Easter Egg Jam Cookies Recipe
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Like most French children, the boulangerie played a big role in my earliest food memories.
The corner bakery was the mythical place where snacks were purchased after school, where grownups could be observed closely while waiting in line with one’s mother for the Saturday lunch baguette, and where one secretly went to buy a few centime’s worth of candy to sneak into one’s room and share with one’s sister.
My allegiances to after-school snacks came and went. There was a long period of getting a milk bun (pain au lait) with a bar of milk chocolate unwrapped, unfoiled, and pushed right in. I never cared for pain aux raisins (eww raisins) but I was all over the almond croissants.
One of my all-time favorites was the lunettes à la confiture (“jam spectacles”), a football-shaped, sugar-dusted cookie sandwich with scalloped edges, and two holes cut out to reveal the layer of jam holding the sablés together (see this video).
I loved those dearly, so it meant a lot that my own kids took to them like a fish to water when I got a box at the organic store. They have been scarfing them down faster than we can buy them, my two-year-old clamoring for “Nettes! Nettes!” and I decided to try and make them myself.
Until I invest in the proper cookie cutter, and because Easter is around the corner, I had the idea to made egg-shaped cookies rather than eyeglasses. So I drew up an egg stencil in two sizes, which you can download here with my compliments. I printed it out on thick paper, and used it to cut the cookies with the tip of a sharp knife.
So it’s all very straightforward: you make roll-out cookie dough, cut out shapes, cut out circles in half the cookies, bake, and pair two by two with a layer of jam in the middle. For the cookie base, I used my recipe for French Christmas sablés, which produces crisp, delicious little cookies, omitting the cinnamon and lowering the sugar to make room for the sweetness of the jam.
These will be perfect if you celebrate Easter, to give away as a gift, or to serve at brunch, or with tea in the afternoon while the kids are running around hunting for chocolate. Having two sizes makes the tray of Easter cookies that much more attractive. I also cut out little hearts with the scraps of dough, and they were the first to disappear.
I used a strawberry-raspberry jam that I got at the organic store, but you’d get bonus points for using your own homemade jam. And if you can’t think of eating anything other than chocolate at Easter, you can replace the jam with ganache or chocolate-hazelnut spread.
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PrintEaster Egg Jam Cookies RecipePrep Time: 40 minutes
Cook Time: 12 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour, 30 minutes
Makes 10 medium and 5 large.
Ingredients
200 grams (7 ounces, about 1 1/2 cups) all-purpose flour, plus more for dusting 125 grams (10 tablespoons) sugar (I use unrefined blond cane sugar) 1/4 teaspoon fine sea salt 1 large egg 125 grams (1/2 cup plus 1 tablespoon) unsalted butter, diced and softened (I leave it out for about 2 hours at room temperature) 175 grams (6 ounces) quality jam such as strawberry, raspberry, apricot... (you can also use chocolate-hazelnut spread) Confectioner’s sugarInstructions
Prepare the dough at least 8 hours in advance, or the day before. In the bowl of a mixer, combine flour, sugar, and salt. Add the egg and mix well. Add the butter in small pieces, mixing it in before adding another piece. The dough will be rather soft; it will get firm after chilling.The post Easter Egg Jam Cookies Recipe appeared first on Chocolate & Zucchini.