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Finding a new flavour to celebrate Purim with fig and halva hamantaschen

Last year I was converted from hamantaschen-hater to freely fressing them whenever I can. Here is this year's triangular treat.

February 19, 2018 17:03
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2 min read

I think of Purim as Pesach's Shrove Tuesday.

It's our chance to use up plenty of chometz before Pesach's floury fast, and I love nothing more than inventing delicious ways to de-flour my storecupboards and relieve my fridge of jams, curds and other spreads. 

The dough must be fine and crumbly though, and the recipe that converted me is from lovely Israeli chef, Amir Batito. It was light, biscuity and melt-in-the-mouth crumbly. More like French patisserie than the hefty versions I’d been dissing.

I still cannot abide traditional poppy seed though. This year's filling was inspired by a jar of fig jam in my fridge, which I thought would work well with the sesame smoothness of halva. But how to make the crumbly confection spreadable? Answer: make your own version. Four parts tahini and one part honey stirred together and you have a halva spread perfect for filling hamantaschen. Serve with a few dried figs, crumbled halva and a cup of rose tea for a Middle Eastern Purim treat worthy of Queen Esther’s Persian palace.