–Newt Gingrich
–Cookie Monster
While I am an admitted Purim Pooper, there is one custom associated with the holiday that I do adhere to and (almost) enjoy:
Hamantashen (aka hamantaschen; homentashn; homentaschan; humentashen; המן־טאַשן; or [Hebrew] Oznei-Haman ).When I was a kid, back in the Old Country, two Sundays before Purim, my mother, may her memory be a blessing, would break out her hand-operated grinder, her rolling pin, and about 10 kilos of flour and begin her yearly task of making hamentashen.
It was an all-day project, the result of which was hundreds of hamentashen by the end of the day.
Sundays in the HolyLand are just another workday, and not Baking Day as it was in the Old Country, but I still manage to make enough hamentashen to go around. It takes me a few evenings because it is a fiddly project, and I don't normally do fiddly, but for hamentashen, I make the exception.
My mother used her grinder (which she inherited from her mother) to grind the fillings for the cookies. She never trusted me to grind the ingredients, as she figured I would grind my fingers off. She was probably right.
Back in the Old Country, at least in the last century, there were only two possible options for hamentashen fillings that my mother made: poppyseed, which she would grind into a paste and add honey or something – I don't actually know because I never ate the poppyseed hamentashen – and prune, which she would grind into a paste adding raisins and jam to the mix. That one, I DID eat.
The dough that was made for hamentashen was the same dough my mother used for her infamous 'roly poly', which was a baked roll filled with sugar, cinnamon, sometimes raisins, and sometimes Turkish Delight. I do not care for Turkish Delight. In fact, I did not care that much for roly poly; that was ok, it was mostly made for company and I was usually spared. (In fact, I was usually told to stay away from the roly poly, and stop picking out the raisins for heaven's sake)
(I just Googled 'roly poly' to see if it is a known baked good or just something my mother invented, and discovered that roly poly is, in fact, "An isopod crustacean of the family Armadillidiidae, also known as pill bugs". But I digress)
Today, I use a food processor to make both the same roly poly dough and any filling I might want. Of course, living in a different country forces me to adapt to different ways. Flour has a different texture here, so the amounts differ. And back then, in the cold of the Old Country, the only fruit juices available were apple and orange. The roly poly dough calls for a quarter cup of orange juice, but in a pinch, apple juice could be used. Here, in the Land of More Than Plenty, there are 27 different varieties of fruit juice available. This year, I used mango juice because that's what I had in the cupboard, but I could have easily used pear or cactus fruit or melon juice. As for the filling, mostly I simply buy it, because I'm that lazy. I use pie filling - blueberry, apple, or cherry. I, also, due to demands from the younger, wilder generation, fill the cookies with butterscotch spread and, of course, the ubiquitous Israeli chocolate spread.
These latter hamentashen are kept under lock and key with strict orders from the children not to serve them to guests or add them to mishloach manot. The key is kept safely in one of the kids' bedrooms to which I am not allowed to enter under penalty of having to clean it up.
I do still make the prune filling, unique in Israel, where the majority of fillings are poppyseed (bleh) or date (meh - since making my life in Israel, I have added humus, tehina, olives, avocadoes, 14 different kinds of eggplant dishes, small amounts of spicy foods, shwarma, pomegranates, and exploding chocolate to my diet. But not dates. But hey.).
My mother would roll out the dough and cut circles using a cleaned glass from a yahrzeit (memorial) candle. Indeed, as was common in many homes at the time, we had a whole set of yahrzeit glasses, washed out and used when the other glasses were in the dishwasher. It was the biggest glass my mother owned, and perfect for making hamentashen circles.
4 comments:
OK, all well and good but WHERE IS THE DOUGH RECIPE?
Thanks, Reesa... Excellent!!!
Do you know?... Your mom's and my mom's grinder look exactly the same!!!
You opened my appetite to bake Hamantaschen cookies.
Would you be willing to share the recipe for the "dough"?
Oh dear Reesa, NOBODY writes the way you do! My diaphragm still hurts from laughing!!! Bless you and may you continue to bring us so much joy! !!!! Purim Sameach!
While the hamentashen of my youth in the actual country I grew up in, just south of the frozen wasteland you did (oh Canada!), I distinctly remember at least one kind that you haven’t: apricot jelly. And before we left to come live here - possibly because of it - some overly woke types started using whole wheat flour.
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