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Recipe: Drunken cherry chocolate hamantaschen

A (not too) tipsy treat that's perfect for Purim

March 20, 2024 14:00
chocolate cherry hamantashen-min lo
Photo: Baila Gluck
2 min read

Cook: 12 - 14 minutes

Serves: Makes: 60 - 70 cookies

"Hamantashen memories" from Naomi Ross, author of The Giving Table by Naomi Ross 

"As a kid in my mother’s house, I’d use a drinking glass to cut out my rounds of dough for hamantashen, the traditional triangular Jewish cookies made for the holiday of Purim. 

Dipping the rim in flour, it was a careful practice of cutting as close together as possible, leaving the least amount of scraps behind (the fewer scraps to re-roll, the better – the dough tends to get tougher with each redo).  

The tradition to give mishloach manot – festive food gifts – on Purim spurred my desire for fun after-school projects in the days leading up to the holiday. For a young person, taking ownership of preparing a package to give to others was a momentous experience. It required me to think about someone else and how to make it special for them. We kept it simple – traditional apricot or prune filled. No frills, but delicious all the same.

Ingredients

Dough

180 ml(3/4 cup)flavourlessoil

225g (1 cup) caster sugar

3 eggs

60ml (¼ cup) milk or soy/oat milk

1½ tsp pure vanilla extract

450g (3 ½ cups) flour, plus more for flouring

85g (2/3 cup) cocoa powder

4 tsp baking powder

¼ tsp salt

Drunken Cherry Filling

340g (12oz) frozen dark pitted cherries, thawed

80ml (1/3 cup) dry red wine

50g (¼ cup) sugar

1 tbsp cornflour

¼ tsp cinnamon

Special Equipment

Rolling pin