Honey cookies (melomakarona)

60 servings

Ingredients

Quantity Ingredient
Karen Mintzias
1 cup Butter
¾ cup Caster sugar
¾ cup Maize or peanut oil
1 tablespoon Honey
2 teaspoons Orange juice
teaspoon Ground cinnamon
1 cup Sugar
1 cup Water
½ Cinnamon stick
1 Orange; grated rind only
6 cups Plain flour
4 teaspoons Baking powder
¾ cup Orange juice
cup Finely chopped walnuts
2 drops Almond essence
teaspoon Lemon juice
1 Thin strip of lemon rind
¼ cup Honey

Directions

NUT FILLING (OPTIONAL

HONEY SYRUP

Oven temperature: 180 C (350 F) Beat butter and sugar with orange rind until creamy. Gradually add oil and continue beating until mixture is very light and fluffy.

Stir in flour alternately with orange juice. Knead dough lightly with hands for 1 minute.

Take a scant tablespoon of dough and flatten it a little. Place a teaspoon of the nut filling in the centre and fold dough over to enclose filling.

Shape into ovals, pinching ends to a point. Decorate tops with tines of fork or by crimping cookies diagonally across top in four rows with special crimper (see NOTE), or leave them plain.

Place on lightly greased baking trays and bake in a moderate oven for 20-25 minutes until golden brown. Cool on wire racks.

Dip in boiling syrup, four at a time, turning cookies once. Leave in syrup 10 seconds in all, longer if well-soaked cookies are preferred.

Lift out onto a plate and leave until cool.

(If no nut filling is used, sprinkle tops with crushed walnuts or toasted sesame seeds and cinnamon. Only those which are to be served should be dipped; store remainder in an airtight container and dip when required.

TO MAKE NUT FILLING: Thin honey down with orange juice and blend into remaining ingredients.

TO MAKE HONEY SYRUP: Place ingredients in a heavy-based saucepan and stir over heat until sugar dissolves. Bring to the boil and boil over moderately high heat for 10 minutes and skim. Let syrup boil on a moderate heat while dipping cookies. Add a little water to syrup when it thickens too much during dipping.

NOTE: Icing crimpers will be familiar to many pastrycooks and cake decorators who work with icing. If you don't own a crimper (or have never seen one), have the family handyman cut a piece of tin or aluminium plate about 2½ x 10 cm (1 x 4 inches). Bend metal in half over a thin rod and cut 6 to 8 evenly spaced saw-like teeth on the narrow edges. Curl the "teeth" slightly inwards.

Source: The Greek Cookbook, by Tess Mallos Typos courtesy of: Karen Mintzias

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