Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (2024)

You've heard of pumpkin pie for Thanksgiving and chocolate cake for Valentine's Day, but how about Hamantaschen for Purim?

Purim is a festive holiday celebrated by Jewish communities around the world every year in the late winter or early spring. It features giving to the poor, sharing gifts of food with friends, dressing up in costumes for children, and plenty of food, wine, and the holiday's signature confection: Hamantaschen!

The origin stories regarding Hamantaschen are many and varied, but this triangular sweet is generally understood to represent the hat, purse, or ear of Haman, the villain in the Old Testament story of Esther. But unlike a real hat, Hamantaschen are absolutely delicious.

So, how do you make these Purim cookies?

That's where we come in. King Arthur is dedicated to sharing the joy of baking, from the recipes and information on our website to our many outreach efforts, like For Goodness Bakes. Our heartfelt mission is to bring people together through baking, and we love connecting with all of you and spreading that joy on this blog and social media: both for your everyday baking, and with special celebratory treats like Hamantaschen.

A buttery, tender, shortbread-like cookie shaped into a triangular nest to hold its sweet filling: that’s Hamantaschen.

Honey-poppyseed, apricot, and prune fillings are classic, but in recent years tradition has started to take a back seat to more current tastes. Think “apple pie.” And chocolate-hazelnut. Some recipe developers have even come up with savory versions, like smoked salmon, or caramelized onion and goat cheese.

Still, if you’re taking your first dive into homemade Hamantaschen I suggest you start with one of the classics. Like the raisin- and apple-enhanced poppyseed filling from our original recipe for Hamantaschen. Or the bright, sweet-tangy apricot filling in Zingerman’s Hamantaschen with Apricot Filling, the recipe I’ll be walking you through here.

How to make Hamantaschen

With their straightforward, easy-to-handledough and two-ingredient filling, these Hamantaschen are a breeze to put together.We’ll start with the dough — here’s what you need:

  • 12 tablespoons + 1 teaspoon (174g) unsalted butter, at room temperature
  • 1/3 cup + 1 tablespoon (78g) granulated sugar or King Arthur Baking Sugar Alternative (67g)
  • 1 large egg, at room temperature
  • 1 teaspoonvanilla extract
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 2 1/4 cups + 3 tablespoons (291g)King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose Flouror gluten-free Measure for Measure Flour

Why the rather odd volume measurements? Like many bakery recipes this one was originally developed by weight, and the translation to volume is a bit bumpy; all the more reason to use a scale to measure your ingredients!

Beat together the butter and sugar until light and creamy.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (1)

This can be done by hand (if you’re strong and energetic); using an electric beater, or in a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment.

Add the egg, vanilla, and salt and mix until thoroughly combined

Add the flour gradually, mixing until everything is completely combined.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (2)

Remove the dough from the mixer and divide it in half. Press each half into a rough circle or square and wrap in plastic. Refrigerate the dough for 45 minutes (or for up to a week) before rolling and filling.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (3)

Make the filling

We’ll go with a classic apricot filling here, one using prepared apricot preserves. For greatest success, we recommend using apricot preserves without high-fructose corn syrup in the ingredient list; it'll produce the brightest, shiniest filling and also tends to stay in place better within the cookie walls.

  • 1 1/4 cups (425g) apricot preserves
  • 1/2 cup (39g) fresh breadcrumbs, packed

To make fresh breadcrumbs in a food processor: Use one slice from a soft sandwich loaf (more or less, depending on how small or large your loaf is). A crusty loaf will work if it’s all you have; but do trim the tough crust before turning the interior into crumbs. Pulse the bread until it's become fine crumbs.

Alternatively, use the same weight (40g) of unflavored dried breadcrumbs, which translates to about 1/3 cup, loosely packed.

Stir together the apricot preserves and breadcrumbs.

Roll, fill, and bake

Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly grease two baking sheets or line them with parchment paper.

Remove one piece of dough from the refrigerator and unwrap it.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (4)

Place the dough on a lightly floured work surface and tap it with your rolling pin to soften.

Lightly flour the top of the dough, then gently roll it 1/8” thick; you should have a (slightly larger than) 12” square or circle of dough, say 12 1/2” or so.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (5)

Using a 3" round cutter, cut out pieces of the rolled dough and place them on the prepared baking sheet.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (6)

Continue rolling and cutting out circles, re-rolling the dough as necessary.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (7)

Place a rounded teaspoon of filling (15g to 20g) in the center of each dough circle. Brush the edges of the dough with water.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (8)

Fold the edges of each cookie up and pinch together three corners to a make a triangle shape, with the filling visible in the center. Start with two sides, making an A shape; then fold in the third side to finish the triangle. Pinch the corners well and angle the sides towards the center, rather than vertically. You should strive for an equilateral triangle with edges that are about 1" long.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (9)

Repeat with the remaining dough and filling.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (10)

Bake the cookies for 18 to 22 minutes, or until the edges and bottoms are golden brown. There's a tendency to underbake these cookies; go for some color. It will give them a nice toasty flavor.

Remove the cookies from the oven and cool them right on the pan. Store Hamantaschen well-wrapped at room temperature for several days; freeze for longer storage.

Smooth sailing, right?

Alas, not for me.

Despite thorough vetting in our King Arthur test kitchen and nothing butpositive reader reviews, I couldn’t for the life of me get these cookies to hold their shape during baking. They tasted sublime … but looked ridiculous.

The walls collapsed inward. The walls collapsed outward. Or hey, some of each. The filling erupted like Mt. Vesuvius, subsequently spilling out of its little nest to pool on the parchment below.

And nothing I did solved the problem.

First, I tried the tips at the bottom of the recipe suggesting things to do “if you find that your cookies fall apart.” Chill the filling. Freeze the shaped cookies. Lower your oven temperature.

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (11)

Nope, nope, and NOPE. While freezing the cookies solid before baking (like, 90 minutes in the freezer) did seem to help, it didn’t solve the problem entirely: most of my cookies were still imitating Jericho, whose walls famously came tumbling down.

Feedback from the test kitchen

After a weekend of frustration, bright and early Monday morning I contacted Charlotte and Molly, our King Arthur test kitchen mavens. “Um, you know the apricot Hamantaschen recipe on our site? My cookies keep collapsing. What am I doing wrong?”

Charlotte replied, “We had the exact same problem when testing that one … it's definitely a finicky recipe. Sorry you had trouble, but I'm sure it'll make for a good blog post!”

Which is exactly right: this does make a great blog post. Why? Because my failure to master this recipe is a good reminder to all of us: life is imperfect. Cookies collapse. Yeast rolls bake into hockey pucks. Cake dips in the middle.

My advice? Don't give up. As long as you’re willing and eager, keep trying. Which is what I did.

The happy ending

After sitting and thinking for a while, I finally had to point the finger at myself: I hadn’t followed the recipe exactly (blush).

The directions call for a 3” round cutter. The largest I have is 2 3/4” — but I went ahead and used it anyway. The subsequent cookies were too small for the jam filling, which simply boiled and expanded in the oven’s heat and blew their dough walls down.

I was also supposed to angle the cookie walls inward toward the filling before baking. Totally missed that step. Perhaps if I’d lowered them to 45° rather than allowing them to stand upright they wouldn’t have been so eager to tip … over.

If you’re waiting for the happy ending, here it is: my misshapen cookies taste great! Though I never did get an Instagram-worthy batch, everyone loved them — proving that old adage once again: beauty is only crust deep.

Do try this at home

Please don’t let me discourage you from making these cookies, because once you taste one you’re hooked: the buttery, crisp cookie and soft apricot filling are a perfect match. Besides, making them successfully will give you bragging rights: my cookies are better than PJ's!

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (12)

Before you start, consider these suggestions. I've tried themand all seem to help, at least somewhat.

  • Follow the recipe as written: no ingredient or tool substitutions, no skipping steps.
  • Though it may seem odd, do use the breadcrumbs in the filling; they help hold the jam in place (says she who tried plain jam, no breadcrumbs, to ill effect).
  • Try using a bit less filling — my working theory is that less filling creates less pressure on the cookie walls. If the filling looks scanty once the cookies are baked, you can always top it off with a dollop of fresh jam.
  • Freeze the filled cookies thoroughly before baking.
  • Do a test bake of just a couple of filled cookies before baking the entire batch. If bad news is coming you might as well get it right away, while there's still time to try some mitigation!

So, what do you think — will you give Hamantaschen a try? Please answer "yes" or "no" in the comments section below. And I hope the "yes" votes win!

Hamantaschen: a sweet celebration (2024)

FAQs

What is the significance of hamantaschen? ›

Historically, eating Haman's pockets, (or ears, or hat...) was meant as a way to symbolically destroy his memory. Today, they're usually seen as an iconic fixture of mishloach manot and the sugary fuel for raucous Purim festivities.

What are some fun facts about Hamantaschen? ›

The pastries are supposed to symbolize the defeated enemy of the Jewish people. The word tash means "pouch" or "pocket" in Yiddish, and thus may refer to Haman's pockets, symbolizing the money that Haman offered to Ahasuerus in exchange for permission to destroy the Jews.

What holiday do you eat hamantaschen on? ›

Food has a special place in Jewish celebrations, and on the holiday of Purim, Jews celebrate by baking and eating a triangular cookie called "Hamantaschen."

Who eats hamantaschen? ›

Hamantaschen – which is Yiddish for "Haman's pocket" – is a biscuit popularised by Ashkenazi Jews that likely stemmed/evolved from mohntaschen or poppy pockets (pastry typically stuffed with poppy seed filling) made by their Germanic cousins.

Why do hamantaschen have three corners? ›

Alfred Kolatch, in his The Jewish Book of Why, argues that the three corners of the hamantaschen possibly signify Queen Esther's ancestors from whom she derived great strength–the three Patriarchs of the Bible, Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

What is the meaning of hamantaschen in Yiddish? ›

Hamantaschen (pronounced huh-min-tah-shun) are triangular pastries associated with the holiday of Purim. Purim is when the triumph of good (Queen Esther in the Bible) over evil (Haman, the villain who planned to destroy the Jewish people) is celebrated. The word hamantaschen means “Haman's pockets” in Yiddish.

Is hamantaschen for Hanukkah? ›

The Hillel Student Board of the Johns Hopkins Jewish Students' Association once again kicked off Hanukkah by pitting two staples of Jewish cuisine against each other: latkes, a fried potato pancake eaten during Hanukkah, and hamantaschen, a triangular cookie filled with chocolate or jam eaten during Purim.

Can you eat hamantaschen year round? ›

[%image reference-image float=right width=400 caption="Any day is a good day to make hamantaschen."] Luckily, hamantaschen, like matzo-ball soup, are technically a holiday food but appropriate to enjoy at any time of year.

What does "taschen" mean in Yiddish? ›

The Yiddish word for 'weaken' is 'tash', with 'taschen' meaning 'pouch' in German. Similarly, 'haman' sounds close to 'mohn', the German word for poppies, as well as the name of the main Persian villain in the Book of Esther, Haman.

Are hamantaschen good? ›

“Unfortunately, the hamantaschen you get in most bakeries aren't very good, because the dough requires a lot of flour to help the cookies maintain their triangular shape in the oven and not unfold into wonky circles with exposed filling. This can lead to dry, tasteless cookies.”

Why poppy seed hamantaschen? ›

Queen Esther, according to Jewish tradition, kept a vegetarian diet of seeds at King Achashverosh's palace, in order to avoid eating non-kosher meat. While seeds were usually interpreted as legumes, chickpea or fava, poppy seeds also come to mind.

What is the English translation of hamantaschen? ›

The name literally means “Haman's pockets” (not Haman's hat, as is usually translated), after the villain of the Purim story, and probably comes from an 18th-century German snack cake, Mohntaschen—Mohn means “poppy seed,” and Tasch means “pocket.” Hamantaschen, therefore, is a play on words (and you know how we Jews ...

What is the purpose of mishloach manot? ›

[commandment] of mishloach manot as counteracting the accusations of Haman. Haman accused the Jews of being “a scattered, and divided nation.” Thus, the Jewish people send gifts to each other in order to show that they are not divided, but rather are united.

Why are hamantaschen shaped like triangles? ›

The term "hamantaschen" is typically ascribed to Haman but can refer to mohn, the Yiddish word for poppy seeds; meanwhile, tasch is German for pockets. Based on etymology, hamantaschen is folded into triangles to represent Haman's three-pointed hat, his pockets, or his ears.

What is the spiritual significance of Purim? ›

Rabbi Nina Beth Cardin wrote, “Purim teaches us that God will no longer intervene for us and save us, at least not obviously and supernaturally…it says that God will be hidden but not distant, silent but not inactive. God will work through us in our daily lives.

What is the deeper meaning of Purim? ›

Perhaps the main message of Purim, is that we must reveal that which is hidden in our midst. We must make sure that we do not overlook those in want in our communities.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Last Updated:

Views: 6127

Rating: 4.7 / 5 (67 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Mrs. Angelic Larkin

Birthday: 1992-06-28

Address: Apt. 413 8275 Mueller Overpass, South Magnolia, IA 99527-6023

Phone: +6824704719725

Job: District Real-Estate Facilitator

Hobby: Letterboxing, Vacation, Poi, Homebrewing, Mountain biking, Slacklining, Cabaret

Introduction: My name is Mrs. Angelic Larkin, I am a cute, charming, funny, determined, inexpensive, joyous, cheerful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.