Description
I searched high and low for a recipe for this delicious pastry, originally prepared only for the aristocratic Renaissance set in Italy. There are only a few recipes online in English, and they assume you know quite about bit about baking or were just wrong. I’ve tried to simplify the process. It’s a challenging recipe that requires a lot of time and some special techniques. Don’t be upset if you don’t get it right the first time. NOTE: The dough is a formula, so the ingredient measures are weights. It matters. The rest is less critical, so I used volumes.
Ingredients
- 12 ⅓ ounces bread flour
- 5 ⅓ ounces semolina flour
- ⅓ ounce kosher salt
- 6 ½ fluid ounces water, or more if needed
- ⅔ fluid ounce honey
- 1 ⅔ cups whole-milk ricotta cheese
- 1 cup water
- ½ cup white sugar
- ⅔ cup semolina flour
- 2 large egg yolks
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- ¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 2 tablespoons finely chopped candied orange peel
- ½ cup unsalted butter, room temperature
- ½ cup lard, room temperature
- ¼ cup confectioners’ sugar for dusting
Instructions
- Mix bread flour
- 5 1/3 ounces semolina flour
- and kosher salt together in a large bowl; add water and honey and mix. The dough will be very dry
- like pasta. If there is still dry flour after a few minutes of mixing
- add up to 2 teaspoons more water to ensure all the flour is moistened.
- Turn dough onto a counter. Knead a few minutes until the dough is smooth
- firm
- and not tacky. While firm
- the dough must also be workable. Divide the dough into four pieces and flatten. Cover dough with plastic wrap when not working with it. Run each piece through a pasta machine on its widest setting a dozen or so times
- folding in half and rotating the sheet 45 degrees each time (see Cook’s Note). Dust with flour very sparingly
- only if needed to prevent tearing. Repeat with all four pieces. Wrap dough in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 2 hours.
- Blend ricotta cheese in a food processor until smooth. Boil 1 cup of water and stir in the sugar. Sift in the semolina
- whisking to avoid clumping. It will immediately thicken up. Reduce heat to low
- fold in the ricotta
- and cook for another 2 minutes
- stirring constantly.
- Remove pan from heat and return filling to food processor. While processor is running
- add egg yolks
- one at a time
- until fully combined. Add vanilla
- cinnamon
- and candied orange peel and pulse to mix. Transfer filling to a bowl. Cool to room temperature
- cover with plastic wrap
- and refrigerate.
- Divide each dough piece into four pieces. Cover dough with plastic wrap. Place clean kitchen towels over a work surface. Lay each sheet of dough on the towels while you roll out the remaining sheets.
- Run each piece through the pasta machine on progressively smaller settings until dough is as thin as possible. After running it through the pasta machine
- stretch each sheet as wide as you can without tearing. Dough sheets should stretch to three times their original width and be so thin you can see through it.
- Place a sheet of parchment paper on a work surface. Melt butter and lard. Place the first sheet of pastry on the parchment. Brush the dough with the butter-lard mixture. Lay the second sheet above the first
- overlapping a half-inch or so. Roll the sheets up into a tight cylinder
- leaving about an inch to overlap the next sheet. Lay the third dough sheet on the parchment
- overlapping the second sheet
- and brush with the butter mixture. Continue rolling up the log of dough
- repeating until all the dough pieces are brushed with the butter mixture and rolled up. Wrap dough log in the parchment sheet and wrap entirely with plastic wrap; refrigerate for 2 hours.
- Preheat oven to 400 degrees F (200 degrees C). Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Place filling mixture in a pastry bag or a 1 gallon zipper bag with the corner snipped off.
- Cut cylinder of dough into half-inch slices; you should have 16 to 20 pieces. Holding the dough in both hands
- use your thumbs to flatten the dough piece from the center outwards. Form flattened slice into a cone shape. Pipe filling into center
- close partially
- and repeat with remaining dough and filling.
- Bake in preheated oven until dough turns golden brown and starts to “peel” back from the pastries
- 20 to 30 minutes. You can baste the pastries a couple of times with the leftover butter and lard mixture during baking
- if you like. Dust with confectioners\’ sugar before serving.
Prep Time: 1 hr
Cook Time: 30 mins
Total Time: 6 hrs 30 mins
Servings: 16