Hamantaschen With Poppy Seed Filling Recipe (2024)

Recipe from Shmil Holland

Adapted by Joan Nathan

Hamantaschen With Poppy Seed Filling Recipe (1)

Total Time
2 hours 15 minutes
Rating
4(543)
Notes
Read community notes

Purim, which celebrates the biblical story of the Jews’ deliverance from a plot to kill them by Haman, minister to the Persian king, is a special time when people drink, dance and play jokes. Gifts of food called shalah manot are distributed, which include fruit, cookies and, of course, hamantaschen. —Joan Nathan

Featured in: Modern Flavors Transform a Purim Tradition

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have

    10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers.

    Learn more.

    Subscribe

  • Print Options

    Include recipe photo

Advertisem*nt

Ingredients

Yield:About 30 cookies

    For the Dough

    • 1cup confectioners’ sugar
    • 2large egg yolks
    • 8ounces unsalted butter at room temperature, in small pieces
    • Grated zest of 1 lemon
    • cups all-purpose unbleached flour
    • Dash of salt
    • 1large egg, beaten, for the glaze

    For the Poppy Seed Filling

    • 1cup milk
    • ½cup sugar
    • Grated zest of ½ orange
    • 1cup poppy seeds
    • cup raisins
    • Juice of ½ lemon
    • ½tablespoon brandy
    • ½tablespoon orange liqueur
    • ½tablespoon butter
    • ½tablespoon vanilla extract

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (30 servings)

163 calories; 9 grams fat; 4 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 2 grams monounsaturated fat; 2 grams polyunsaturated fat; 18 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 9 grams sugars; 3 grams protein; 15 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.

Powered by

Hamantaschen With Poppy Seed Filling Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. For the Dough

    1. Step

      1

      Put the confectioners’ sugar and the egg yolks in a food processor and blend. Add butter and lemon zest and process to blend. Gradually add the flour and the salt, pulsing until it forms a ball. Divide the dough in half, flatten each into a disk, wrap tightly in plastic wrap. Chill until firm, at least 1 hour or up to overnight.

    2. Step

      2

      Meanwhile, prepare the filling: Put milk, sugar and orange zest in a saucepan over medium heat. Grind poppy seeds to a fine powder in coffee grinder, taking care not to over-process to a paste. When milk mixture is warm, turn heat to low and add poppy seeds and raisins. Cook at a low simmer stirring frequently until the seeds absorb the milk and the mixture is thick, about 15 minutes. Add the lemon juice, brandy, orange liqueur and butter. Stir and cook for 2 minutes more. Stir in the vanilla extract, remove from the heat and let cool completely, or chill until needed, up to 3 days.

    3. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

    4. Step

      4

      Unwrap one of the chilled dough disks and place on a piece of parchment paper that has been dusted lightly with flour. Lightly dust the top of the dough with flour. Cover with a second piece of parchment paper. Let stand at room temperature until malleable, about 5 minutes. Use a rolling pin to press and roll out the dough into a ¼-inch- thick round between the sheets of parchment, flipping the dough occasionally. Use a plain biscuit or cookie cutter or glass to cut 3-inch circles, placing the circles on the prepared baking sheet spaced 1 inch apart. Place the baking sheet in the refrigerator to chill until firm while you repeat the rolling/cutting process with the second round of dough.

    5. Step

      5

      Remove the first pan of dough rounds from the refrigerator. Place a heaping teaspoon of the filling in the center of each, and press up the sides to form triangles, pinching the ends closed. If the dough is too firm, let stand a minute or two to soften; returning the baking sheet to the refrigerator if the dough becomes too soft. Repeat with the remaining dough rounds.

    6. Step

      6

      Brush the tops with beaten egg. Bake until golden and dough is delicately firm all the way through, about 13-18 minutes, rotating the racks front to back and top to bottom after about 10 minutes.

    7. Step

      7

      Place trays on wire racks for 10 minutes before transferring cookies on parchment to racks to cool completely.

Ratings

4

out of 5

543

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

Barbara Greenberg

I avoid wheat for a variety of reasons. Can I substitute Almond Flour for the regular flour in this recipe?

Peggy

To make Hamantashen even prettier, use a scalloped cookie cutter to make your "circles". It will make a nice presentation!

Judy H-M

These are the best poppyseed Hamantashen that I have ever baked and I have tried many recipes.My poppyseed filling required less than 15 minutes to thicken.

Jack Pickett

This dough is pate sucre it is traditionally made by placing flour on a pastry board and making a well and adding remaining ingredients in the center. Slowly draw in flour to form a smooth paste. Pasta is also made this way FYI. No need for a processor.

Laura

I think I'm going to "unsave" this one. The dough was fine although 2 1/4 c flour was a little too much. My main complaint was the poppy seed filling contained so many little extra's that they masked the flavor. I don't think the Israelites or Ashkenazi would have had orange liqueur to add to their pastries - and while it was a nice flavor, it covered the earthy taste of the poppy seeds. This wasn't a simple recipe, but the complexity didn't add much to it imho. I'm glad I tried it.

Jeff Segall

You added too much water. That's why they came apart.

RM

I actually used my mix master for this recipe. It turned out great. I started with 2 cups of flour and added more until the consistency was right. Just under 2 1/4 cups of flour total.
Didn't want to make the poppy seed filling from scratch (it's our least favorite), so used store bought. In addition filled the dough with apricot, raspberry and prune. All delicious!

Bubikon

A nice recipe. Be sure to really grind the poppy seeds or else bits will stick to your teeth. I am not sure how the dough would melt. It certainly helps to refrigerate the dough for at least an hour before baking. All in all a fine recipe. Esther would have been proud.

Jane

My cookies spread too. I use an egg wash to seal the corners and that solves the problem w/ spreading. I hope this helps.

sharon

I also noted the dough was dry when I refrigerated it with the hope it would come together after chilling. No such luck. It was completely crumbly so the next day It went back into the processor and I mixed it with a few tablespoons of ice water. Perfection! Definitely add some milk or water to the pastry. Once I did, it rolled out beautifully.

Caitlin

Delicious! The dough is very buttery, so you have to take your time with it. I chilled mine overnight & then again for a few minutes after the cookies were made / after circles were cut - depending on the look & feel. Scraps were chilled before being rolled again. I had no issues with baking. If I were to change one thing, I would add the raisins before poppy seeds, and hit it with the immersion blender. I liked the taste the raisins added, but didn't like getting a bite of a whole raisin.

Anne M

This is the first time I have attempted to make Hamantaschen; and I am generally skeptical of baking with the food processor but this recipe worked beautifully. We didn't use all of the poppyseed filling because we wanted some raspberry jam filled cookies too; with this substitution it still produced excellent cookies!

Linnea

Thanks for this! We celebrate brave Queen Esther as often as possible. It is good to mention her name in the description of Purim, as she is actually the star of the story.

AMF

Poppy seed filling was particularly good. I don't actually like the traditional mix all that much, but the hint of citrus from the orange zest really improved it. Pastry was also excellent.

Lisa

PSA: 1/2 tbsp = 1.5 tsp

Claudia R.

Loved the recipe. I did not use the egg wash, but sifted confectioners sugar on top. I also ended up rolling out the dough on my granite countertop, instead of between two sheets of parchment because the dough kept sliding around on the paper. Fluted scone / biscuit tins work well for the circles.Overall a bit of a pain to make, but they are so delicious.

Ann

My daughter has tried making the poppy seed filling for these twice now and both times the milk curdled/separated. The milk et al was fresh and she was careful to keep it at the right temp…So any tips?

Barrett

These are delicious! I will say that it made way too much filling. Not a terrible problem, as I’ll enjoy the rest of the filling on toast this week. I also found the bake time to be a bit off. I baked mine 25 minutes, and they are still quite tender (perhaps a bit underbaked). Molly Yeh has a fantastic tip, which is to brush the cut circles with egg wash before adding the filling. Acts as an adhesive! Beautiful cookies!

Shelly

I made this dough exactly as directed and it was a complete fail. I'm not sure how it's possible, but it was both greasy/separated butter and crumbly at the same time and would not hold together. Even worse, I had doubled the recipe, hoping to make 60 cookies, but the dough was totally unusable and had to trash it and start over with a different recipe. I did use the recipe for the poppyseed filling and that worked fine.

Lyndiana Jones

Wet the rim before sealing - helps keep them from popping open.

Matt

This recipe was a disaster! The dough didn't come together at all and was far too crumbly to be rolled and folded. I don't know how this recipe got 4 stars with over 500 ratings, but it totally ruined our hamentaschen party.

A

I'm curious what the author meant by "room temperature" - my kitchen is a toasty 75F and the dough is not soft enough to shape after being out for almost an hour.

MarkC

These were delicious, so much better than the sweet, doughy lumps you get from the deli. These are my suggestions:The recipe for the dough doesn't include any liquid, and it was very dry and hard to work with. I'd try using whole eggs, rather than just the yolks. Also, Like many recipes, this one skimps on flavor. I used the zest from a whole lemon for half the amount of dough. And way more brandy, which dialed back the sweetness without any booziness. Go wild. Live a little.

Ellen Tabor

This dough is a kind of shortbread, and I would worry that all the butter along with the confectioners' sugar, which is used to create a more tender cookie in shortbread, would result in spreading. I made Tori Avey's oil-based hamantaschen, which required no chilling prior to rolling and were the best hamantaschen I ever made. They did not spread or open up!

Pondkeeper

Note that poppy seeds can cause a drug test to indicate positive for opiods. If you are subject to drug testing, substitute out the poppy seed filling and instead use the traditional prune filling, or one of the newer alternatives: apricot, cherry, or chocolate.

Ellen Tabor

Or tell the tester that you had poppy seeds and reschedule your test.The only hamantaschen I bake and eat are poppy seed. But I'm not subject to drug testing...

Chef

I don’t see the need to put the circles in the fridge. They will break when you try to fold them cold. Leave out of the fridge.

Phillida

What happened to the traditional yeast dough?

RoDances

I have to agree with many others who said the proportions are off for the dough. I added 2 tablespoons of water that made it manageable but the dough was harder to work with than it should be. Filling was lovely though.

Deb Wasserman

Dividing the dough in thirds and rolling out to about 12'' diameter created much more workable dough. 1/4" was too thick. Also, the "pinch" technique doesn't work as the cookies always turn into pancakes. The fold-and-press technique creates triangles that actually stay together. In my oven, 20 minutes at 375 degrees was perfect.

Sam Goldstein

Came out stunning with gluten free flour at 7,000’ altitude- I love hamantaschen like these, which have a pie crust texture although they are delicate. For gluten free I used Bob’s Red Mill One-to-One Flour. 1/4” seemed a little thick for the dough so I rolled a little thinner and it worked. I loved the addition of orange liquor. Thank you and Chag Purim Sameach!

Private notes are only visible to you.

Hamantaschen With Poppy Seed Filling Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is poppy seed filling made of? ›

Ingredients: Corn syrup, poppyseeds, sugar, water, modified corn starch, salt, vanilla extract, spices, and citric acid.

Should poppy seeds be soaked before baking? ›

It is not absolutely necessary but some bakers like to soak the poppyseeds in warm water or warm milk to soften the slightly hard outermost part of the poppyseed. I like that little crunch with poppyseeds but if you don't, soak the poppyseeds in the milk you'll be using in this recipe.

How do you grind poppy seeds for baking? ›

Push the poppy seeds through a food grinder, using the fine grinding plate. I use my KitchenAid food grinder attachment for my stand mixer. You can also use a coffee grinder and do it in smaller batches. Note: If using a meat grinder, you need to push firmly.

How long does poppy seed filling last in the fridge? ›

Add the poppy seeds and stir well to blend. Remove from heat; cool before using. Store unused filling in the refrigerator for up to five days.

Why can't you eat poppy seed bagels? ›

Service members may want to hold off ordering that "everything" bagel. It's not an urban legend: Eating poppy seeds can cause diners to test positive for codeine on a urinalysis, Defense Department officials said in a memo released yesterday.

What is the history of poppy seed filling? ›

Traditionally, poppy seed filling was almost exclusively prepared at home. Immigrants brought poppy seeds to the United States, with the first recipes for poppy seed cookies attested as early as 1889 in cookbooks published by German-Jewish immigrants.

Is it safe to bake with poppy seeds? ›

Before Papaver somniferum seeds can be used in baking, they are carefully dried and prepared. This process also removes the possibility of serious side effects by greatly reducing the amount of the opium alkaloid they contain that allows them to be legally used in your kitchen.

Why do people bake with poppy seeds? ›

Poppy seeds perform several functions in baked goods such as: Flavor: provide a rich nutty flavor, may be intensified by toasting. Aroma: provide a mild nutty aroma. Texture: contributes a crunchy texture.

Can poppy seeds go bad? ›

Poppy seeds usually don't spoil, but they can go rancid due to their oil content. Your senses will guide you in determining their freshness. Sight is not a very reliable indicator for poppy seeds but smell can be quite telling. Fresh poppy seeds have a sweet, nutty smell.

Can I skip poppy seeds in a recipe? ›

We should never skip any ingredient, instead we should replace it with the ingredients that are easily available. That's why measurement also matters a lot. You can use melon seeds instead of poppy seeds. However, there will be a difference in the flavour compared to the actual recipe.

Can I just sprinkle poppy seeds? ›

Pour some poppy seeds into your hand and sprinkle them very thinly across the ground to create natural looking drifts. Allow 7-30 days to germinate, depending on the variety, soil condition and growing temperatures. Keep the soil moist during germination.

Is it necessary to grind poppy seeds? ›

Whole poppy seeds have a mild taste, but once ground, they release a nutty, slightly sweet flavor that can really elevate your dishes. Ground poppy seeds blend more seamlessly into your recipes. Whether you're baking or cooking, you don't want to bite into a whole seed unexpectedly.

Can you freeze solo poppy seed filling? ›

All unopened and sealed retail products can be stored safely in your kitchen without refrigeration or freezing. Once opened, we recommend that you store in an air-tight container. In a refrigerator, product should remain fresh for about 10 days. If frozen, the product should remain fresh for about 3 months.

What is canned poppy seed filling? ›

Ingredients : Corn Syrup, Poppyseed, Sugar, Water, Modified Corn Starch, Salt, Natural Flavor, Spices and Citric Acid.

Why is my poppy seed bitter? ›

Bitterness in poppy seeds is a known problem, especially with the ground ones, due to their high oil content. Store them in the freezer, like nuts, to keep them from going rancid. You will have to grind the poppy seeds for most traditional poppy seed cakes and pastries.

What is poppy seed bread made of? ›

Mix together flour, salt, baking powder, poppy seeds, butter flavoring, oil, eggs, milk, sugar, vanilla, and almond flavoring. Pour into prepared pans. Bake at 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) for one hour.

Why do bakers use poppy seeds? ›

Poppy seeds perform several functions in baked goods such as: Flavor: provide a rich nutty flavor, may be intensified by toasting. Aroma: provide a mild nutty aroma. Texture: contributes a crunchy texture.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Otha Schamberger

Last Updated:

Views: 5888

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (75 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Otha Schamberger

Birthday: 1999-08-15

Address: Suite 490 606 Hammes Ferry, Carterhaven, IL 62290

Phone: +8557035444877

Job: Forward IT Agent

Hobby: Fishing, Flying, Jewelry making, Digital arts, Sand art, Parkour, tabletop games

Introduction: My name is Otha Schamberger, I am a vast, good, healthy, cheerful, energetic, gorgeous, magnificent person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.