Cheese Blintzes

Total Time
1 hour 15 minutes
Rating
4(42)
Comments
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Ingredients

Yield:About 10 blintzes

    For the Filling

    • 16ounces farmer cheese
    • 1large egg
    • ¼cup sugar
    • cup matzo meal or fine dry unseasoned bread crumbs
    • 1tablespoon vanilla extract

    For the Batter

    • ¾cup whole milk
    • 8large eggs
    • ¾cup durum (semolina) flour
    • 2tablespoons cake flour
    • 2tablespoons vegetable oil
    • Nonstick vegetable oil spray
    • 2 to 3tablespoons butter, or as needed
    • Sour cream, for serving, optional
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (10 servings)

258 calories; 15 grams fat; 5 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 6 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 17 grams carbohydrates; 0 grams dietary fiber; 8 grams sugars; 13 grams protein; 226 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. For the Filling

    1. Step 1

      For the filling: In a medium bowl, combine farmer cheese, egg, sugar, matzo meal or bread crumbs and vanilla. Using a fork, mix well; set aside.

    2. Step 2

      For the batter: In a large bowl, combine milk, eggs, durum flour, cake flour, vegetable oil and ¼ cup cold water. Whisk until batter is smooth.

    3. Step 3

      Place a 9-inch well-seasoned crepe pan or heavy skillet over medium-low heat. When pan is well heated, film it lightly with nonstick cooking spray. Allow pan to heat again for a few moments, then ladle ½ cup batter into skillet and tilt in all directions to spread batter thinly and evenly. Cook until underside is pale yellow-white and edges lift easily from bottom of pan, about 3 minutes. Adjust heat as needed if crepe is cooking too quickly or slowly.

    4. Step 4

      Use a spatula to flip crepe, then cook other side for an additional 2 to 3 minutes. (The first crepe often tears or folds; there will still be enough batter for 10 crepes.) Transfer crepe to a plate, and repeat with remaining batter to make 10 crepes.

    5. Step 5

      Place a crepe on a work surface and spread 3 to 4 tablespoons filling on one side. Starting from filled side, roll blintz and stack on a serving plate or in a container seam side down. At this point blintzes may be covered and refrigerated for up to 24 hours.

  2. For the Batter

    1. Step 6

      To serve, place a large sauté pan or skillet over medium heat. Melt a tablespoon butter and add as many blintzes as possible without crowding pan. Cook until golden brown on bottoms and filling is heated through, about 3 minutes. Turn and cook other sides until golden brown, about 2 more minutes. Remove from heat and keep warm; repeat with remaining crepes and filling. Serve immediately, seam side down, garnished with sour cream, if desired.

Ratings

4 out of 5
42 user ratings
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Comments

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I cooked them à la Veselka --folded over, not wrapped-- and they were perfectly acceptable. One problem, and it's a biggee: pretty sure this recipe should have asked for one teaspoon of vanilla, not a tbls. I stopped at about half a tablespoon and the vanilla flavor is still distractingly pronounced. Compared to a regular blintz recipe this recipe is inferior.

We like savory, so for the filling I omitted the sugar and vanilla and added a couple of cloves of raw garlic pushed through a garlic press plus a squirt of sriracha and a big grind of black pepper. In addition, because my food co-op's farmer's cheese includes no salt, I had to add some. Other than that rather major change, I followed the recipe. The result was, for us savory-lovers, delicious in the extreme.

I used homemade Ricotta and added some sliced strawberries. Tried to emulate what my mother made 50 yrs ago and it comes very close. Put more marinated stawberries on top after baking in well buttered dish.

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Credits

Adapted from ‘The Veselka Cookbook’ by Tom Birchard with Natalie Danford (St. Martin’s Press, 2009)

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