Frugal Food Thursday: Double Chocolate Hamantaschen
Welcome to Frugal Food Thursday! If you have a great frugal recipe, please link up below!
Last Sunday was the Jewish holiday of Purim, which celebrates the events of the Scroll of Esther. It's celebrated by reading the scroll, dressing up in costumes, eating (and drinking!) at a festive meals, and sharing gifts of food - especially hamantaschen.
Hamantaschen, or "Haman's pockets," are three-cornered filled cookies named for the villain of the Purim story. Traditionally, they're filled with poppyseed or prune filling.
But I had a chocolate hankering when I was making mine, and I wanted to use up a free Hershey's chocolate bar from CVS. (What a deal!) So, I decided to add cocoa powder to the dough and use the chocolate bar as the filling - double chocolate hamantaschen. Yum!
DOUBLE CHOCOLATE HAMANTASCHEN
2 eggs
1/2 cup oil
3/4 cup sugar
1 tsp vanilla
3 cups flour
1/2 tbsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa
1 4-oz Hershey's chocolate bar
Beat the eggs. Add in the oil, sugar, and vanilla.
In a separate bowl, mix the flour, baking powder, salt, and cocoa together. Add the dry ingredients a little at a time to the wet ingredients, beating at first with a wooden spoon and kneading with your hands when the dough becomes stiff, until all the dry ingredients have been incorporated.
On a floured board, roll out a portion of the dough with a rolling pin. Using a 4-inch diameter cookie cutter (I used a circular quart-sized container), cut out rounds. Fill the middle of each round with one square from the chocolate bar, broken into small pieces. Fold up the hamantaschen by folding up the bottom until it touches the filling, then the left side, and then the right, so that it forms a triangle. Add the unused dough back to the rest of the dough. Continue until all the dough has been used, approximately 14-16 hamantaschen.
Bake at 350 degrees on a greased cookie sheet for 15 minutes. Remove from the oven and allow to cool on a wire rack.
There are lots more cheap recipes posted here at Frugal Follies. Click here for the list!
Got a great frugal recipe? Link below to your actual post, not your main page. Please only link up recipes and other food-related posts; contest entries and other posts are not allowed and will be deleted. I'd appreciate it if you would link back to Frugal Food Thursday as well!
For more great recipes, please visit the bloggers listed on the left sidebar under Food Linkups. There are lots of great recipes on each blog and I'm sure you'll find some new favorites!
Last Sunday was the Jewish holiday of Purim, which celebrates the events of the Scroll of Esther. It's celebrated by reading the scroll, dressing up in costumes, eating (and drinking!) at a festive meals, and sharing gifts of food - especially hamantaschen.
Hamantaschen, or "Haman's pockets," are three-cornered filled cookies named for the villain of the Purim story. Traditionally, they're filled with poppyseed or prune filling.
But I had a chocolate hankering when I was making mine, and I wanted to use up a free Hershey's chocolate bar from CVS. (What a deal!) So, I decided to add cocoa powder to the dough and use the chocolate bar as the filling - double chocolate hamantaschen. Yum!
DOUBLE CHOCOLATE HAMANTASCHEN
2 eggs
1/2 cup oil
3/4 cup sugar
1 tsp vanilla
3 cups flour
1/2 tbsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa
1 4-oz Hershey's chocolate bar
Beat the eggs. Add in the oil, sugar, and vanilla.
In a separate bowl, mix the flour, baking powder, salt, and cocoa together. Add the dry ingredients a little at a time to the wet ingredients, beating at first with a wooden spoon and kneading with your hands when the dough becomes stiff, until all the dry ingredients have been incorporated.
On a floured board, roll out a portion of the dough with a rolling pin. Using a 4-inch diameter cookie cutter (I used a circular quart-sized container), cut out rounds. Fill the middle of each round with one square from the chocolate bar, broken into small pieces. Fold up the hamantaschen by folding up the bottom until it touches the filling, then the left side, and then the right, so that it forms a triangle. Add the unused dough back to the rest of the dough. Continue until all the dough has been used, approximately 14-16 hamantaschen.
Bake at 350 degrees on a greased cookie sheet for 15 minutes. Remove from the oven and allow to cool on a wire rack.
There are lots more cheap recipes posted here at Frugal Follies. Click here for the list!
Got a great frugal recipe? Link below to your actual post, not your main page. Please only link up recipes and other food-related posts; contest entries and other posts are not allowed and will be deleted. I'd appreciate it if you would link back to Frugal Food Thursday as well!
For more great recipes, please visit the bloggers listed on the left sidebar under Food Linkups. There are lots of great recipes on each blog and I'm sure you'll find some new favorites!
23 comments:
What could be better than a double chocolate hamantaschen.. Great recipe.. thanks.
I linked up a vegetarian entree for falafel that is made in the crockpot, yet it comes out crispy! Thanks for hosting..
Those look *so* yummy! I think going with chocolate was a good choice. ;) Thanks for the idea. :)
Thanks for hosting! I'm sharing my Lemon Cranberry Muffins & FAVE Breakfast Options this week.
Denise @ Creative Kitchen
Happy Thursday! I am sharing my recipe for Pureed Zucchini Soup With Sun Dried Tomato.
It will be very frugal during zucchini season!
Thanks for hosting!
Thanks for hosting! Looking forward to checking out the many links here. :) I'm sharing our latest muffin, lemon poppy seed. So yummy! Blessings, ~Lisa
These sound great! I've never had chocolate hamantaschen before...only with fruit! One of my favorite holiday desserts actually. YUM! : )
Your double chocolate treats for Purim sound wonderful!
Sunday was also the first day of spring, but that didn't keep cold weather from blowing in later, so I made some Beef Vegetable Soup with Italian Veggies to warm us a little. It was remarkable filling, as well as nutritious. Better yet, all the ingredients were in my pantry or refrigerator/freezer. No trips out to pick up anything!
Hi Laura! My recipe for this week was really frugal because it included some foraged food and some old russet potatoes that I would have thrown away! Twice cooked gnocchi with white pine salt was amazing. all the best, Alex
I really loved your post and the history of this recipe. Your Hamantaschen looks delicious and full of flavor. Thank you so much for sharing with Full Plate Thursday and please come back!
I had never heard of these until last year. I kept meaning to try them but forgot. Thanks for the reminder - I think I will give your version a try:)
Looks yummy.
Spice Up Your Life with Mexican Treats.
sounds great! thanks for sharing your great recipe! PinayMum - Mommy's Life Around...wishing you a great Friday! :)
Interesting, and anything with chocolate appeals to me. Thanks for sharing! I found you on Ann's Food on Fridays site.
this is so nice triangle shape, i will try this recipe thanks for sharing it.
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Yum! Sounds wonderful. I love chocolate.
I hope you'll stop by and share your recipe with my linky, Sweet Tooth Friday. http://alli-n-son.com/2011/03/24/chocolate-donuts/
Yum, those look good :)
I've been making these for a few months at work and had no idea what they were called! Thanks for letting me know :) I'll have to try the chocolate ones!
I know it's crazy, but the thought of making the dough chocolaty as well had never occurred to me!
I'm thinking of dozens of other fillings that might be quite delectable in these too!
these sound delicious! i love chocolate...
I love the story behind these cookies - and double chocolate anything resonates with me! These look wonderful. Thank you for sharing them with the Hearth and Soul blog hop!
I love that you put your own twist on a traditional favorite! Thanks for linking up!
Oh my - these cookies are truly beautiful, and wow, all that chocolate :). I know they were good!!
:)
ButterYum
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