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4 oz cream cheese, at room temperature; 1 stick unsalted butter, at room temperature, plus 1 tablespoon melted butter, for brushing; 1 / 4 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar; 1 tsp pure vanilla extract ...
The poppy seed filling is a paste of ground poppy seeds, milk, butter, sugar and/or honey, often with additional flavorings such as lemon zest and juice. [2] It may have raisins. [5] The walnut filling is a paste of ground walnuts, milk, butter, sugar, often with additional flavorings such as coffee or orange zest. [2]
A dessert in Hungarian cuisine made with noodles, poppy seeds and sugar. [17] Makovník Slovakia: A nut roll filled with poppy seed paste. Makowiec: Poland: Makovnjača Croatia: A Croatian poppy seed cake [18] [19] or roll. Makový závin Czech Republic: Czech poppy seed roll. Makówki: A traditional poppy seed-based dessert from Central Europe.
Kolache, a popular Czechoslovakian pastry, is filled with poppy seeds, or jam. Hungarian and Polish cooking, adds Baca, includes a trove of seed-centric dishes, like poppy seed rolls, savory soups ...
Cabbage strudel (káposztás rétes in Hungarian) is especially associated with the cuisine of Hungarian Jews. [20] The 19th-century American writer Alice Lee Moqué recorded an encounter with savoury strudel, ordered mistakenly as a dessert, in her account of her travels through Dalmatia (modern-day Croatia), at the Hotel Petka in Gravosa ...
Old-fashioned strudel and an American cinnamon roll, too “We take pride in making our strudels the old-fashioned way, hand-pulling all the dough to make it light and delicate,” Schrull said ...
Nut rolls are known also by many specific regional names, including: orechovník in Slovak; makowiec in Polish; potica, povitica, gibanica, orahnjača/orehnjača in Slovenian and Serbo-Croatian (walnut variant, makovnjača for variant with poppy seed, in Croatia can also be made with carob); kalács and bejgli in Hungarian; and pastiç or nokul ...
Poppy seeds were one of the most popular spices in medieval Central Europe. [2] Traditionally, poppy seed filling was almost exclusively prepared at home. Immigrants brought poppy seeds to the United States, with the first recipes for poppy seed cookies attested as early as 1889 in cookbooks published by German-Jewish immigrants. [2]