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Sablé Galette Cookies

4.6

(3)

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Sablé Galette CookiesMichael Bennett Kress

This is the easiest cookie you will ever bake. It is made as one large cookie that you cut after baking. Sablé means sandblasted, which describes the grainy texture of these cookies perfectly. I saw cookies like these during my travels around Brittany in the northwest region of France, where they use enormous amounts of butter in everything they bake. For a Sephardic twist, I like to add orange blossom water to this parve version of the famous French cookie.

Storage:

Place baked cookies into an airtight container or freezer bags and store at room temperature for up to five days or freeze up to three months.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    Makes 18 bars

Ingredients

2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup (2 sticks) parve margarine, cut into tablespoons
Dash of salt
1/2 cup plus 1 teaspoon sugar, divided
2 large egg yolks, divided
1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
2 tablespoons orange blossom water (optional)
1 tablespoon cold water plus 1/2 tablespoon water, divided

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    1. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Place the flour, margarine, salt and 1/2 cup of the sugar in the bowl of a food processor fitted with a metal blade. Pulse about seven times, or until the mixture looks like sand. You can also do this by hand in a large bowl with two knives or a pastry cutter. Add 1 egg yolk, the vanilla, orange blossom water, if using, and the tablespoon of cold water. Process or mix just until the dough comes together.

    Step 2

    2. Place a large piece of parchment on the counter and grease lightly using the paper or foil wrapper that wrapped the margarine. Dump the dough onto the greased parchment and, using a rolling pin, roll into a large circle, about 9 inches in diameter.

    Step 3

    3. To decorate the edge of the cookie, using the flat end of the handle of a wooden spoon, or the tip of your index finger, make indentations one after the other all around the outside of the circle.

    Step 4

    4. Whisk together the remaining egg yolk with the 1/2 tablespoon of water. Brush the top of the cookie with egg wash. Using the tines of a fork, make one set of lines straight across the top of the cookie. Make another set about 2 inches below the first. Repeat until you have four to five sets of lines. Now slide the parchment a quarter turn to the right and make four to five additional sets of lines, each about 2 inches apart. The new set of lines should cross the first set of lines on an angle, creating a diamond-shaped grid.

    Step 5

    5. Sprinkle the top of the cookie with the remaining teaspoon of sugar. Slide the parchment onto a cookie sheet and bake for 35 to 37 minutes, until the edges start to look golden. Remove from the oven and immediately cut the cookie into 8 or 12 large wedges or about eighteen 1 x 3-inch bars, if you like. If you wait until the cookie cools to cut it, you will not get nice clean edges.

From The Kosher Baker: Over 160 Dairy-free Recipes from Traditional to Trendy by Paula Shoyer. Copyright © 2010 Brandeis University. Reprinted with permission from Brandeis University Press/University Press of New England.
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