... and I'm still recovering. The Haas tornado whipped through the home in the afternoon and we certainly made merry. Now, today - too many chocolate eggs and cannolis later - I feel a biscotti and a cafe are in order - only the biscottis are gone. I sent Easter sweets - including three types of dessert up to Collegeville - with my son today. This is to ensure that I do not make too many trips to the refrigerator this week.
Now, my mother's Wheat Pie is another story. The Pizza du Grane remains in the fridge - carefully hidden by Kirsten. It is my daughter's favorite dessert and she guards it as a She-Bear guards her cub. It somehow did not make it to the dessert buffet table yesterday! In fact, when my husband peeked into the fridge yesterday and exclaimed, "Oh no - we forgot to put out the Easter Wheat Pie" and indeed - started to actually take it out - my daughter rushed into the kitchen, grabbed the pie from his hands and carefully sneaked it back in- and covered with "stuff." More on that tomorrow. Happily, there were at least 8 desserts on the table. It was not missed. Really.
As I bemoan the loss of my biscottis which disappeared quickly, I am cheered by the knowledge that I have the recipe and the ingredients! And now you will, too.
From: Sweet Sicily: A Story of an Island and Her Pastries by Victoria Granof
8 T unsalted butter, softened
1/2 cup sugar
2 egg yolks
1/2 cup milk
Grated zest of 1 lemon
2-1/2 cup flour
2 t baking powder
3/4 cup sesame seeds
In a large bowl, beat the butter and sugar together until just combined. Beat in the yolks, milk and zest. (The mixture will seem curdled and that is fine) Sift the flour with the baking powder and stir into the butter mixture. Mix until the dough comes together in ball. Cover and refrigerate for at least one hour or up to 1 day (being a lazybones I always refrigerate overnight). It makes the dough easier to handle.
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Grease two large baking sheets.
Ms. Granof has you rinse the sesame seeds in a fine mesh strainer and dry. I did not do that. I did turn them out in a shallow baking pan.
Divide dough into eight equal parts. Shape each one into a ball and then roll each ball with the palm of your hands on a lightly floured ball into a rope about 8 inches long. With a sharp knife, cut each rope into 4 pieces. Roll each piece in the sesame seeds and place 2 inches apart on the greased baking sheet. (I needed to brush them with milk so that the sesame seeds would adhere.)
Bake for 20-25 minutes until browned. Let cool for five minutes and then place on baking racks.
I probably ate 2 piping hot! Sweet Sicily is a sumptuous book - containing mouth-watering photos and some history behind each of the pastries and the various cultures that have influenced Sicilian desserts. I may need to write a play about a dessert. And it won't be a drama! Happy Easter Monday, all!
glad to hear you had such a wonderful easter! all your goodies sound yummy :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Heather -hope yours was also lovely. I am sure it was yummy.
ReplyDeletei'm glad you agree with me regarding the suspicioness of a "fishing cat"!!! ;)
ReplyDeleteps i am definitely trying this "wheat pie" next easter. it's rare that i hear of an eyetalian tradition i haven't tried, but i've never heard of this!
How funny-about your daughter hiding the pie! I am convinced I have to try it!!! It must be real special.
ReplyDeleteI shall post the photo tomorrow and the link to the recipe. the recipe makes about four pies. The original recipe fed Italy. You do need the wheat - many stories about bringing the wheat home to Minnesota...
ReplyDeleteThat's what I'm talking about: eight desserts!!! My kind of meal.
ReplyDeleteWow... 8 desserts? That's a lot! Can't wait to see the pictures :)
ReplyDeleteSounds like a perfect day. I can NOT wait to see what goes into that pie!!
ReplyDeleteOh I love that book and I have the book too. I made some of the cookies from that, it was delicious.
ReplyDeleteCheers,
elra
i'm so glad to hear that you had a wonderful Easter. thank you so much for the compliment on my story. it meant so much, especially coming from a playwright like you :).
ReplyDeletemay i add you to my blogroll?
Pearl: I would be honored to be added to your blogroll. I am in the midst of change here and will adding blogs, changing templates, etc in the coming days. There's something about spring that begs for new and clean lines!
ReplyDeleteI am the official dessert guard at our house. It all looks so yummy.
ReplyDeleteI love all the sesame seeds in it! so toasty and crunchy!
ReplyDeletesounds like you had a mega feast! 8 dessert?!! 0____0
Oh, Claudia, I would love to come to your home for Easter dinner! How beautiful everything looks. I especially like your biscotti recipe and will have to give that a try.
ReplyDeleteI'll be back for seconds! :-)
Mmm, these look like perfect little Easter cookies. How delicious! So glad your daughter was able to preserve her favorite Easter treat.
ReplyDelete