EASY APRICOT CHEESE KOLACHES

Recently, kolaches have been receiving a lot of attention.  In fact, just last week, the New York Times ran an article entitled “The Kolache:  Czech, Texan, or All-American? (All Three).”  Kolaches are Czech pastries, made with a yeast dough and most often topped with a sweetened cream cheese or fruit filling.  Here in Texas, kolaches are hugely popular.  There’s a strip of highway in south-central Texas known as the Czech Belt, where numerous bakeries and roadside stops sell homemade kolaches, and for many travelers, stopping and buying kolaches is the highlight of any road trip.  Our personal favorite is Weikel’s Bakery (” We Gotcha Kolache”), and I might add that their apple strudel and mega-sized Rice Krispie squares with pecans are pretty awesome, too.  My kids have been eating sausage kolaches from the Kolache Factory, a chain with locations all over Texas, since they first cut teeth.

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 Offerings at the Kolache Factory

If you are like me, and by that I mean being neither Czech nor inclined to wake up early enough to mix up yeast dough in time to serve kolaches hot out of the oven to my impatient family (and they really are best hot out of the oven — the kolaches, that is, not my family), here is an easy way to quickly satisfy any kolache cravings or curiosity.  By using Pillsbury refrigerated thin crust pizza dough, you can save yourself a LOT of time and still serve up delicious, tender, hot kolaches.  I’ve used apricot jam here, but feel free to go wild and use that fig jam with bay leaf that has been sitting in your pantry for years.

EASY APRICOT CHEESE KOLACHES
Author: 
Recipe type: Breads and Muffins
 
Ingredients
  • 11-ounce can Pillsbury Refrigerated Thin Pizza Crust (do not use other varieties, or your kolaches will be too doughy)
  • 4 ounces cream cheese, softened
  • 4 tablespoons sugar, divided use
  • 3-1/2 tablespoons flour, divided use
  • 1 large egg yolk
  • 2 tablespoons butter, divided use
  • ¼ cup Apricot Preserves
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
  2. Prepare cheese filling: Place cream cheese, 2 tablespoons sugar, 1-1/2 tablespoons flour, and egg yolk in a medium bowl. Using an electric mixer, beat until smooth and creamy.
  3. Prepare crumb topping: Place 2 tablespoons flour, 2 tablespoons sugar, and 1 tablespoon butter in a mini chopper and process until crumbly.
  4. To assemble kolaches, unroll pizza dough, and cut into 6 equal pieces. Using your hands, shape pieces into rounds. Place 1 round in the center of a 9-inch pie plate, and surround with remaining 5 rounds. Gently press rounds together to cover bottom of pie plate. Melt remaining 1 tablespoon of butter by placing in a small dish and microwaving on high for 20 seconds. Using a pastry brush, brush melted butter over dough. Using the back of a tablespoon, create an indentation in each kolache. Fill with 1 tablespoon cheese filling. Top cheese filling on each kolache with 2 teaspoons apricot jam. Sprinkle crumb topping evenly over kolaches.
  5. Bake until lightly golden and cheese filling is set, approximately 18 minutes. Allow to cool briefly in pan. Use a spatula to remove kolaches and transfer to serving plates.

001The timesaving shortcut — be sure it’s thin crust

(other varieties will not achieve desired results)

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Nestled in baking dish, waiting for filling

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First comes the cheese filling . . . 

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 And then the jewel-like fruit filling

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A sprinkling of streusel (known as “posipka”)

010Hot out of the oven 

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Czech it out!

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Těšit!

(which, according to Google Translate, means “Enjoy” in Czech)

BEER BREAD

Just for fun this weekend, I made Beer Bread to serve with dinner.  I clipped this recipe years ago, and we were all skeptical about it — 4 ingredients, and about 5 minutes to mix it together.  But to our happy surprise, the bread was quite tasty, kind of like a biscuit on performance-enhancing drugs.  Don’t get me wrong — no one will mistake this for an $8 loaf of artisanal bread from the farmers market.  But with about as much effort as it takes to put on mascara, you can have fresh-out-of the-oven bread with a crunchy crust, that smells and tastes good, especially with butter slathered on it while warm.  It’ll be great to serve with homemade soup when the weather cools.

BEER BREAD
Author: 
Recipe type: Breads and Muffins
 
Ingredients
  • 3 cups self-rising flour (if you can't find self-rising flour, substitute 3 cups all-purpose flour mixed with 1-1/2 tablespoons baking powder)
  • 5 tablespoons sugar
  • 12-ounces beer (preferably dark)
  • 4 tablespoons butter, melted
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Spray a 9x5x3-inch loaf pan with cooking spray.
  2. In a large bowl, mix together flour, sugar, and beer. Transfer batter to prepared pan. Bake for 45 minutes. Brush melted butter over top of bread and bake 10 minutes more. Remove from pan and serve hot.

 

006 (4)

 Ready for the oven

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 Hot from the oven — smells so good!

012 (3)

 Enjoy some bread while I go put on some mascara