Best 4 Date Filled Shortbread Cookies Maamoul Recipes

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Date filled shortbread cookies maamoul are a traditional Middle Eastern treat that are popular throughout the world. These delightful pastries feature a crumbly shortbread crust filled with a sweet date paste and flavored with a variety of spices. Maamoul are often made for special occasions, such as Eid al-Fitr, but they can be enjoyed any time of year. With their unique flavor and texture, maamoul are sure to be a hit with your family and friends.

Check out the recipes below so you can choose the best recipe for yourself!

DATE-FILLED SHORTBREAD COOKIES (MA'AMOUL)



Date-Filled Shortbread Cookies (Ma'amoul) image

Some say ma'amoul, a popular Middle Eastern cookie stuffed with date puree, is a reminder that at the end of the fasting period, there's a sweet reward. Stamped with geometric designs, they make beautiful edible gifts.

Provided by Martha Stewart

Categories     Food & Cooking     Dessert & Treats Recipes     Cookie Recipes

Yield Makes about 24

Number Of Ingredients 17

1/2 teaspoon active dry yeast
1/2 cup plus 1/2 teaspoon sugar
1/4 cup warm water (100 to 110 degrees)
3 cups fine semolina flour
1/2 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons ground mahleb
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon ground mastic
1 cup clarified butter, melted and cooled
1/4 cup whole milk, room temperature
1/2 cup pitted Medjool dates
1/4 cup unsalted butter, room temperature
3 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons sugar
2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
2 teaspoons ground mahleb
1 teaspoon ground anise seeds

Steps:

  • Dough: In a small bowl, stir yeast and 1/2 teaspoon sugar into warm water; let stand until bubbly, about 5 minutes.
  • In a large bowl, whisk together flours, mahleb, salt, mastic, and remaining 1/2 cup sugar. Gently mix in clarified butter until it is absorbed. In a small bowl, stir together yeast mixture and milk. Drizzle over flour mixture; using your hands or a rubber spatula, knead just until dough comes together and is moist but not wet. Cover; let stand at room temperature 2 hours.
  • Filling: Meanwhile, pulse dates, butter, water, sugar, cinnamon, mahleb, and anise seeds in a food processor until a smooth paste forms. Cover and let stand until dough has rested.
  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Using a 1 1/2-inch ice cream scoop, scoop 1 heaping tablespoon of dough; roll into a ball. Press dough in the palm of your hand to form a well in the center. Place 1 scant teaspoon of filling in well. Pull up sides of dough to enclose, adding more dough if necessary. Firmly press dough into a ma'amoul mold. Invert mold; tap to release dough onto a parchment-lined baking sheet. Repeat with remaining dough, spacing about 1 inch apart. Refrigerate about 1 hour.
  • Bake until beginning to turn golden around edges, 14 to 17 minutes. Transfer sheets to a wire rack; let cool completely.

MAAMOUL (DATE FILLED COOKIES)



Maamoul (Date Filled Cookies) image

Maamoul are buttery date filled middle eastern cookies that will melt in your mouth and are utterly scrumptious. Naturally sweetened with dates these have minimal added sugar. They are popular at Eid, Christmas and other holidays.

Provided by Roxana Begum

Categories     Dessert

Time 1h

Number Of Ingredients 9

1/2 cup ghee (or butter, grass fed )
1/4 cup light olive oil (or butter/ghee)
2 ½ cups all purpose flour ((may use half whole wheat pastry flour))
2 tablespoons sugar
2 tablespoons rose water (or orange flower water)
3 tablespoons milk ((start with 2 and add as needed))
2/3 lb dates (medjool, soft, pitted, chopped (or ready made date paste))
confectioner's sugar
almond flour

Steps:

  • Preheat the oven to 350°F.

Nutrition Facts : ServingSize 1 cookie, Calories 104 kcal, Carbohydrate 15 g, Protein 1 g, Fat 4 g, SaturatedFat 2 g, Cholesterol 7 mg, Sodium 1 mg, Fiber 1 g, Sugar 7 g

LEBANON TRAVELER'S DATE COOKIES (MAMOUL)



Lebanon Traveler's Date Cookies (Mamoul) image

Like shortbread in Scotland, these cookies, called mamoul, are found everywhere in Lebanon and Syria. They're rich semolina cookies shaped around a date paste perfumed with orange flower water and rose water. They're a beautiful pale yellow, easy to bite into.

Provided by Olha7397

Categories     Dessert

Time 40m

Yield 2 doz

Number Of Ingredients 14

1/2 teaspoon active dry yeast
1/4 cup lukewarm water
1 tablespoon orange flower water
1 large egg
8 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted and cooled to lukewarm
1 1/2 cups coarse semolina (NOT fine semolina flour)
2 tablespoons sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup all-purpose flour
milk, for brushing
3/4 cup honey dates
3 tablespoons sugar
1 1/2 teaspoons orange flower water
1 1/2 teaspoons rose water

Steps:

  • In a large bowl, dissolve the yeast in the water. Stir in the orange flower water, egg, and melted butter. Add the semolina and stir in, then sprinkle on the sugar and salt and stir. Add the flour and stir and turn to combine until crumbly but holds together when squeezed. Cover with plastic wrap and let rest for 1 hour.
  • Meanwhile, prepare the filling: Place all the ingredients in a food processor and process to a paste. Transfer to a bowl and set aside, covered.
  • Place a rack in the center of the oven and preheat the oven to 350°F Set out an 18 by 12 inch baking sheet near your work surface.
  • To shape the mamoul, use a tablespoon to scoop up a full level tablespoon of dough. Place it in the palm of one hand and use the thumb and fingers of the other hand to flatten it into a nearly 3-inch-diameter round. Scoop up 1 1/2 teaspoons of the filling and place it on the center of the round. Pull the edges up to cover the filling, then roll the cookie lightly between your palms to make a ball. Place seam side down on the baking sheet. Repeat with the remaining dough and filling, placing the cookies about 1/2 inch apart. Prick each cookie decoratively with a fork. Brush the tops with a little milk.
  • Bake until touched at the edges with golden brown, 20 to 25 minutes. Transfer immediately to a wire rack to cool. Makes 2 dozen rich cookies, either round mounds or high decorated ovals, filled with aromatic date paste.
  • NOTE: This recipe the instructions for round mamoul decorated only by pricking with a fork. In Syria and Lebanon, and in some specialty grocery stores in North America, you can find elaborately carved mamoul molds. If you have a mold, oil it with olive oil and then oil again lightly every 3 or 4 mamoul. Fill the mold almost full of dough and use your thumb to press down in the center. This will make a hollow in the center and will also give you thin walls of dough around the edges. You may need less filling, say 1 teaspoon each. Place the filling in the center, then fold the thin walls over and pinch off any excess dough. Pull the shaped mamoul up gently from the mold and transfer to the baking sheet, decorative side up. Repeat with the remaining dough and filling.
  • Semolina, a coarse grind of durum wheat with small, irregular yellow granules, is used to make pasta. It is also used as bread flour in Puglia, and in Tunisia and Morocco.
  • Semolina flour, also known as durum flour, is finely ground. It is very high in gluten. It can, like semolina, be used to make bread, but because it is so high in gluten, the bread dough will be stiff and the bread fairly tough.
  • Home Baking.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 1435.5, Fat 50.8, SaturatedFat 30.3, Cholesterol 227.9, Sodium 336.9, Carbohydrate 221.1, Fiber 12.1, Sugar 74.2, Protein 28

MA'AMOUL



Ma'amoul image

Ma'amoul are popular Middle Eastern shortbread cookies flavored with mahlab - a powdered spice made of cherry pits - and orange blossom water. They're usually stuffed with crushed pistachios, crushed walnuts or date paste and stamped with geometric designs. They are often presented as gifts during high holidays, and are best enjoyed with tea or Turkish coffee. This version, which came to The Times by way of Dalia Mortada in a Sunday Review piece she wrote about Syrian food, is adapted from Rana Jebran, a founder of HoneyDoe, a Syrian catering company in Chicago.

Provided by The New York Times

Categories     cookies and bars, dessert

Time 3h

Yield 18 to 20 cookies

Number Of Ingredients 17

9 tablespoons (125 grams) unsalted butter, softened
1/4 cup ghee (clarified butter)
1 1/2 cups (250 grams) coarse semolina
1 1/2 cups (250 grams) fine semolina (or all-purpose flour)
1/4 cup (50 grams) granulated sugar
1/2 teaspoon mahlab (available in Middle Eastern shops)
1/4 cup orange blossom water
1/2 teaspoon instant yeast
1 to 3 tablespoons cold milk
Powdered sugar, for dusting
6 tablespoons (50 grams) shelled pistachios, finely chopped
1/2 tablespoon powdered sugar
1/2 tablespoon orange blossom water
1/2 cup (50 grams) walnut pieces, finely choppped
1/2 tablespoon powdered sugar
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 tablespoon orange blossom water

Steps:

  • Prepare the dough: In a large bowl combine the butter and ghee and mix well with a spatula. In a separate bowl, combine the coarse and fine semolina, the sugar and mahlab and mix well.
  • Add the dry ingredients to the butter-ghee mixture. Use your hands to massage the ingredients together, rubbing it between your fingers without kneading or over-working the dough. Add ¼ cup orange blossom water and thoroughly mix with your hands again. Cover and set aside to rest for at least two hours and up to 10 hours at room temperature.
  • Meanwhile, prepare the nut fillings: In a bowl, thoroughly mix the pistachios, sugar and orange blossom water; set aside. In a separate bowl thoroughly mix the walnuts, sugar, cinnamon and orange blossom water; set aside.
  • Preheat the oven to 350˚F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper. In a small bowl, mix the yeast with 2 tablespoons warm water until it dissolves. Add it to the dough and mix using your hands (but, again, don't knead). If the dough seems too dry to form into a ball, add cold milk, 1 tablespoon at a time, until the dough comes together. The dough shouldn't be wet, just moist enough to stick together when forming the cookies.
  • Take a chunk of dough and roll it into a ball the size of a golf ball. Holding the dough ball in one hand, take the index finger of your other hand to indent the center and form a hollow area by continuing to press down while turning the ball with your other hand. Spoon one of the nut fillings into the hole and close it back up, pinching the dough together over the filling. Repeat with remaining dough and filling.
  • In the Middle East, ma'amoul cookies have beautiful intricate designs after being pressed into special molds. You can find molds online or at a Middle Eastern supermarket. Otherwise you could use a muffin tin to shape the cookies. Press the stuffed dough ball into an oiled mold and then gently smack the mold onto your hand to get the cookie out. Arrange the molded cookies on the prepared baking sheet and bake until golden brown on the bottom, about 14 minutes.
  • Dust the cookies with a layer of powdered sugar as soon as they come out of the oven (the sugar will melt into the dough), then dust again once cooled. Serve with a cup of tea or Turkish coffee.

Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 211, UnsaturatedFat 5 grams, Carbohydrate 23 grams, Fat 11 grams, Fiber 2 grams, Protein 4 grams, SaturatedFat 5 grams, Sodium 2 milligrams, Sugar 3 grams, TransFat 0 grams

Tips:

  • Use high-quality dates for the filling. This will make a big difference in the flavor of the cookies.
  • If the dough is too dry, add a little bit of water until it comes together.
  • If the dough is too sticky, add a little bit of flour until it is no longer sticky.
  • Be careful not to overwork the dough, or the cookies will be tough.
  • Chill the dough for at least 30 minutes before baking. This will help the cookies hold their shape.
  • Bake the cookies until they are just golden brown. If you overbake them, they will be dry and crumbly.
  • Let the cookies cool completely before storing them in an airtight container.

Conclusion:

Date-filled shortbread cookies are a delicious and festive treat that is perfect for any occasion. They are easy to make and can be customized to your own taste. With a few simple tips, you can make sure that your cookies turn out perfect every time.

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