Maida Heatter's Rugelach (Walnut Horns)

Total Time
1 hour 30 minutes, plus overnight refrigeration
Rating
4(102)
Comments
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Featured in: FOOD; Easy Does It

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Ingredients

Yield:About 36 cookies

    The Pastry

    • ½pound unsalted butter at room temperature
    • ½pound cream cheese at room temperature
    • ½teaspoon salt, optional
    • 2cups sifted all-purpose flour

    The Filling

    • ½cup, plus 2 tablespoons, granulated sugar
    • 3teaspoons cinnamon
    • 3tablespoons melted butter
    • ¾cup currants or raisins
    • cups walnuts, finely chopped

    The Glaze

    • 1egg yolk
    • 1teaspoon water
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (36 servings)

139 calories; 11 grams fat; 5 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 3 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 9 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 3 grams sugars; 2 grams protein; 57 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. Step 1

    Prepare the pastry the night before you are ready to cook.

  2. Step 2

    To make the pastry, put the butter, cream cheese and salt into the large bowl of an electric mixer. Beat on medium, then high speed, until the mixture is creamy and smooth. Then beat on low speed while gradually adding the flour. If the dough starts to overly coat the beaters, scrape the dough off the beaters and continue adding flour, stirring it in with the hands until thoroughly and evenly blended. The dough will be extremely sticky.

  3. Step 3

    Scrape the dough off the hands and fingers. Rinse, wash and dry the hands. Turn the dough out onto a well-floured board. Flour the hands and gather the dough into a short sausage shape. Cut this into three pieces of equal size. Flatten each piece slightly and wrap each piece in clear plastic wrap. Refrigerate overnight.

  4. Step 4

    When ready to cook, preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line two cookie sheets with aluminum foil and set aside.

  5. Step 5

    Combine the sugar and cinnamon for the filling and set aside.

  6. Step 6

    Place one ball of dough on a floured pastry cloth. Hammer the dough firmly to soften it slightly. Do not let it become warm. Quickly roll out the dough, turning it occasionally, with a floured rolling pin into a circle about 12 inches in diameter. Don't worry about a slighly uneven edge.

  7. Step 7

    Using a pastry brush, brush the dough with a tablespoon of the melted butter. Sprinkle the dough all over with one-third of the cinnamon-sugar mixture. Sprinkle with one-third of the currants or raisins and one-third of the walnuts. Roll the rolling pin lightly over the top to press the filling slightly into the dough.

  8. Step 8

    Using a long, sharp knife, cut the circle into 12 pie-shaped wedges. Roll each wedge jellyroll fashion, rolling from the outside toward the point. Do not be dismayed if some of the filling falls out. Place each roll, point side down, about one inch apart on one foil-covered cookie sheet. Repeat with a second ball of dough and then a third, filling and rolling each as indicated.

  9. Step 9

    For the glaze, beat the egg yolk with the water. Brush the top of each walnut horn lightly and evenly with the mixture.

  10. Step 10

    Place each sheet on a rack in the oven and bake for 30 minutes. Preferably at mid-point during the baking, you should reverse the sheets top to bottom and front to back, to insure even browning. When the horns are cooked, remove them with a metal spatula and transfer them to racks to cool.

Ratings

4 out of 5
102 user ratings
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Comments

This pastry is wonderful. I used it for some little hamentashen and also made the rugelach as suggested, anointing the pastry with marmalade before adding the nuts and cinnamon sugar, Easy to handle, delicious.

Try using less flour and handle the dough as little as possible. This is a very utilitarian dough and can be used for many different recipes. I've been making this recipe for about 35 years. Maida Heater personally signed her first book for me. Lovely woman. She noted that she was glad to see "the condition" of the book (choc. stained) Well used!
Play with the dough until you are happy with it. Some ingredients have "changed" since the original recipe was created

This is the BEST rugelach recipe. Following Step 1 is paramount to success. I know, because I didn't do it the first time and the result was a flat, runny pastry. I'm glad the recipe states overnight refrigeration as Step 1. Thank you

Nice recipe. Great dough. I suggest forming the 3 pieces of dough into flat rounds before refrigerating overnight since they will ultimately be rolled into circles.

I too have been making these for 40 years…the best. The dough is not sweet…but filling is. After sprinkling with filling, lightly tap the filling with a rolling pin ..helps it to stay in place. I use a pizza cutter to slice into triangles…just pick your size…then roll them up! They freeze well.

I have been making this for about 40 years, and it is, by far, the favorite rugelach of my family and friends, including my European friends. The cinnamon-walnut-currant filling has a perfect balance of flavors, and unlike jelly or fruit fillings, this does not leak out of the dough and scorch the bottom of the cookie.

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