Aylenish Rugelach With Orange, Walnuts and Cinnamon Recipe (2024)

By Julia Moskin

Aylenish Rugelach With Orange, Walnuts and Cinnamon Recipe (1)

Total Time
1 hour 30 minutes
Rating
4(73)
Notes
Read community notes

Once upon a time, good Jewish housewives (known as balaboostas in Yiddish) all knew how to make pastries like strudel, rugelach and schnecken from scratch, using a cream-cheese-enriched dough supposedly stretched thin enough that you could read the newspaper through it. This was a day’s work, but with the arrival of good-quality puff pastry on the market, modern bakers can quickly (“aylenish” in Yiddish) produce this close cousin: a sweet, fragrant filling of nuts, spices and dried fruit wrapped in rich dough. Orange marmalade gives a tart undertone (and the faintest suggestion of a Christmas fruitcake), but apricot or raspberry jam are also considered classic.

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Ingredients

Yield:About 4 dozen

  • ¼cup plus 2 tablespoons/55 grams golden raisins
  • ¼cup/60 milliliters rum (optional)
  • 2tablespoons/25 grams granulated sugar, plus more for sprinkling
  • 2tablespoons/30 grams dark brown sugar
  • ¼teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • teaspoon ground nutmeg, preferably fresh
  • ½cup/60 grams chopped toasted walnuts
  • Salt
  • 1cup/340 grams orange marmalade
  • About 1 pound/500 grams puff pastry
  • 1egg yolk, whisked with a splash of milk or water

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (48 servings)

91 calories; 4 grams fat; 1 gram saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 2 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 12 grams carbohydrates; 0 grams dietary fiber; 7 grams sugars; 1 gram protein; 52 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Aylenish Rugelach With Orange, Walnuts and Cinnamon Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Soak raisins in rum and ½ cup very hot water. In a medium bowl, combine both sugars, cinnamon, nutmeg, walnuts and a pinch of salt. Drain raisins (discard soaking liquid) and mix them into sugar mixture. In a saucepan, melt marmalade until runny. Remove any large chunks orange peel.

  2. Step

    2

    Cut about a 4-ounce piece of puff pastry and roll out on a floured board into a rectangle, about 17 inches by 7½ inches. The pastry should be thin and supple enough to drape, but not so thin that holes start to appear when rolling.

  3. Step

    3

    Brush a 2½-inch-wide stripe of marmalade down the long center of the rectangle. Sprinkle marmalade with filling and fold top edge down over filling. Brush the top of filled section with marmalade and sprinkle marmalade with filling. Fold bottom edge up over the filling to make a kind of flattened roll; do not press. Cut in half crosswise and refrigerate rolls for 20 to 30 minutes, or freeze for 10 to 15 minutes.

  4. Step

    4

    Heat oven to 375 degrees; use the convection setting if you have it. Cut rolls across into ½-inch-wide slices. Place slices, seam side down, on baking sheet lined with parchment paper or nonstick liners. Brush tops with egg yolk and sprinkle with sugar.

  5. Bake 20 to 25 minutes, until golden brown and puffed. Let cool slightly before removing to a cooling rack. Meanwhile, repeat with remaining pastry and filling. Store at room temperature in layers separated by parchment paper, in airtight containers.

Ratings

4

out of 5

73

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

Kim G.

It really doesn't take all day to make the basic rugelach dough. Find the basic recipe on the NYT cooking web site. Make it in the evening in your food processer or with an electric mixer; divide into 4 balls, wrap in plastic and put it in the frig over night. In the morning you are ready to go. The filling in this recipe is delicious and different.

Meg

Walnuts add body, but it works fine without walnuts. Parchment or wax paper is a must

gracecl

Used dried currants soaked in brandy instead of raisins. Wonderful.

Chantelle

Used soaked dates instead of marmalade & pecans. Used coarse sugar on top

Judy L.

This recipe sounds delicious, but I wonder the real yield. Using 1/4 of puff pastry per batch, at 17" wide, and cut into 1/2" pieces, that's ~30 pieces per batch, X 4 batches = 10 dozen, not 4 dozen. Either the pieces you cut are wider than 1/2", the original puff pastry length should be less than 17" wide, or some other reason. I cook a lot and help a cookbook author with recipe write-up, so I get frustrated with sloppy recipes, which don't help amateur cooks.

Dr. Ichiban

I think the recipe intends you to roll it longways, up the 17” length, and cut it into 1/2 inch pieces across the 7 1/2 inch width. This would result in 15 pieces per 1/4 of puff pastry, so 60 pieces total. The yield would be about 5 dozen, rather than the recipe’s stated 4 dozen, or your calculated 10 dozen. Hope this helps!

Meg

Walnuts add body, but it works fine without walnuts. Parchment or wax paper is a must

Kim G.

It really doesn't take all day to make the basic rugelach dough. Find the basic recipe on the NYT cooking web site. Make it in the evening in your food processer or with an electric mixer; divide into 4 balls, wrap in plastic and put it in the frig over night. In the morning you are ready to go. The filling in this recipe is delicious and different.

Roni Jordan

Agree completely. I have a dried fruit filling left over from a Harvest tart recipe and plan to use it with my traditional rugelach cream-cheese dough. Easy!

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Aylenish Rugelach With Orange, Walnuts and Cinnamon Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What's the difference between schnecken and rugelach? ›

Some people make Rugelach that looks like Schnecken but it's the dough that really makes the difference. Schnecken is made with sour cream, whereas Rugelach is made with Cream Cheese.

How do you keep rugelach fresh? ›

Storage: Rugelach will keep at room temperature for 3 days (wrapped tightly) or 1 to 2 weeks longer in the refrigerator. Freezer: Freeze the discs of dough for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator before proceeding with the recipe. Or freeze the shaped Rugelach cookies for up to 3 months.

What is rugelach dough made of? ›

Satiny soft dough made with butter, cream cheese, and sour cream wrapped around a filling of sugar, nuts, and dried fruit: that's rugelach, which in Yiddish means "little twists." Beloved in many Jewish communities, these cookies flake like a Danish or croissant with its buttery flavor the perfect foil for the sweet ...

What is a fun fact about rugelach? ›

These croissant-shaped treats are believed to have originated in the Jewish communities of Poland and are also popular in Israel as well as the Jewish diaspora. They make the perfect treat for Rosh Hashanah because we eat sweets in the hopes of a sweet new year.

What does rugelach mean in Yiddish? ›

Yiddish for “little twists” or “rolled things,” rugelach have become a popular dessert in America, enjoyed by Jews and non-Jews alike. They descend from an Eastern European pastry known as kipfel, which is a croissant-like cookie made with flour, butter, sour cream, sugar, and yeast.

What is the difference between American and Israeli rugelach? ›

Rugelach are a traditional Ashkenazi Jewish treat made from a sweet yeast dough folded over a filling of your choice. Although the American version uses Cream Cheese for the dough, these Israeli-style Rugelach are made from a yeasted enriched dough that is quite similar to a Babka.

What is the difference between babka and rugelach? ›

Babka is a yeast bread that is rolled with chocolate filling. It's usually made in a loaf pan. Rugelach is rolled like croissants. The main differences between the two of them are their shape and the type of dough they use.

Does rugelach freeze well? ›

You can freeze rugelach pastries before or after baking them. Before baking, you can freeze them on a parchment-lined baking sheet until frozen. Then transfer them to a freezer-safe bag and freeze for up to 3 months.

What does rugelach symbolize? ›

Historically, Rugelach is said to be linked with the Viennese Kipfel, crescent shaped pastries which commemorate the lifting of the Turkish siege in the Battle of Vienna. Rugelach is also similar in shape to the French croissant, which may be a descendant of the popular sweet pastry.

What ethnicity is rugelach? ›

Rugelach (/ˈruːɡələx/ ROO-gəl-əkh; Yiddish: ראגעלעך, or Yiddish: רוגעלעך, romanized: rugelekh and Hebrew: רוגלך rōgalaḵ) is a filled baked confection originating in the Jewish communities of Poland.

What is similar to rugelach? ›

Rugelach and schnecken are the subject of much confusion in the world of Jewish baking. They are both treats made from the combination of cookie or yeast dough and are filled with different ingredients, like ground nuts, raisins, and jam.

How long does rugelach last in the fridge? ›

How long will my Rugelach last? Our Rugelach are very hearty, they stay fresh unrefrigerated for about three days. However, If you want them to last longer, putting them in a plastic bag in the fridge will keep them fresh for from 8 to 10 days.

Is rugelach Ashkenazi? ›

Rugelach (or Ruglulach) is a Jewish pastry of Ashkenazi origin and is made with a cream cheese dough and different fillings that can include raisins, walnuts, cinnamon, chocolate, or apricot jam preserve.

Where did schnecken come from? ›

Schnecken are a type of sweet bun or roll of German origin. They typically contain raisins.

What is a German sweet roll called? ›

"Schnecken means “snails,” which is what these coiled buns resemble. They are much stickier, puffier, gooier and generally more over the top than ordinary Cinnamon Buns.

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