February recipe: Topfenstrudel
Topfenstrudel
is an Austrian dessert with a curd cheese filling interleaved with layers of
thin strudel pastry. I don’t think it’s
particularly a winter dessert, except that I heard about it from someone who
had been ski-ing in Austria, so it’s associated in my mind with snow and
mountains. I’ve adapted the filling to
use cream cheese, which is more easily available in the UK than curd cheese.
I
rolled the pastry for this recipe out to about 15 inches by 20 inches (about 35 cm by 50 cm), and in
theory it should be thinner than that if you can manage it. I stopped at this because the filling is
fairly liquid, and I was concerned about it leaking out through breaks in the
pastry if the pastry was any thinner. I
gather that strudel pastry is supposed to be rolled out so thin that you can
read a newspaper through it. Not sure I
am ever going to manage that, but there’s the standard to aspire to!
Topfenstrudel
Strudel pastry
4 oz
(approx 125 g) plain flour
1
Tablespoon (1 x 15 ml spoon) vegetable oil
4
Tablespoons (4 x 15 ml spoons) water
0.5
teaspoon (0.5 x 5 ml spoon) white wine vinegar
Filling
1 oz
(approx 25 g) butter
1 oz
(approx 25 g) light brown soft sugar
4 oz
(approx 125 g) cream cheese
1
egg, separated
Rind
of 1 lemon
2
fluid ounces (approx 50 ml) single cream
To make the pastry
Mix
the flour with the vegetable oil, vinegar and water to make a soft dough.
Wrap
in cling film and leave to stand for 30 minutes to 1 hour, while you make the
filling.
To make the filling
Cream
the butter and sugar until light and fluffy
Beat
in the cream cheese, egg yolk and lemon rind.
Stir
in the cream.
Beat
the egg white until stiff. Fold into the
cream cheese mixture.
To assemble the strudel
Grease
a large baking sheet.
Roll
out the pastry on a floured work surface as thinly as possible, aiming for an
approximately rectangular shape. I
rolled this pastry quantity out to about 15 inches by 20 inches (about 35 cm by
50 cm).
Brush
the pastry with melted butter.
Spread
the filling evenly over the pastry, leaving a margin of about 1 inch (approx
2.5 cm) round all the edges.
Starting
from one of the short sides, fold the 1 inch pastry margin over the filling.
Fold
the 1 inch pastry margin over the filling along each of the long sides.
Starting
from the first short side, roll up the strudel like a Swiss roll. When you get to the other short side, moisten
the last 1 inch pastry margin with water and seal it to the roll so that the
filling is fully enclosed.
Very
gently lift the strudel roll onto the greased baking tray.
Brush
the top of the roll with milk.
Bake
in a hot oven at about 180 C for about 30 minutes until golden. Don’t worry if some of the filling leaks out
through one or two breaks in the pastry; it seems to set quite quickly as it cooks
and this seals the break, so most of the filling stays in the strudel.
Serve
hot, cut into slices, with cream or ice cream.
I cut this into six servings.
2 comments:
I never saw a recipe with white wine vinegar in the pastry. Learn something new every day. :)
I can never get the pastry to roll out thin enough - fear of it ripping, I think.
Constance - I don't think I have, either. Cider vinegar would be an alternative. Yes, I was worried that the pastry would rip if I rolled it out much thinner. I may try being a bit braver another time.
Post a Comment