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lime rose coconut ghraybeh

December 5, 2019 by Kathryn Pauline 4 Comments

Not that anyone ever needed a reason to eat a cookie, but “it’s December!” is definitely one of my favorites. Last week, I shared my favorite cookie I’ve made so far this year, a sesame-coated chewy tahini take on peanut butter blossoms, and this week I’m sharing another good one, with a very different flavor profile. This one just happens to be vegan (or almost-vegan if you have trouble finding vegan white chocolate), and it’s perfect for adding a pop of color to a box of holiday cookies.

I’ve received a lot of requests over the years for a vegan coconut oil rosewater ghraybeh recipe, but it took me a while to come up with this particular flavor combination, which is my new favorite thing: coconut, rosewater, and lime. You’ll most often find the three together in cocktails, but it works great in desserts too. Be sure to use virgin/extra-virgin coconut oil here, because you want to include as much coconut flavor as possible (the subtlest of the three).

When I was deciding how to style these ghraybeh, I wanted to be able to sprinkle a little extra lime zest, coconut, and rose on top, but I didn’t want to take anything away from the really delicious cookie underneath. A drizzle of royal icing or a full dunk of white chocolate, while beautiful, felt a little too cloying for these. Then recently I stumbled upon these rose pistachio shortbread my friend Mai baked last Christmas, and I knew a little drizzle of vegan white chocolate would be the perfect thing to add some richness and sweetness, and to bring everything together.

It’s a little hard to get your hands on real vegan white chocolate (available online and in some health stores), but it’s easy enough to make if you can find cocoa butter, and I’ve included a couple options below the recipe. You can always feel free to use conventional white chocolate if all partakers are ok with some dairy.

Absolutely no need to use a piping bag for the white chocolate—a rustic drizzle from a spoon is so much easier and always looks chic—just keep the spoon snapping back and forth, and it’ll turn out great. You can keep it pretty minimalist, if you’d like, or you can always go totally overboard with the toppings, especially if you’re going for an extra-festive look this holiday season.

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lime rose coconut ghraybeh

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  • Prep Time: 30 minutes
  • Total Time: 1 hour
  • Yield: about 2 1/2 dozen

Ingredients

  • 210g virgin coconut oil (1 cup), melted and cooled to warm room temperature
  • 100g powdered sugar (about ¾ cup)
  • 3g salt (½ teaspoon)
  • 6g rosewater (1 teaspoon)
  • 1.5g lime zest (1 teaspoon loosely packed, from about 1 whole lime)
  • 340g all purpose flour (about 2 3/4 cups)
  • 10g unsweetened grated coconut (3 tablespoons)
  • 100g vegan* white chocolate, for drizzling (1 heaping 1/2 cup)
  • Optional: rose petals, extra coconut, and extra lime zest for sprinkling

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 325°F (163°C) convection.**
  2. Place in the bowl of a stand mixer (or a large mixing bowl): melted coconut oil, powdered sugar, salt, rosewater, lime zest, flour, and grated coconut. Mix together at low speed with the paddle attachment. Stop mixing once it comes together into a dough.
  3. Shape into about 2 1/2 dozen balls, and space out on a parchment-lined sheet pan.
  4. Bake for about 25 to 30 minutes, until the cookies are very light brown. Cool on the parchment.
  5. Temper the white chocolate (zap for 10 seconds at a time in the microwave, and stir between zaps. Stop microwaving once there are still small chunks of white chocolate, and let them melt with the residual warmth). Drizzle the cooled cookies with white chocolate, and immediately sprinkle with rose petals, coconut, and lime zest.

Notes

* Feel free to use regular old white chocolate if you don’t need these to be vegan. Vegan white chocolate is available at some health food stores and online. If you can’t find vegan white chocolate, vegan dark chocolate works great too and adds a lovely contrast in color and flavor (just careful not to use too much, or the other flavors will be lost).

** If you don’t have convection, they might take a couple minutes longer to bake.

Making ahead and storing: These cookies keep great for several days. Seal them tightly in a container, and store at cool room temperature.

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Filed Under: every recipe, sweets, vegan Tagged With: coconut, cookies and bars, lime, middle eastern, rosewater

sesame blossom cookies

November 28, 2019 by Kathryn Pauline 4 Comments

Way before ugly Christmas sweater parties, and way before high-waisted jeans became ✨fashion✨, our moms would all dress up in unironic holiday sweaters, layered over apparently ahead-of-their-time chic mom jeans, and get together for a holiday cookie exchange. Or at least this was the tradition with the moms in my neighborhood growing up. My mom would always come home with a giant platter of every single holiday cookie imaginable—little frosted trees, Mexican wedding cookies, gingerbread men, apricot kolachkies, and of course the cookies that didn’t have a snowball’s chance in hell of making it to Christmas day: Pam’s peanut butter blossoms. If there had been a neighborhood-wide bakeoff, Pam would’ve won it every year.

So recently I decided to revisit this old childhood favorite, this time inspired by Syrian/Lebanese barazek (which you can learn more about in this lovely blog post by Maureen Abood). They’re those super crunchy sesame-covered biscuits, and the one thing they share in common with peanut butter blossoms is their nuttiness. So I decided to give my favorite childhood cookie a sesame makeover, with tahini in place of peanut butter, and the signature barazek crackly sesame coating. They’re chewy on the inside, crunchy on the outside, and (don’t worry!) still very chocolate-peanut-buttery, despite having no peanut butter in them at all. Perfect for peanut-free families, and all your holiday parties! If you’re making these for someone with a peanut allergy, just make sure you eliminate any potential cross-contamination in your kitchen, and make sure your ingredients don’t list peanuts as a potential cross-contaminant.

I developed this recipe last summer, and have thought about it every day since then, so I’m psyched to finally share it with you guys. But a few quick notes before I leave you to it: This one is loosely adapted from a NYT recipe for peanut butter blossoms (linked to below), but I spent some time researching before developing this one, and noticed one point of contention: exactly when do you add the chocolate kiss? Too early and it will melt everywhere, fall out of temper, and never solidify. Too late and it won’t really embed itself in the cookie, but will just sit on top and never get melty enough. Plus, everyone’s preferences about chocolate gooeyness are going to be a little different, so there’s no clear cut-and-dried answer.

Here are my preferences, reflected in the recipe below: The chocolate kiss should melt a bit in the oven and even fall a little out of temper, but it should not melt so much that it loses its shape. That way, it will solidify and hold its shape once cool, but it will remain somewhat soft and a little gooey, and never fully harden. I also think it’s important that the kiss embed itself in the cookie, and that the cookie stays chewy, so it’s important to add the chocolate kiss before they get too crunchy (but not too early or it’ll melt everywhere and/or the cookies will be underdone).

Follow the recipe below, and it should be super easy, but if you want to make any adjustments to the timing to suit your own preferences (or the idiosyncrasies of your own oven), please feel free! Maybe you’re sending these in the mail to a friend out of state? In that case, add the chocolate kiss closer to the end and don’t let it stay in the oven for too long, which will make it much easier to package them neatly. Maybe you’re serving these to your guests right from the oven and wouldn’t mind a super gooey chocolate center? Add the chocolate kiss a minute earlier and really let it get melty. Either way, you won’t be disappointed!

A little more cookie inspiration for you, before I leave you with the recipe! If you like these cookies, here are a few yummy related ones I’ve found out there:

  • Adrianna Adarme’s Tahini Concord Grape Thumbprints, which have the same tahini flavor, and that crackly coating of sesame seeds but with more of a PB&J thing going on.
  • Maureen Abood’s Lebanese Crunchy Sesame Cookies, the inspiration for these.
  • Jessie Sheehan’s Tahini Blossoms, a similar cookie, which (like this recipe) uses tahini in place of peanut butter, with a lovely sweet and salty coating instead of crunchy sesame seeds.
  • Flippin Delicious’s Sunflower Blossoms, with sunflower seed butter instead of peanut butter, and gluten free flours, for those who are allergic to gluten, sesame, and peanut! You can also find recipes out there for almond blossoms and cashew blossoms, if you’re working with multiple allergies.
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sesame blossom cookies

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loosely adapted from this NYT recipe

  • Prep Time: 30 minutes
  • Total Time: 2 hours
  • Yield: 3 dozen

Ingredients

  • 230g all purpose flour (1 3/4 cups)
  • 6g baking soda (1 teaspoon)
  • 115g unsalted butter (1 stick), softened to room temperature
  • 100g granulated sugar (1/2 cup)
  • 100g brown sugar (1/2 cup)
  • 3g salt (1/2 teaspoon)
  • 1 large egg (55g), at room temperature
  • 125g tahini (1/2 cup)
  • 15g milk (1 tablespoon)
  • 5g vanilla extract (1 teaspoon)
  • 70g sesame seeds (1/2 cup) – for coating
  • 3 dozen unwrapped chocolate kisses*

Instructions

  1. Sift together the flour and baking soda. Set aside.
  2. Place the butter, sugar, brown sugar, and salt in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Beat at medium speed for about 1 minute, just until it lightens slightly.
  3. Add the egg, tahini, milk, and vanilla, and beat at medium speed until smooth (just about 30 seconds). Scrape down the sides halfway through to make sure it fully incorporates.
  4. Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, and stir together at low speed until it comes together. Don’t overmix it, and stop as soon as there are no dry patches.
  5. Cover and chill the cookie dough in the refrigerator for at least 1 hour, up to 24.
  6. Once the cookie dough is ready, preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C) convection**, and shape it into about 3 dozen small balls (about 20g each, with a #50 cookie scoop, or 1 slightly heaping tablespoon). Roll them generously in sesame seeds, and place a couple inches apart on parchment-lined cookie sheets.
  7. Bake for about 8 minutes, just until they’re puffy and light brown. Remove from the oven, place a kiss in the center of each (push them down slightly so they’re a little embedded in the dough), and return to the oven for 2 minutes, until the cookies are golden brown.
  8. Let them cool on the cookie sheet for 1 minute, then slide the parchment off the sheet pan to cool the rest of the way. The chocolate will harden slightly at room temperature, until it’s a little softer and gooier than before, but set. Feel free to chill them in the fridge to hurry the cooling along.

Notes

* If you don’t like chocolate, feel free to omit the chocolate altogether (my baker friend Lysa made these without the chocolate, and still called them “the absolute best cookie in the world”). On the other hand, if you want to include the chocolate but can’t easily find chocolate kisses where you live (they’re a bit of a US thing, and not always available worldwide), you can totally use chocolate buttons instead (even 2 stacked on top of each other if they’re wafer-thin). If all else fails, you can even use chunks of chocolate or a cluster of chocolate chips, for a more rustic look. (Thanks to everyone who has written in with these suggestions, after successfully trying them out. Glad to know these cookies can be enjoyed no matter what your chocolate situation!)

** No worries if you don’t have convection—they might just take a little longer to bake, and you might need to rotate the cookie sheets.

Make ahead and storage: These cookies keep super well at room temperature for several days. The cookie dough freezes wonderfully—just roll and coat balls in sesame seeds, freeze them on a sheet pan, and store them in a plastic bag. You can bake them right from frozen, but they might just take an extra minute or so to bake.

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Filed Under: every recipe, sweets Tagged With: chocolate, cookies and bars, sesame, tahini, vanilla

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Welcome! I’m Kathryn Pauline, cookbook author, recipe developer, and photographer.

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