Indulge in the delectable flavors of ricotta-filled pastries, a delightful treat that tantalizes the taste buds and captivates the senses. These pastries, often showcasing a golden-brown crust and a soft, pillowy interior, are a symphony of textures and flavors. They can be enjoyed as a sweet or savory dish, with endless possibilities for fillings and toppings. Whether you prefer the classic combination of ricotta cheese, sugar, and cinnamon, or explore more adventurous variations like spinach and feta or sun-dried tomatoes and pesto, there's a ricotta-filled pastry out there to satisfy every palate. Let's delve into the world of these delectable treats and discover the perfect recipe to delight your taste buds.
Check out the recipes below so you can choose the best recipe for yourself!
SWEET RICOTTA PASTRIES
Provided by Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Categories Food Processor Egg Dessert Bake Ricotta Orange Family Reunion Shower Potluck Pastry Gourmet Kidney Friendly Vegetarian Pescatarian Peanut Free Tree Nut Free Soy Free Kosher
Yield Makes 12 servings
Number Of Ingredients 21
Steps:
- Make filling:
- Bring milk and zest to a simmer in a small heavy saucepan, then remove from heat. Whisk together yolk, sugar, cornstarch, and a pinch of salt in a bowl. Whisk in milk, then transfer mixture to saucepan.
- Bring to a boil over medium heat, whisking constantly, and boil 1 minute. Stir in vanilla, then transfer to a clean bowl and chill custard, its surface covered with parchment paper (to prevent a skin from forming), until cold, at least 1 hour. Discard zest.
- Pulse ricotta in a food processor until smooth. Whisk into custard. Stir in orange-flower water and citron. Chill until ready to use.
- Prepare pastry while custard chills:
- Pulse flour, sugar, and salt in cleaned food processor until combined. Add butter and zest and pulse until mixture resembles coarse meal with some roughly pea-size butter lumps. Add yolks and water and pulse until just incorporated and dough begins to form large clumps.
- Turn out dough onto a work surface and divide into 4 portions. With heel of your hand, smear each portion once or twice in a forward motion to help distribute fat. Gather dough together, using a pastry or bench scraper if you have one, and form into a ball.
- Generously butter muffin cups and top of pan. Press 2 tablespoon dough over bottom and up side of each muffin cup in an even layer with well-floured fingers. Chill until firm, about 30 minutes.
- Meanwhile, roll out remaining dough between 2 sheets of parchment paper into a 9-inch round (about 1/8 inch thick) and transfer to a baking sheet, discarding top sheet of paper. Cut 12 (1/2-inch-wide) strips, then cut in half crosswise to make 24 strips total. Chill until ready to use.
- Assemble and Bake pastries:
- Spoon a scant 2 tablespoons filling into each muffin cup and smooth, then crisscross 2 strips on top of filling, trimming to fit. Brush pastry cross with egg wash. Bake until filling is puffed and starting to crack and edges are golden, 25 to 30 minutes.
- Cool in pan on a rack 10 minutes. Invert a rack on top of pan, then flip pan and remove. Turn pastries right side up and cool completely.
RICOTTA-FILLED PASTRIES
Categories Mixer Cheese Egg Dessert Bake Ricotta Orange Vanilla Spring Pastry Gourmet Kidney Friendly Peanut Free Tree Nut Free Soy Free
Yield Makes about 24 pastries
Number Of Ingredients 20
Steps:
- Make dough:
- Mix together 3 cups flour and sea salt in bowl of mixer at moderately low speed, then beat in water. Gently squeeze a small handful of dough: It should hold together without falling apart. If it doesn't, add more water 1 teaspoon at a time, beating after each addition and continuing to test. Continue beating at moderately low speed until dough forms a ball, about 5 minutes (dough will not be smooth).
- Halve dough and roll out each half into a rough 12- by 5-inch rectangle (1/4 inch thick) with a rolling pin. Put dough on a lightly floured baking sheet and cover with plastic wrap. Set smooth rollers of pasta machine at widest setting. Feed 1 piece of dough through rollers 6 times, folding in half each time. Feed remaining piece of dough through rollers in same manner.
- Stack both pieces of dough and, using rolling pin, roll together to form 1 (1/2-inch-thick) piece. Feed dough through rollers 10 more times, folding in half each time. Fold dough in half crosswise, then fold in half again. Chill dough, wrapped in plastic wrap, at least 2 hours and up to 8.
- Beat together butter and lard in a bowl with mixer until pale and fluffy.
- Quarter dough. Keeping remaining pieces covered with plastic wrap, roll out 1 piece dough into a rough 4- by 8-inch rectangle (1/4 inch thick) on a lightly floured surface. Feed rectangle through rollers of pasta machine (dust dough with flour as necessary to prevent sticking), making space between rollers narrower each time, until dough has gone through narrowest setting (dough strip will be about 4 feet long). Cover strip loosely with plastic wrap. Feed another piece of dough through rollers in same manner.
- Put 1 dough strip on lightly floured surface and trim ends to make even. Spread 3 tablespoons lard butter evenly over strip with offset spatula. Gently stretch strip to 9 inches wide with your fingers, moving slowly down length of strip. Beginning at a short end, carefully and tightly roll up strip, stopping 1 inch before end, then cover loosely with plastic wrap. Spread other dough strip with 3 tablespoons lard butter and stretch to 9 inches in same manner (do not roll up). Overlap 1 inch of a short end onto exposed end of first roll, then continue to roll up first roll to form a tight cylinder (about 9 inches long and 2 inches in diameter).
- Feed remaining 2 pieces of dough through rollers and make another tight cylinder in same manner. Wrap cylinders well in plastic wrap and chill until firm, at least 3 hours. Chill remaining lard butter.
- Make filling:
- Bring sugar and water to a boil in a 2-quart saucepan over moderate heat, stirring until sugar is dissolved. Add semolina flour in a slow steady stream, stirring, and cook, stirring, until mixture becomes a thick heavy paste, 2 minutes. Transfer to a baking sheet and spread 1/4 inch thick. Chill, covered with wax paper, until cold, about 30 minutes.
- Tear semolina into pieces and mix in bowl of mixer at low speed to break up. Add yolks, vanilla, sea salt, and cinnamon and beat until smooth. Mix in ricotta and candied orange peel at low speed. Spoon into pastry bag and chill.
- Form pastries:
- Preheat oven to 400°F. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper. Remove remaining lard butter from refrigerator.
- Working with 1 cylinder at a time, trim about 1/2 inch from each end, then cut cylinders into 3/4-inch-thick slices (about 12). Lay 1 slice flat on work surface and gently flatten into a 4-inch round with heel of your hand, starting in center and smearing out in all directions.
- Form round into a cone:
- Carefully scrape round off work surface with a knife or metal spatula. Put your thumbs underneath round and first two fingers of each hand on top, then gently push center upward with thumbs and simultaneously pull side downward with fingers, keeping layers overlapping slightly (imagine a collapsible travel cup).
- Cupping cone in palm of your hand, pipe in about 3 tablespoons filling. Pinch edges of dough together to seal and put pastry on a baking sheet. Form and fill more sfogliatelle in same manner with remaining slices and remaining cylinder.
- Brush sfogliatelle with some lard butter. Bake in batches in middle of oven (keep second batch covered with plastic wrap while first bakes), brushing with remaining lard butter twice during baking, until very crisp and golden brown, about 30 minutes total. Transfer pastries to a rack to cool slightly, then serve.
FLAKY RICOTTA PASTRIES
Sfogliatella Riccia Shell-shaped Flaky Ricotta Pastries Recipe provided by Adrianna in Sicily: www.cookiesfromitaly.com Sfogliatella is a fan or shell-shaped pastry. It is heavy because it is filled with semolina, ricotta, and candied fruit. It is Neapolitan in origin. Sfogliatelli originated in the Middle East. Yes, the Arabs brought the art to Europe and it became the millefeuille of France, the strudel of Austria, the millefoglie of Sicily, and the sfogliatelli of Naples. The original recipes used a rendered pork fat called strutto, but today the fat is replaced with butter. We have given the pastry recipe too! But, one can buy perfectly good frozen puff pastry in any super market or specialty store if the puff appears a bit overwhelming.
Provided by Phil Franco
Categories Dessert
Time 1h20m
Yield 10 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Bring the water to a boil, add a pinch of salt and pour in the semolina, stirring so as not to form lumps.
- Cook, stirring for about 8 mins., stirring constantly. Let cool.
- Make a Fontana with the flour. Put half of the butter, a pinch of salt and as much water as necessary to knead the dough to a smooth and elastic consistency. Wrap the dough in a towel and let rest for an hour.
- Sift the ricotta; mix with the semolina, 6 tbs. sugar, a pinch of cinnamon and the candied peel.
- Roll out the pastry with a rolling pin to obtain a 25x18-in. rectangle, 1/16-in. thick. Cut the pastry vertically into 4 strips and place one on top of the other, brushing each one with melted butter. Let rest for half an hour, and then roll up the stack of dough.
- Slice the roll into 10 equal pieces with a very sharp, floured knife. Place the pieces on the pastry board and roll them gently with the rolling pin, first vertically, in an upward direction, and then in a downwards direction, to give them an oval shape.
- Turn the ovals over, place a bit of ricotta filling in the middle of each one, brush the edges with egg yolk, then fold the dough over and press to seal.
- Brush the sfogliatelle with melted strutto and place on a paper greased with butter. Bake in a pre-heated oven at 425ºF for 20 minutes
- Remove from the oven. Brush with melted butter again, lower the temperature to 350ºF and bake for another 20 minutes
- Let cool, sprinkle with confectioner's sugar and serve.
- That's it!
Nutrition Facts : Calories 350.6, Fat 22.2, SaturatedFat 13, Cholesterol 68.4, Sodium 133.9, Carbohydrate 33.4, Fiber 1, Sugar 12.8, Protein 4.7
RICOTTA PUFFS
Roasted red peppers and ricotta cheese give these pastry puffs delicious flavor, while parsley and oregano add a little spark. -Maria Regakis, Somerville, Massachusetts
Provided by Taste of Home
Categories Appetizers
Time 35m
Yield 1-1/2 dozen.
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 400°. On a lightly floured surface, unfold puff pastry. Cut each sheet into nine squares. Mix ricotta cheese, red peppers, 2 tablespoons Romano cheese, parsley, oregano and pepper., Brush pastry edges with milk; place 2 rounded teaspoonfuls of cheese mixture in center of each square. Fold edges of pastry over filling, forming a rectangle; seal edges with a fork. Cut slits in pastry; brush with milk. Sprinkle with remaining Romano cheese., Place 2 in. apart on lightly greased baking sheets. Bake until golden brown, 15-20 minutes. Remove to wire racks. Serve warm. Refrigerate leftovers.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 150 calories, Fat 8g fat (2g saturated fat), Cholesterol 4mg cholesterol, Sodium 140mg sodium, Carbohydrate 16g carbohydrate (1g sugars, Fiber 2g fiber), Protein 3g protein.
Tips:
- Use high-quality ricotta cheese: Look for ricotta cheese that is fresh and smooth, with a slightly sweet flavor. Avoid ricotta cheese that is grainy or watery.
- Drain the ricotta cheese well: Before using the ricotta cheese, drain it in a colander for at least 30 minutes to remove excess moisture. This will help to prevent the pastries from becoming soggy.
- Use a light touch when mixing the dough: Over-mixing the dough will make the pastries tough. Mix the dough just until it comes together, then stop.
- Chill the dough before baking: Chilling the dough before baking will help to prevent the pastries from spreading too much in the oven.
- Bake the pastries until they are golden brown: The pastries should be baked until they are golden brown on top and cooked through in the center. This will take about 20-25 minutes.
Conclusion:
Ricotta-filled pastries are a delicious and versatile treat that can be enjoyed for breakfast, lunch, or dinner. They are easy to make and can be customized with a variety of fillings and toppings. With a little creativity, you can create your own unique ricotta-filled pastries that your family and friends will love.
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