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ROSH HASHANAH RECIPES |
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SARAH
WERNICK'S TEYGLAKH (ROSH HASHANAH, LITHUANIAN)
Source: Jewish Holiday Kitchen
- Joan Nathan
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Makes about 80 pieces (Parve)
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INGREDIENTS:
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SYRUP:
1 pound honey
¾ cup water (plus more if needed)
2 tbsp lemon juice
2 cups sugar
DOUGH:
6 eggs
1 tbsp ginger
½ tbsp salt
3 tbsp oil
1 tsp baking powder
3½ cup flour (plus ½ cup or more for rolling dough)
GARNISH:
¾ cup slivered almonds
½ cup whole glacéed cherries
½ cup sesame seeds
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DIRECTIONS:
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Line 2 cookie sheets with
aluminum foil and oil lightly. Set aside. In a large, heavy pot
(at least 6-quart capacity) mix together the honey, water, lemon
juice, and sugar. (This pot size may seem too large; however,
the syrup would overflow a smaller pot later in the recipe.)
Heat to boiling.
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While the honey syrup is
heating, beat together the eggs, oil, ginger, and salt until
blended. Sift together the baking powder and 3½ cups flour. Add
to the egg mixture to form a sticky dough. Cut into 8 pieces.
Dust each piece with flour and roll between your hands until it
forms a "snake" about ¾ inch in diameter. Slice each
snake into about 10 slices, ¾ inch thick. Add to the boiling
syrup and simmer slowly for about an hour. It is important to
cook the dough for the full time.
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At the end of the first half
hour, the teyglakh will be an attractive golden color , but they
will not be hard and crisp. Further cooking will improve their
texture and make them a beautiful dark mahogany color.
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Stir gently every 10 minutes
or so during the cooking period. If the liquid seems close to
evaporating, add more water, about 1/3 cup at a time. Ten
minutes before the end of the hour, add the almonds and
cherries. Stir frequently until done, to make sure that the
syrup doesn't burn. When the cooking is complete, remove pan
from heat. Immediately place the teyglakh, almonds, and cherries
on the oiled pans, keeping as much of the leftover syrup as
possible on the pot.
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Separate the teyglakh so that
they don't stick together. Stir the sesame seeds into the
leftover syrup, adjusting the quantity to the amount of syrup
that remains, if necessary. When the sesame-syrup mass cools
enough to be handled, form it into spheres the size of gumballs.
Work quickly but carefully: the syrup is extremely hot at first,
but will become too hard to shape as it cools. Form the teyglakh
into pyramids--one large or several small--and decorate with the
cherries, sesame balls, and slivered almonds.
Note: Teyglakh keep very well and
make excellent gift. If it si necessary to cover them, use lightly
oiled aluminum foil. Some cooks roll the finished teyglakh in
finely chopped nuts or coconut, which makes them less sticky. Others
form the teyglakh dough into shapes, such as spheres or knots. They
can be stuffed with bits of nut or dried fruit before they are
cooked.
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