Sunday, April 11, 2010

Ham & Cheese Knishes

If you have not had them before, Knishes are wonderfully rich dense baked dumplings, usually filled with meat, potatoes or other vegetables such as broccoli or spinach. They are a traditional Jewish-American food and so are therefore usually kosher – they are made of either meat or dairy, never mixed, and don’t contain non-Kosher foods such as pork or seafood. I decided to make Ham & Cheese Knishes since they are a “twisted” version of the traditional knishes – decidedly not Kosher, just like the characters in The Believers. I have eaten MANY knishes in my life but never made them before. I was surprised at how easy they were. I improvised these – taking the traditional potato and onion filling and simply adding ham and cheese. This recipe made about 16 apple sized knishes. I had some extra dough left over, which is fine as it can be used to fix and holes in the dough.

INGREDIENTS

Dough
4 cups all purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons white vinegar
2 eggs
1 cup vegetable oil
1 cup warm water

Filling
2 cups chopped yellow onion
1 -2 Tbs of oil
2 lbs potatoes (I used red potatoes)
1 cup ham, chopped
1 ½ cups shredded cheese (I used Gruyere which worked very well, I think any good melting cheese that goes with ham would work1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon pepper
1 egg beaten (for eggwash)

Instructions

Put all dry ingredients in the bowl of a stand mixer with a dough hook (I made this with a standing mixer and it worked great. It can be done by hand, I just haven’t done it). Stir the dry ingredients together for a few seconds. Add all wet ingredients to the bowl.

Start the mixer on low for the first minute and then turn mixer to medium-high and let knead for approximately 8 minutes, until the dough is somewhat elastic.

Take the dough out of the mixer, form into a ball and divide in half. Place each half in a bowl, cover with plastic wrap, and let rest for about an hour.
While the dough is resting, you can make the filling. Sauté the onions in about 1 – 2 tablespoons of vegetable oil on medium to medium low heat for approximately 25 minutes so that the onions are dark brown. The onions should brown slowly so keep the heat low so the onions do not burn.


Peel the potatoes, cut into large chunks and put in a saucepan covered with water. Bring to a boil and cook until the potatoes are cooked through. Drain the potatoes and mash with a potato masher or potato ricer. Add sautéed onions, salt and pepper, cheese and ham.


This is how it looks all mixed together.



When the dough has rested, preheat the oven to 375 and line two baking sheets with parchment paper.

Take one ball of dough and roll it out into a long rectangle. I found that I did not need any flour on the rolling pin or rolling service, since the oil in the dough made it not too sticky.

After you have rolled out the dough as thin as you can, take it with your hands and stretch it in all directions so that it is so thin you can almost see through it. You may create holes when stretching it which is fine. Patch up with extra dough if this happens.



When the dough is stretched out, put half the potato mix in a thin line about one inch from the end of the dough.


Then take the end of the dough and roll it over the filling and keep rolling like a jelly roll. Pinch the ends of the jelly roll so that the filling will not leak through. Depending on what size you want your knishes, cut the roll about every two inches and pinch the ends together so that the filling is covered by dough. To cut the knishes from the roll I used my hands, not a knife. Turn the little knish cylinders so one pinched end is down and put an indent with your thumb in the top end. Line them up on the baking sheet so they are not touching.




Brush egg wash over knishes. Bake in over at 375 for approximately 50 minutes, until they are golden brown. They can be served warm or at room temperature. These would be delicious with deli brown mustard.

Yum!

10 comments:

  1. I love things wrapped in dough - ha ha! Makes everything taste better!

    Also love books - good luck with your blog!

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  2. These look so tasty, I have to try them. :)

    I'm also a lover of books, so I'll be checking back to see what else you post. :)

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  3. hi, friend. i think you want 4 cups of flour? not 2.

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  4. These sure look yummy. So does that boston cream pie!

    I like your idea of mixing your two loves -- cooking and books.

    One book that inspired me to to try homemade corn tortillas was from Erica Bauermeister's The School of Essential Ingredients (I hear it's now out in paperback.)

    Lillian, the main character, as a restaurant and a cooking school. The story revolves around her and her students as they learn how to cook/bake and they learn how to come to terms with things in their individual lives. I LOVED the book!

    All the best with your new venture. Brenda @ It's A Beautiful Life

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  5. Thanks Brenda I will definitely check out that book! Wendy

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  6. Wendy Wendy Wendy can't you see
    Sometimes your knishes hypnotize me
    And I just love your flashy glaze
    Guess that's why they broke and you're so paid.

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  7. Wendy, nice dishes. I will try to cook them. I found a recipe at the webpage of the Jewish Museum Buenos Aires but this one is very creative.

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  8. Thanks and I have a keen offer: How Much Should House Renovations Cost small home renovations

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