Apple, Rosemary, & Sharp Cheddar Galette with Caramelized Shallots in a Buttery Parmesan Crust

Apple, Rosemary & Cheddar Galette | Kneading Home

Guys, less than a week till Christmas. Are you ready? Maybe you're Jewish and don't celebrate Christmas. If that's you, let me say first Happy 4th night of Hanukkah, and second, I have recently developed a crazy intense love for latkes, and for a non-jew the amount of them I've managed to get my hands on in the last week is pretty remarkable. Seriously making me question my catholic upbringing. But anyway, chances are regardless of what holiday you celebrate, you'll probably be attending some festive gatherings in the next two weeks. Lucky for you, I've got the perfect dish. 

I've had a long time fascination with sweet and savory things that don't seem like they'd fit together, but surprisingly pair quite fantastically, making you question everything you thought you knew. For me this is sharp cheddar and apples. Sure they could work together on a cheese plate, but what about all stewed up nice and steamy in a rustic galette? Even better.

For those of you who've never had the opportunity to throw together a galette, or who might not know what it is, it's basically a rustic, no-fuss, much easier version of a pie. No crimping the edges, no rolling out perfectly round measured circles, no covering the crust with tin foil (ain't no body got time for that), and no nervous transferring of a crust to a pie dish. You just mix up your dough, roll it out (and seriously the more imperfect the better here) and throw whatever kind of fillings you like inside. Fold up the edges, again imperfections here add to the rustic-ness, and pop it in the oven. No fuss. The result is handmade and charming. 

Apple, Rosemary & Cheddar Galette | Kneading Home

And the apples and cheddar? They make quite the dynamic duo. And along with toasty caramelized shallots and winter herbs this thing comes out of the oven smelling super cozy. But even though the filling is great, I still think this crust is my favorite part. It's flakey, buttery, with just a the perfect hint of pepper and parmesan. So far this season I've cooked it up for Thanksgiving, a weeknight dinner, and the holiday potluck we had last weekend. 

Apple, Rosemary & Cheddar Galette | Kneading Home

Apple, Rosemary, & Sharp Cheddar Galette with Caramelized Shallots in a Buttery Parmesan Crust
Serves 6 as an appetizer 

For the dough:
1 stick unsalted butter, cubed and frozen for 15 minutes
1 1/4 cups all purpose flour
1/4 cup cornmeal
1 tsp salt
fresh ground pepper
1/4 cup freshly grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
4-5 tbsp cold water
1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil

For the filling: 
3-4 shallots, sliced
1/4 tsp thyme
1 tbsp rosemary
1/4 tsp salt
1 giant, or 2 regular size Honeycrisp apples, peeled & sliced
1 heaping cup grated extra sharp cheddar
1 egg

Make the dough. Pulse flour, cornmeal, salt, pepper and parmesan in a food processor until combined. Add frozen butter chunks and parmesan and pulse until butter breaks up to the size of peas. Add 1/2 the water, pulse, add the other half, pulse, then add the olive oil and pulse until cohesive dough forms. Transfer the dough to a lightly floured work surface and knead 2-3 times, form into a disc, wrap in plastic, and refrigerate for 20-30 minutes and up to two days. 

Meanwhile, heat some olive oil in a small skillet, sauté shallots over medium low heat for 10-15 minutes until soft and golden brown. Set aside. Finely shop thyme and rosemary and mix with salt, set aside. 

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Assemble the galette. Cover a flat work surface with a large piece of parchment and lightly dust with flour. Roll out the dough to a 14" imperfect circle - seriously, keeping it a little uneven, with jagged edges adds to the rustic feel. Top with cheddar, leaving about 1/2 inch boarder on all sides. Top cheddar with shallots and 1/2 of the herb salt mixture. Top with apples - I layered mine in two overlapping rows but you could do any design you'd like. Sprinkle with remaining herbs. Using a bench scraper, fold uncovered edges of the galette over. Whisk egg and brush crust with a liberal amount of egg wash. Drizzle entire galette with olive oil, freshly grated parmesan, and salt & pepper. 

Transfer galette, keeping it on the parchment paper, to a large baking sheet. And cook for 50-60 minutes until the crust is golden brown. Let cool about 10 minutes and serve. 

Notes: 

  • Photos updated November 2016
  • The galette is just as great at room temperature as it is warm. 
  • Reheats best in the toaster oven. 

 

 

 

Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan!}

Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home

The man and I are hosting a little holiday potluck this weekend, as if the holidays didn't give me enough of an excuse to bake my brains out. We got our tree, decorated our tiny apartment, and washed the dog - we're super excited about it.

I discovered vegan baking several months ago and every time I experiment with a new vegan recipe I feel amazed at what great things can be made with purely whole, plant-based foods. Seriously, dates, bananas, flax seeds, coconut oil - amazing stuff. So when I found out that not one, not two, but three vegans RSVPed to our potluck the first words that entered my mind were "I'VE GOT THIS!" 

Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home
Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home
Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home

I've been working on a vegan hot chocolate that is deadly good, stay tuned. And yesterday, inspired by the 8 persimmons that have been sitting in our fruit basket for weeks (those things last forever), I veganized my favorite crumble bars by smitten kitchen. It was surprisingly easy, and minus the time it takes to peel and dice the fruit, this recipe is a breeze. 

The persimmons are subtle and sweet and the crumble is addicting to say the least. These make a great holiday potluck dish, and if you're wondering, your meat-eating, vegan-skeptical friends will never be able to tell! 

Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home
Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home
Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home
Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home
Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home
Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home
Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars {Vegan}| Kneading Home

Vegan Persimmon Pecan Crumble Bars 
Adapted from smitten kitchen
Fills a 9x13 inch pan with approximately 30 small bars 

For the crust + crumble: 
2 sticks vegan butter (I used Earth Balance) 
1 flax egg (1 tbsp flax seed meal, 3 tbsp water, 1/4 tsp baking powder)
2 cups all purpose flour 
1 cup rolled oats
1/4 cup toasted pecans, roughly chopped 
1 cup brown sugar, packed 
1/2 tsp salt 
1 tsp baking powder 
1/2 tsp cinnamon 
1/4 tsp nutmeg 

For the filling: 
10 small fuyu persimmons, (about 2.5 cups) peeled & diced 
2 tbsp lemon juice 
2 tbsp cane sugar 
1 tbsp corn starch 
1/4 tsp cinnamon 

Prep work: Chop the vegan butter into small cubes and place in the freezer for 20-30 minutes. Prepare the flax egg by whisking together flax seed meal, water, and baking powder in a small bowl, let sit for 20 minutes. 

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Line a 9x13 inch baking dish with parchment paper, making sure it covers the edges - this will make it easier to pull the bars out once their baked. Rub the parchment with excess butter or spray with coconut oil (I used Trader Joe's coconut oil spray). 

Prepare the filling. In a medium bowl, combine peeled and diced persimmons with lemon juice, sugar, corn starch, and cinnamon. Set aside. 

Prepare the crumble: In a large bowl whisk together flour, oats, pecans, sugar, salt, baking powder, cinnamon, and nutmeg. Add in cold butter cubes and flax egg. Using your hands (or a pastry cutter) to gently break up the butter pieces until the mixture looks like sand with large pea-sized butter chunks. 

Pour about 2/3 of the crumble into the bottom of the baking dish and press it down until it forms a solid crust. Top with the filling then sprinkle remaining crumble on top. Bake for 30-35 minutes. Let cool completely before cutting into squares. Refrigerate until cold and serve. 

Notes: 

  • Not vegan and want to use traditional ingredients? Use two sticks of real unsalted butter in place of the vegan butter, and 1 large egg in place of the flax egg. 
  • I think these taste best served cold, the crumble thickens and I feel like the flavors are brought out more, but you could totally serve these warm or room temperature, they will just be messier. 
  • I froze these for our party this weekend. I'll post an update, but I'd imagine they freeze great. 
  • Can't find persimmons? You can make these bars with pretty much any fruit. I've made over 4 flavors of smitten kitchen's bars, all of them varying just slightly. These things are so simple, feel free to experiment. 


Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese

Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home

The five years I spent living in NY shaped my life in so many ways. It was the city that introduced me to my husband, it educated me, and taught be how to support myself. I feel indebted to all living in NY taught me as well as all the city introduced me to including (and especially) a love for rugelach. Since moving to California, I've noticed when I mention my love for the stuff, I get a weird look followed by a "isn't that a green you put in a salad". No, that is arugula. Get it together, people. But I hear it over and over again. Apparently it's not a thing out here, because literally not a soul knows what I'm talking about. And what a shame that is. 

Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home

So if you're unfamiliar with the classic Jewish delicacy, let me introduce you. Rugelach are perfect bite-size pastry morsels. The flakey, moist dough is made of about 80% cream cheese and butter. And the fillings? Oh the fillings. Traditionally there are chocolate flavors, and jam flavors with nuts and raisins and things of that sort. Choosing between the two is always a painful process which results in me buying an entire bag of the stuff and devouring it before I make it to the subway.

Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home

There are recipes you pin and think "oh that looks good" then there are recipes you see and think "oh my god, I have to drop everything I'm doing and make this right now. Where have you been all my life?!" This is the latter. At least for me. So when I saw Deb's recipe for rugelach while thumbing through the Smitten Kitchen cookbook last year I did exactly that. 

Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home

So for Thanksgiving this year, instead of making a bunch of elaborate pies and cakes, I decided to jazz up this perfect pastry with some festive fillings - and what I created was a rugelach sampler of sorts. Chocolate Raspberry is classic, rich, bold and my favorite of the three. Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans (Nate's favorite) feels warm and cozy and tastes like Thanksgiving, and Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese is sophisticated and savory. Oh and to top it all off, this stuff is super hands-on and fun to make, if you're into that kind of thing. They transport me to my favorite Italian pastry shoppe in the east village with the added charm of being perfectly homemade. 

Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home
Homemade Rugelach 3 Ways: Chocolate Raspberry, Cinnamon Apple with Toasted Pecans, & Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese | Kneading Home

Homemade Rugulach: 3 Ways 
Makes 48 (16 of each flavor) 
adapted from The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook 

For the dough: 
1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature 
8 oz (1 brick) cream cheese, at room temperature 
1/2 tsp salt 
2 cups all purpose flour 

Chocolate Raspberry Flavor: 
1/3 cup raspberry jam 
1/2 cup (3 oz) bittersweet or dark chocolate, finely chopped 

Apple Cinnamon with Toasted Pecan Flavor: 
1/4 cup pecans, chopped and toasted 
1 granny smith apple
1.5 tbsp lemon juice 
1/4 cup sugar 
1 tsp cinnamon 

Honeyed Fig with Goat Cheese Flavor: 
1/2 cup packed (4 oz) dried black mission figs  
3 oz goat cheese, room temperature 
1-2 tbsp honey 

For the egg wash: 
1 large egg yolk 
1 tsp water 
turbinado sugar for sprinkling 

Make the dough. In a stand mixture, beat the butter and cream cheese together on high until light and fluffy. In a separate bowl whisk together salt and flour. With the mixture on low, slowly add the flour mixture to the butter mixture a little at a time until completely combined. Be careful to not over-mix. Transfer the dough to a large piece of plastic wrap and cover, forming it into a solid disc. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours (or up to 3 days). 

Prepare your fillings. Small prep bowls or ramekins come in very useful here. Heat the jam in a small saucepan until it loosens and becomes easily spreadable. Set aside. Finely chop chocolate. Chop and toast pecans. Core, peel and dice the apple into tiny 1/8 inch cubes, place in a bowl with lemon juice and toss to combine. In a separate bowl, combine cinnamon and sugar. Remove fig stems. Place figs in a food processor and pulse until finely minced. Stir goat cheese to loosen it and make it easier to spread. 

Divide your dough into 3 equal parts. Place 1/3 of the dough on a lightly floured, cold, work surface (keep the remaining refrigerated). Roll out the dough into a 12-inch circle. It doesn't matter at all if it's a perfect circle. Apply fillings (see details for each flavor below). Place a large piece of wax paper over your fillings and gently press them into the dough - this makes the rolling process slightly less messy. Using a pastry wheel or a knife, cut your dough into 16 pieces (like a pizza - see photos). Starting from the outside, tightly roll each slice. Transfer the rugelach to a baking sheet lined with parchment, then place in the freezer (or fridge if you're like me and live with a freezer so tiny not even the smallest baking sheet will fit) for 10-15 minutes. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. In a small bowl, whisk together the egg yolk and water. Remove rugelach from freeze, paint the tops with egg wash and sprinkle with turbinado sugar. Bake for 20-25 minutes until the tops just begin to brown. Continue with remaining two thirds of the dough. 

  • For the chocolate raspberry flavor: Spread an even layer of jam over the entire surface. Top with chocolate. 
     
  • For the apple cinnamon: Sprinkle cinnamon sugar over entire surface. Drain the liquid from the apples as best and possible, then top the dough with apples and pecans. 
     
  • For the honeyed fig with goat cheese: Spread a thin layer of goat cheese over the entire surface. Sprinkle with minced fig, then drizzle with honey. 

Notes:

You really can't go wrong with the fillings. Feel free to substitute or add things if the spirit moves you. Or add everything! The original recipe was a sort of "everything" flavor with jam, chocolate, pecans, and cinnamon sugar. 

Stores at room temperature for three to four days, in the fridge for about a week, and in the freezer for up to two months.