Poppy Seed Hamentashen

bowl of hamentashenThis is the final instalment of my hamentashen treatise (see part 1 and part 2). Today we’re taking it old-school with the classic Poppy Seed Hamentashen. This is the hamentashen I grew up with. This recipe comes from Uri Scheft. These are the most popular hamentashen at Lehamim, his Tel Aviv bakery.All 3 on black trayMake sure you start with very fresh poppy seeds. You’ll need to grind them up a bit. I found that  my spice grinder was perfect for the task. ground poppyseedsThe poppy seeds get cooked down into a paste with some milk, sugar and butter. Lemon zest adds a perfect zing of freshness. making fillingI learned a great trick from Uri for keeping the hamentashen dough from getting soggy. A handful of cake or muffin crumbs absorb any moisture in the filling leading to hamentashen with a nice crisp bottom crust. I didn’t have any cake or muffin crumbs on hand, so I bought a package of 6 inexpensive white cupcakes at the supermarket, scraped off the icing and ground them up in the food processor to make crumbs. I let the crumbs sit out at room temperature for a few hours to let them dry out a bit. Extra crumbs can be stashed in a freezer bag for another day.making filling 2 I found it easiest to fill hamentashen if I first put the filling into a disposable piping bag.3 fillings

Click here to print recipe for Poppy Seed Hamentashen.

on black tray

2 thoughts on “Poppy Seed Hamentashen

  1. nilathetoughcookie

    Hi Cindy, I’d never heard of Hamentashen, but these look great! Is the crust like a shortbread?Love the cupcake crumb trick to keep the pastry from getting soggy, btw. I bet you can use that trick for other baked goods, too 😉

    Reply
    1. saltandserenity Post author

      Thanks Nila, yes, the crust is sort of a hybrid shortbread cookie-flaky pie crust.
      The crumbs would be a great idea in apple or any fruit strudel or even in a fruit tart or galette.

      Reply

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