All Posts By

Kat

Breads, Breakfast/Brunch, Sweet Snacks

Makivnyk – Sourdough Poppy Seed Crescent (маківник)

Back to baking things that are “Ukrainian-inspired” although this could also be Polish, Hungarian, Slovak, Czech, or from the Baltics (did I cover everything?!?) …. this is Makivnyk (маківник): a sweet, poppy seed filled sweet bread, with a dough similar to a cinnamon roll, although not nearly as sweet and cinnamony. It’s often baked as a breakfast bread or something for afternoon tea, and often during celebratory seasons like Christmas or Easter. I’ve sprinkled it with raw sugar, but you can also add coarse pearl sugar or confectioners sugar. I love it because it isn’t overly sweet. The original recipe that I found was yeast-based but I converted to sourdough.

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Cookies, Sweet Snacks

Ukrainian-Style Walnut Ring Cookies, with Chocolate (волоський горіх печиво)

Here’s another Ukrainian/Eastern-European-inspired cookie recipe: Ukrainian-Style Walnut Ring Cookies, with Chocolate. In my research, I saw these both with chocolate like this, or with just walnuts held on with an egg wash and sprinkled with confectioner’s sugar. I guess it was how fancy one was being. Or what ingredients are on hand. The cookie dough is quite nice — mostly whole wheat flour (a little unusual for a cookie) and a touch of dark, buckwheat flour honey. As with many of the cookies that I am making, these are mostly made at Christmas time, so it feels a little strange to be making them in the run up to Easter, but oh well. They are yummy no matter what time of year.

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Dinner, Lunch, Sides

Colcannon-Stuffed Jacket Potatoes

Swapping back to Irish-inspired food again, for St. Patrick’s Day, whoever thought of putting creamy, buttery, bacon-y, cheesy colcannon in baked potatoes should be given a medal. Comfort food at it’s finest. While it might not look like much, it is delicious.

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Breads

Black Rye Bread

I generally don’t make all rye sourdough breads. I like rye, but my tendency is to mix it with some wheat flour. But for once, I went with all rye. It didn’t rise much, but I should expect that, using different flour types. It’s dense and flavorful and very hearty, very filling. The recipe does call for caraway seeds, but I omitted them, because I really don’t like caraway, and seeing I am the only consumer of this bread, I do have to like it!

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