarona at room temperature in an airtight container. They will last for all your Christmas Holidays!