Ahhh, rugelach. You’d be hard-pressed to find a Jewish dessert that is more beloved than sweet, flaky rugelach. Yiddish for “little twists” or “rolled things,” rugelach have become a popular dessert in America, enjoyed by Jews and non-Jews alike. They descend from an Eastern European pastry known as kipfel, which is a croissant-like cookie made with flour, butter, sour cream, sugar, and yeast. Sometimes kipfel are filled with fruit or nuts, sometimes not. In the early 20th century, American Jewish cooks took the concept of kipfel and added cream cheese to the dough, resulting in the delicious rugelach we know and love today.
Rugelach are often served on Jewish holidays like Hanukkah and Shavuot, though of course they can (and should!) be made throughout the year. Our family typically serves them during Rosh Hashanah, when sweet foods are made to signify a sweet new year. The rolled shape is similar to the spiral challah served at Rosh Hashanah, which symbolizes the cyclical nature of a year. Some people roll rugelach into a strudel-like form, then slice it to make spiral-shaped cookies. In today’s blog, I’m going to share the method for creating the more popular crescent-shaped cookies.
While rugelach filling recipes vary greatly, the dough most American bakers use for rugelach is pretty standard, comprised of equal amounts of flour, cream cheese, and butter. I add a bit of sour cream, sugar, and salt to mine because I like to shake things up. I’m a rugelach rebel! Actually, many people use sour cream in their dough instead of cream cheese, which is more similar to the way kipfel are made. I like to add both because I love the way the dough bakes up– crispy on the outside, soft and flaky and scrumptious on the inside. You’ll love it too. Promise.
I wish I could say that this recipe is healthy, but alas, it is just the opposite. That is, unless you consider fat, sugar, and starch to be healthy– and they might be, depending on how you look at it. After all, tasty treats in moderation are certainly good for the soul. I don’t recommend futzing with the recipe too much by substituting lowfat ingredients, since it’s the fat in the dairy products that ultimately makes these cookies so flaky and delicious. If you do try modifying the recipe for health reasons, let me know how it turns out for you– I’d love to hear! For the rest of us making full-fat rugelach, don’t worry about it too much. These cookies bake up fairly small, so you can treat yourself to a couple and not feel too terribly guilty. Life is there to be lived, am I right?? 🙂
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Rugelach
Ingredients
Dough Ingredients
- 1 cup unsalted butter (2 sticks)
- 8 ounces cream cheese
- 1/4 cup sour cream
- 2 cups all purpose flour
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 2 tablespoons granulated sugar
Filling Ingredients
- 1 1/2 cups chopped walnuts or pecans
- 1 1/4 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips
- 1/2 cup berry preserves (raspberry, strawberry, or blackberry)
- 1/4 cup brown sugar
Egg Wash Ingredients
- 1 large egg
- 1 teaspoon water
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 1/2 teaspoons cinnamon
NOTES
Instructions
- Chop cold butter and cream cheese into smaller pieces. Put pieces into your food processor along with sour cream, flour, salt, and sugar. Pulse together ingredients until a crumbly dough forms and begins to fall away from the sides of the processor. Don't overprocess; the dough should look crumbly, like cottage cheese.
- If you don't have a food processor: let the butter and cream cheese come to room temperature. Using a stand mixer or hand mixer, cream the butter and cream cheese together with the sour cream. In a separate bowl, sift together the flour, salt, and sugar. Slowly add the dry mixture to the wet mixture, mixing constantly, until dough holds together and begins to pull away from the sides of the bowl. Don't overmix. Pour dough onto a lightly floured rolling surface...
- and form into a rough ball shape.
- Divide the ball into four equal pieces and form those pieces into rough balls.Cover each ball with plastic and place in the refrigerator. Refrigerate dough balls for at least 1 1/2 hours, for up to 48 hours.
- In a skillet, toast the chopped nuts over medium heat until fragrant.
- Pour the toasted nuts into a food processor along with the chocolate chips, berry preserves, and brown sugar. Pulse together until a thick, coarse paste forms. Reserve.
- Combine the cinnamon and sugar in a small bowl; reserve. Beat your egg wash with water; reserve.Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Lightly flour your rolling surface and rolling pin. Take one portion of the dough out the refrigerator (keep the rest of the dough cold until ready to use). Roll out the dough to about 1/8 inch thickness. You may need to use the rolling pin to pound out the dough a bit at the beginning; the dough will be very firm and cold, but will become more pliable as it starts to warm. Just keep rolling with firm, even pressure, and eventually it will look like this:
- Lift the dough gently from the rolling surface (it may stick a bit) and re-flour your surface beneath the dough.
- Replace the dough onto the newly refloured surface. Use a round 9" cake pan as a guide to make a nice, smooth imprint of a circle in the dough.
- Cut the dough into a large circle, following the shape of the cake pan. If you don't have a cake pan, just guesstimate the size of the circle and cut it as smoothly as you can.Form the trimmed excess dough into a small ball. Wrap it in plastic and reserve in the refrigerator, adding to the ball with each batch that is made.
- Take 1/4 of the filling (about 4 tbsp) and place it in the center of the circle. Spread it very thin across the surface of the dough; a thick layer of filling will make your cookies expand and burst. You can use your fingers to make the spreading easier; I like to use my palm to flatten and even out the filling. Leave about an inch around the edges of the circle.
- Cut the circle into 8 equal triangles by first cutting the circle in half...
- then quarters...
- then halve the quarters to make eighths.If you prefer to make smaller bite-sized cookies, divide each quarter into three to make 12 equal triangles.
- Roll each triangle, starting from the wide flat end and rolling towards the narrow point.
- Keep rolling...
- and rolling...
- until the entire triangle is neatly and firmly rolled.
- Press the end point into the cookie to secure it. Place the rolled cookies onto a parchment lined cookie sheet, end point down. Leave an inch between the cookies, as they will expand slightly during baking.When you are ready to bake, brush the top of each cookie with egg wash, then sprinkle lightly with cinnamon sugar.
- Place cookies in the oven and let them back for about 25 minutes, or until golden brown.Roll out your next batch of cookies while this batch is baking. When the cookies are golden brown, remove from the oven and let them cool on a wire rack.When you're finished making cookies from the four dough balls, make a smooth ball from the leftover dough trimmings you've reserved and roll it out to make your fifth batch.
- These cookies taste amazing served warm and fresh from the oven. They'll keep for a few days in a tightly sealed container. You can rewarm them in the microwave if you want to. Also, feel free to use this dough recipe with other rugelach fillings. If you're using a fruit-only filling, make sure it's an oven safe variety for pastry baking. Using simple jam or preserves alone (without firming them up with other ingredients) tends to make a runny filling that flows out of the cookies, which makes for a goopy mess. If you've never made these cookies before, start with my filling-- it's really yummy, promise!
Nutrition
tried this recipe?
Let us know in the comments!
Hello Tori,
When my Nanny died years ago all her recipes died with her. I exclusively use your recipes when trying to recreate her’s and my mother’s recipes. Blintzes, Kneidelach, Kreplach, Stuffed Cabbage,Chicken Soup,Hamantaschen, this rugelach recipe and more! What a fairly easy recipe and it came out delicious. I highly recommend using the food processor as it made making the dough and the filling quick and easy! My friends are loving them too! Thank you so much. Wish you had a cooking show!
So pleased that you’re enjoying the recipes Bonnie! Thank you for writing. 🙂
I made this recipe and I love it! Crunchy, flaky, buttery, with a delicious filling. I will make them again and again.
Thank you Tory, your recipe for Rugelach has been my go to for years now! The closest I’ve found to my Baba’s❤️
Recipe really looks goo i am handicapped and need short recipes as I can’t stand too long. Thanks.
So glad this is helpful Carolyn!
First time making these this morning I began by setting up the ingredients as they occurred in the recipe. Starting with the dough. Flour, etc. and blend in the machine. At first the dough didn’t come together so I reread the recipe maybe half a dozen times making sure ice water wasn’t called for. Convinced, finally, I just pulsed away. The dough developed as you said. Biggest laugh of my morning! Made up the four “balls” of dough, wrapped and into the reefer. Cleaning up those tools & counter I discovered SOUR CREAM didn’t make it into the dough. Bummed because I like to do a recipe as written at first.
Baked up beautifully! Love these! You are the Best!
First time baking Rugelach and made for Break the Fast 2020. Everyone love them (including me)!
I made rugelach for the first time using this recipe and love the results! Thanks for the excellent instructions; I’ve never thought of using a round cake pan to get a perfect circle! I love the chocolate-nut filling! I used blackberry preserves as that’s alI had on hand, and it was a good compliment. I’m of Czech ancestry and have seen many similar recipes in ethnic cookbooks called “nut rolls” or “nut horns” and have decided they are rugelach. I also have an old and delicious Christmas cookie recipe from the St. Paul (MN) Pioneer Press called “Apricot Crescents” that’s similar; the filling is apricot preserves, flaked coconut, and finely chopped pecans. Yum!
Fabulous Rugelach! I did not care for the chocolate filling so I used raspberry preserves, raspberry liquoure, walnuts, raisins and added some brown sugar. This work out perfect for me.
Thank you so much for your basic receipe. I have been looking for a good one for years!
Meryle
Hello Tori Avey,
I am acquainted with your recipe collection. Your rugelach recipe is not the first recipe of yours that I have made. I have to tell you that you are a culinary Goddess.
Thank You,
Thomas
Wow, Thomas, high praise! Thank you kindly!
Yes thats how I make mine the ingredients are sweet enough.. My grandmother only used 2 cups of flour, 2 sticks of unsalted butter and, 1 block of cream cheese for dough.. She also put raisons in hers..They were delicious
These were the best rugelach I’ve ever tasted – better than the bagel shops. However, mine were far from perfect. The bottoms were burnt. Is it because they were over-stuffed and leaked, causing the sugar to caramelize, as a reader above suggested? I’m keen to get them just right. Many thanks!
Hi, Tori’s assistant Ashley here. It’s difficult to know what went wrong without knowing exactly how they were made, but I’d agree that over-stuffing them would likely cause the bottoms to burn. I’d suggest making them with less next time to see if that helps. Good luck!
Use double cookie sheets. I read that stops the burnt bottoms. I’m trying that concept tomorrow.
This recipe is fantastic!! I usually only bake cookies but my husband wanted me to try rugelach (he is Italian and Irish) so I searched the internet and used Tori’s recipe. WOW!! Not only easy and fun to make but taste unbelievable. I even gave some to my friend who is quite a baker and she really really loved them. THANK YOU TORI – I wish you put out a cookbook. BTW I never put a comment out on anything before but, I felt this truly deserved one.
My aunt used 3 ingredients. 4 cups flour, 2 cups cottage cheese and 1 lbs butter or margarine. The rest is the same, no egg wash no sugar. But putting in fridge, rolling and shaping in triangles is all the same. The dough is like velvet. I use the dough for a savory dish, empanadas. Try it and let me know. No sour cream or cream cheese. I think less calories. Not diet but healthier except for the chocolate or raisins inside.
What type of cottage cheese
For Susan McFarland and Lynn: My mom used creamed cottage cheese and I am sure it is small curd. Her recipe is labeled Meltaways.
Thank you so much for sharing! I wish I could include a photo of my 1st place holiday cookie contest plaque and prize, but you’ll just have to take my word for it! Everyone was saying it wasn’t even a contest, that my cookies blew all the others away.
My notes are to begin checking your first batch early. I didn’t and ended up with a totally burnt first batch and semi burnt second. I had to lower the temp 25 degrees and shorten the time by 5 minutes.
Would it be too much of a good thing to roll these rugelach with Rabbi Olitsky’s Chocolate Chip Cream Cheese filling?
please let me know if I can freeze this dough. Thank you, best ruggalah recipe
Hi Nancy, Tori’s assistant Ashley here! We have not frozen this dough, thought I think that if you wrap it very well before freezing it should be just fine. Let us know how it turns out!