This recipe for the week came into
being after I saw the Mexican Cuisine event at My Food Treasures. I did some
searching around the internet and this dish – alfajores – caught my eye. If you
are unfamiliar with this (as I was the first time I heard this name), let Mr.
Wiki shed some light:
‘An alfajor or alajú[1] (Spanish pronunciation: [alfaˈxor],
plural alfajores; derived
from Arabic: الفاخر,
"luxury", "exquisite") is a traditional confection[2] found in some regions of Spain
and in parts of Latin America, including Paraguay, Argentina, Chile, Uruguay,
Colombia, Peru, and Mexico.[3]’
It is basically a sandwich of two
shortbread cookies, with a sweet filling, and sometimes rolled in coconut.
Apparently, the Mexican version uses more coconut than the others.
It looked interesting, and the fact
that it could be covered in chocolate sort of decided it for me J.
Traditionally, the filling is Dulce de
Leche which is a caramel syrup, but nowadays, they have expanded their
fillings to include chocolate as well. Which is exactly what I did!
First, the recipe for the shortbread cookies.
What you’ll need:
130 g all-purpose flour
1/8 teaspoon salt
113 g unsalted butter, room temperature
30 g icing sugar
1/2 tsp pure vanilla extract
What you’re going to do:
1. In a bowl whisk the flour with the
salt.
2. In another bowl, beat the butter
until smooth and creamy.
3. Add the sugar and beat until smooth.
Beat in the vanilla extract.
4. Gently beat in the flour mixture
just until incorporated.
5. Flatten the dough into a disk shape,
wrap in plastic wrap, and chill the dough for at least an hour or until firm.
6. Preheat oven to 180 degrees C. Line
baking sheet with parchment paper.
7. On a lightly floured surface roll
out the dough until it is about 1/4 inch (.6 cm) thick. Make sure your dough is
firm enough, else it will stick like hell.
8. Using a lightly floured 2 inch (5
cm) cookie cutter, cut out shapes.
9. Place on the baking sheets and place
in the fridge for about 15 minutes. (This will firm the cookies so they
maintain their shape when baked.)
10. Bake for about 7 - 10 minutes, or
until cookies are brown around the edges. Cool on a wire rack.
The cookies will keep in an airtight
container for about a week.
Next, the filling, for which I made a basic chocolate ganache.
What you’ll need:
100 g chocolate
50 ml cream
1 tbsp butter, cut into cubes, at room
temperature
What you’re going to do:
1. Heat cream till it starts to boil
and turn off.
2. Pour immediately over chopped
chocolate and stir till completely melted.
3. Add butter and stir till smooth.
4. Cool and refrigerate for 30 minutes.
(Of course, you could always skip this
and use Nutella J)
Now, assembling the alfajores.
Take two shortbread cookies and
sandwich them together with a heaping teaspoon of filling. Press together
gently and rest.
Finally, coating for the alfajores.
1. Chop 100 g milk chocolate and melt
in the microwave (stirring every 10 seconds)
2. With the help of a fork dip one of
the alfajores in the melted chocolate, drain and place on wax paper.
3. Let the chocolate set completely,
chill if necessary.
Bonus – garnishing.
Now comes the garnishing part. You can
do it all sorts of ways:
1. Sprinkle the tops of the cookies
with confectioner’s sugar.
2. Coat sides with coconut.
3. Dip half the cookie in chocolate
4. Cover completely in chocolate
(The last two steps require some skill –
as you can see mine are far from perfect!!)
I loved the completely coated alfajor –
chocolate on the inside, chocolate on the outside and light, soft, buttery
cookies in between – BLISS!!!!
They probably sound familiar to my ill
fated macarons; it’s basically two cookies being sandwiched with filling. But
these were heavenly, and not half as sweet as macarons!!! Do try these out –
the process might seem a bit long drawn, but it really is very simple!! The
problem is that they’re dangerous; you can’t seem to stop with one!!!
This recipe is a participant in the ‘Flavors of Cuisines - Mexican’ event by
My Food Treasures and Erivum Puliyum.