The Cookie Recipe You'll Find in Every Midwestern Cookie Tin (2024)

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Shauna Sever

Shauna Sever

Shauna is the author of 3 cookbooks. She is a contributor for The Splendid Table, and has been featured on many other TV and media outlets. She lives with her husband + two children outside Chicago. Her book, Midwest Made, will be published in Fall 2019.

updated Feb 3, 2020

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The Cookie Recipe You'll Find in Every Midwestern Cookie Tin (1)

This kolacky recipe takes advantage of the lightness of a cream cheese dough, and combines it with a scratch-made apricot filling with a tiny bit of orange blossom water.

Makesabout 4 dozen kolackyPrep45 minutesCook45 minutes

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The Cookie Recipe You'll Find in Every Midwestern Cookie Tin (2)

One of the first things people mention when you talk about Christmas baking Midwest-style is kolacky. Like its Jewish cousin rugelach, kolacky starts with an easy cream cheese dough and is filled with various fillings, usually fruity ones, but they are simpler to form, and they look so pretty tucked into cookie tins.

My kolacky recipe takes advantage of the ease and lightness of a cream cheese dough, and combines it with a scratch-made apricot filling woken up with a tiny bit of orange blossom water — infinitely more flavorful than a canned filling.

Lekvar is a coarse, thick jam with Hungarian roots, and works beautifully as a filling for kolacky, kolache, cookies, and pastries of just about any origin. This recipe makes a lot, but any leftovers freeze beautifully. This same method can be used for dried cherries, prunes, and figs, adjusting the sugar, acid, and flavorings to taste to suit the sweetness of the fruit.

Buy Shauna’s Book: Midwest Made: Big, Bold Baking from the Heartland, $27

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Apricot and Orange Blossom Kolacky

This kolacky recipe takes advantage of the lightness of a cream cheese dough, and combines it with a scratch-made apricot filling with a tiny bit of orange blossom water.

Prep time 45 minutes

Cook time 45 minutes

Makes about 4 dozen kolacky

Ingredients

For the apricot and orange blossom lekvar (makes about 2 1/2 cups):

  • 1 pound

    dried apricots

  • 2/3 cup

    granulated sugar

  • 1 tablespoon

    freshly squeezed lemon juice

  • Pinch fine sea salt

  • 1 to 1 1/2 teaspoons

    orange blossom water, to taste

  • 1/2 teaspoon

    vanilla extract

For the dough:

  • 4 ounces

    full-fat cream cheese, at room temperature

  • 1 stick

    unsalted butter, at room temperature

  • 3 tablespoons

    granulated sugar

  • 1 1/2 teaspoons

    finely grated orange zest

  • 1 teaspoon

    vanilla extract

  • 1/2 teaspoon

    almond extract

  • 1/2 teaspoon

    fine sea salt

  • 1 cup

    unbleached all-purpose flour, spooned and leveled, plus more for dusting

  • Powdered sugar, for dusting

For the filling:

  • 1 cup

    Apricot and Orange Blossom Lekvar

Instructions

Make the levkar filling:

  1. In a 3-quart lidded saucepan, place the apricots and cover with them water by about 1 inch. Cover, place over high heat, and bring to a boil. Boil for 5 minutes. Remove the lid, add the sugar, lemon juice, and salt, and stir to combine. Replace the lid. Lower the heat to medium-low and simmer, stirring occasionally, until the fruit is softened, about 20 minutes.

  2. Remove the lid from the pan and continue to simmer, stirring often, until the excess liquid has evaporated and the lekvar becomes thick and jammy and breaks down easily with a fork, about 10 minutes more. Transfer the contents of the pan to a food processor or blender. Blend until nearly smooth. Add 1 teaspoon of the orange blossom water and the vanilla. Blend for 30 seconds more. Taste, adding more orange blossom water, if you like. Pour the lekvar into a heatproof container and let cool uncovered at room temperature. Cover tightly and refrigerate for up to 3 weeks, or freeze for up to 1 year.

Prepare the dough:

  1. In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat together the cream cheese, butter, and granulated sugar on medium-high speed until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes. Add the orange zest, vanilla, almond extract, and salt, and beat for 1 minute more. Reduce the speed to low and gradually stir in the flour. To avoid overmixing, when a few streaks of flour remain finish mixing the dough by hand. Line a work surface with plastic wrap and turn out the dough onto it. Gently pat the dough into a rectangle and wrap tightly. Chill at least 2 hours, or overnight.

  2. Position an oven rack to the center of the oven and preheat it to 350°F. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

  3. To shape the cookies, lightly dust a work surface with flour. Roll out the dough to a rough 13x17-inch rectangle, about 1/16-inch thick (you need a thin dough to get crisp cookies that don’t unfurl while baking). Re-flour the surface as needed to prevent sticking. Use a pizza cutter to trim 1/2 inch from all 4 sides to make a clean, straight-edged 12x16-inch rectangle. From there, cut the dough into 4 dozen (2-inch) squares. Place 1 scant teaspoon of filling in the center of each square, spreading the filling across the square in a diagonal strip. Focusing on the 2 bare corners of the square, fold 1 over the filling, then fold the opposite corner on top, pinching gently to seal.

  4. Place the cookies about 1 1/2 inches apart on the prepared baking sheets, 2 dozen to a sheet. (Place 1 sheet of cookies in the refrigerator while you bake the first.) Bake until lightly golden at the bottom and edges, about 20 minutes in total, rotating the sheet 180 degrees halfway through the baking time. Let the cookies cool briefly on the baking sheet before transferring them to wire racks to cool completely. Dust generously with powdered sugar.

Recipe Notes

Storage: Store cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days.

Reprinted with permission from MIDWEST MADE © 2019 by Shauna Sever, Running Press.

This recipe is a part Shauna Sever’s Week of Desserts.You can find all the recipes here.

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The Cookie Recipe You'll Find in Every Midwestern Cookie Tin (2024)

FAQs

What are the 7 methods of cookies? ›

For example, there are drop, icebox, bar, sheet, cut out, pressed, rolled, molded or wafer. Let's take a minute to look at these methods.

What ingredient makes a cookie chewy? ›

Cornstarch gives the cookies that ultra soft consistency we all love. Plus, it helps keep the cookies beautifully thick. We use the same trick when making shortbread cookies. Egg yolk: Another way to promise a super chewy chocolate chip cookie is to use an extra egg yolk.

Which product of the reaction is responsible for making the cookies rise? ›

The rise: At about 212 degrees Fahrenheit, the water in the dough turns into steam. The cookie starts to rise as the vapors push through the dough. Eventually, the baking soda or powder starts to break down into carbon dioxide gas, which raise up the cookie farther.

What are the 3 main types of cookies explain each? ›

Here are the 4 main types of cookies:
  • Session cookies. These are temporary web cookies that are only present as long as your web browser stays open or your session is active. ...
  • Persistent cookies. ...
  • Third-party cookies. ...
  • First-party cookies. ...
  • User experience. ...
  • Advertising and marketing. ...
  • Analytics and web optimization.
May 22, 2023

What are the 7 basic ingredients in all cookies? ›

What are the 7 basic baking ingredients?
  • Flour.
  • Raising Agent.
  • Salt.
  • Fats & Dairy.
  • Add-Ins.
  • Water.

What is the secret ingredient to keep cookies soft? ›

Light corn syrup is another ingredient that you can add to cookie dough that will help it stay softer longer. The corn syrup you buy at the grocery store is not the high-fructose corn syrup that soft drinks are made with; it's a sugar that is liquid at room temperature and helps other sugars say liquid at high heat.

What makes cookies fluffier? ›

Room temperature butter is just the right consistency to incorporate air when it's creamed with sugar. These trapped air pockets result in risen, fluffy cookies. If the butter is any warmer, it won't incorporate enough air and your cookies will have less rise.

What makes cookies soft vs crispy? ›

Soft cookies have a water concentration of 6% or higher – moisture being the variable in texture. To make cookies crispy, add less liquid or bake it in the oven for longer to dry out the dough.

What is the secret to making cookies? ›

The key is to always use top-quality ingredients as they'll result in a better cookie; it really is that simple.
  • Always use butter.
  • Choose the right sugar.
  • Choose the right flour.
  • Check your flour is in date.
  • Choose the right kind of chocolate.
  • Cream the butter and sugar.
  • Beat in the eggs.
  • Fold in the flour.

What are cookies for beginners? ›

An HTTP cookie stores information in a user's web browser. Web servers generate cookies and send them to browsers, which then include the cookies in future HTTP requests.

How to create cookies in Java? ›

Using Cookies in Java

To make a cookie, create an object of Cookie class and pass a name and its value. To add cookie in response, use addCookie(Cookie) method of HttpServletResponse interface. To fetch the cookie, getCookies() method of Request Interface is used.

Why do my cookies taste weird? ›

The ingredients you used could be the culprit – using different sugars, melted butter, baking powder or baking soda can alter a cookie's texture and taste.

Why are my cookies gritty? ›

If you don't cream butter and sugar long enough, it will still be gritty and dense, which may result in grainy cookies that don't puff or spread. Meanwhile, if you cream butter and sugar for too long, it will introduce too much air, causing your cookies to potentially puff excessively and become cakey while baking.

What happens if you only use brown sugar in cookies? ›

Brown sugar, meanwhile, is dense and compacts easily, creating fewer air pockets during creaming—that means that there's less opportunity to entrap gas, creating cookies that rise less and spread more. With less moisture escaping via steam, they also stay moist and chewy.

What are 7 layer cookies made of? ›

What Are Seven-Layer Cookies? They are called Seven-Layer Cookies because there are seven basic ingredients that are layered one by one in the order in which they appear in the recipe below: butter, graham cracker crumbs, coconut, chocolate chips, butterscotch chips, sweetened condensed milk, and chopped pecans.

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