Jan 21, 2014

Carrot horn rolls

Let me start by saying these cookies have the silliest name: horn rolls. Really? At first I thought it was a mot-à-mot translation from Romanian and had a good laugh with my hubby, but it turns out that's what they call them. Still silly, but if you have a better name for them, please let me know. Until then, let's prepare our ingredients, shall we?


Ingredients:
250 g all purpose flour
125 g mascarpone
100 g caster sugar
40 g finely shredded carrot
1 large egg
5 g orange zest
3 g baking powder (roughly 1/2 teaspoon, if you are a fan on the imperial system)
pinch of salt
fruit preserve (jam) of your choice
1 egg yolk
powder sugar




Directions:
Sift the flour, salt and baking powder and set aside. In a large bowl, beat the mascarpone cheese and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the egg, the orange zest and the shredded carrot and mix well, using a rubber spatula. Gradually add the flour mixture. You have now reached the point where you need to get the spatula out of the way and start using your hand(s). Knead the dough until it's soft and does not stick to your hands, form a ball, cover it in plastic wrap and put it in the fridge for about half an hour. Meantime clean the flour from the kitchen counter, table, floor, and your pet, if you happen to own one. Preheat your oven to 180ºC (350ºF) and place rack in center. Line your tray with baking paper. You might still have some flour on your face and, of course, your clothes. I always do. Ask your husband to open than preserve jar, you won't be able to do it and ladies must not spew profanities, goddamned jars! As you can see, those 30 minutes are now long gone, so get the dough out of the fridge.

Dust some flour on a wooden surface and roll the dough into a circle 0,5 cm (0,2 inch) thick. Using a sharp knife or pastry wheel, cut the disk into 8 equal-sized wedges. If you want the horn rolls to be a little smaller (mine were close to ginormous), cut the dough into 10 wedges. Or, even better, cut the dough in half and roll each piece into a 0,3 cm thick disk. Then cut six wedges out of every disk. There's not much science here, so feel free to divide the dough as you like, keeping in mind that smaller horn rolls need to be watched closely toward the end of the baking time (smaller amounts of dough need a shorter baking time).

Put the jam (I used quince preserve on half of them and strawberry on the other half) on each triangle, not too much because it will ooze out. Starting at the wide end of the wedge, roll the dough into a crescent shape. Brush the pastry with the remaining egg yolk and bake for about 25 minutes or until the top and the bottom are golden brown. Leave to cool on a wire rack and dust with powder sugar.
As you can see in the picture above, I only have seven horn rolls in the tray. That is because I ate one before taking the picture. I am like that, you know?

Recipe slightly adapted from Laura Adamache.