Fancy Raspberry Hamentashen (easy!)
Super easy, yet fancy, raspberry hamentashen look almost too pretty to eat! Easy to make and delicious, these are great for misloach manot!
A few years ago I had the idea to cover my hamentashen in chocolate like the famous Roldin Sufganiyot. It was always a hit, but I still kept going back to the classics (raspberry jam) again and again.
This year I was creating a Valentines Day video for a client and stumbled upon these insanely delicious raspberry flavoured pink chocolates. I knew I HAD to try my raspberry hamentashen covered in raspberry chocolate and it didn’t disappoint! If you can’t find raspberry chocolate locally, then feel free to use ruby chocolate or even white chocolate! It will adjust the taste a bit, but the wow factor will still be there 🙂
For these fancy raspberry hamentashen I like to use my classic super easy hamentashen recipe. I fill them with raspberry jam (jelly for the Americans 😉 and decorate with pink raspberry chocolate and freeze dried raspberries.
So, in Israel they don’t sell freeze dried fruit yet – it’s not readily available anyway. But I knew I wanted to top these raspberry hamentashen with dried raspberries. Luckily, my parents live next door and my mom owns a fruit dehydrator! Yup, like the ones they sold on TV back in the 90s. That one!
So I took a handful of frozen raspberries (wouldn’t dream of using fresh when they’re so hard to come by here) and dehydrated them for a couple of days.
If you are in Israel and don’t have a dehydrator 😉 I have two options for you. You can order freeze dried raspberries on iHerb, orrrr you can skip them and top with sprinkles!
Usually you’ll find the recipes I share on my blog are made with ingredients that are easy to find or that you already have in your pantry. So this is an exception to the rule…
For the hamentashen themselves, you should have everything you need. For the decorations, I admit it may be trickier, but if you can get these things, yummmm, it’s worth it.
- 1 recipe of Classic Hamentashen
- Raspberry flavoured Pink Chocolate, or ruby chocolate
- Freeze dried raspberries, or sprinkles
- Follow the easy instructions to make and bake your hamentashen.
- Then melt your chocolate in the microwave or over a bain Marie.
- Dip your cooled hamentashen into the chocolate and cover completely.
- Top with dried raspberries and let set.
Smores Hamentashen from my friend Dee’s blog One Sarcastic Baker.
Lemon Meringue Hamentashen from The Kosher Dinner Lady.
Fancy Raspberry Hamentashen (easy!)
Recipe details
Ingredients
- 2 eggs
- 1/2 cup oil
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 2 1/4 cups flour plus extra as needed
- 1/2 Tbsp baking powder
- 1/4 tsp salt
Filling
- rasberry jam or any other filling of your choice
Decoration
- 1 cup raspberry flavored pink chocolate or ruby chocolate chips
- 1 Tablespoon freeze dried raspberries or sprinkles
Instructions
- I a large mixing bowl lightly beat 2 eggs with a whisk, add ½ cup of oil, ¾ cup of sugar and 1 tsp vanilla, mix well.
- Add 2 ¼ cups of flour, ½ Tblsp baking powder and ¼ tsp of salt. Mix until dough forms.
- If the dough is very sticky to the touch add about 1 Tablespoon of flour at a time. The dough should not be dry, so do not add too much.
- Roll out the dough between two pieces of lightly floured parchment paper until about 1/2 inch thick and cut out circles using a cookie cutter or the top of a drinking glass.
- Place a teaspoon of filling in the center of each circle. Fold up the edges to form a triangle. Gently pinch sides and smooth them out.
- Bake at 350°F for 10 minutes. Let cool on a wire rack.
- Melt chocolate in a microwave safe bowl in 15 second incraments, stirring well in between each 15 seconds. When the chocolate is mostly melted, DO NOT place back in the microwave, just mix well with a spoon until completely melted.
- Dip hamentashens one at a time into the melted chocolate until completely covered.
- Top each hamentashen with a sprinkle of the dried raspberries while the chocoalte is still wet.
- Let the hamentashens set on a baking sheet or wire rack until set to the touch.
Comments
Share your thoughts, or ask a question!
Very interesting! Actually if you walk down the aisle of just about every American supermarket or grocery store, jam is what is on the shelves along with jelly and marmalade. Jam is produced using the entire fruit. Jelly is using juice of the fruit only (hence a clear end product.) Marmalade is made with citrus, fruit, juice and peel. My personal jam favorites, cherry, raspberry, strawberry, apricot, pineapple. Just looked at your basic hamentashen recipe and now you throw this into the mix . . . The raspberry chocolate will have to wait a bit, available, yet a bit expensive, yet certainly will give this a try. Love the raspberry on raspberry flavors and textures with the freeze dried bits sprinkled on top. I like it. Pinning and will get back to you when I try them with my group. 💕 Thanks for sharing.
What happens if you add raspberry extract or oil (i.e. Loran's) to the chocolate?