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Converso Cake

March 14, 2017 Sara Gardner

Over the past few weeks, I’ve traveled a great deal through towns and cities that are all a part of the Camino de Santiago (reflections on those places coming soon). For those readers that don’t know, the Camino de Santiago de Compostela (literally the “walk of St. James’ of Compostela”)  is a pilgrimage route, the most well-known of which runs through the French Pyrenes through the north of Spain to the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela on the northwestern point of Galicia (see this map for an idea). This pilgrimage is not only famous among the religious, as the ruins of Santiago (aka St. James) were supposedly found in this Galician capital, but also for tons of tourists as well, who to northern Spain to traverse the famous path, hoping on their way to find inner-peace or just enjoy the novelty of the trip. In fact, this pilgrimage has become one of the most well-known of the many fabulous Spanish traditions – up there with the running of the bulls in Pamplona, Buñol’s Tomatina, and Sevilla’s Semana Santa.

Interestingly enough, the city of Santiago de Compostela also boasts a famous, similarly-named dessert called the Tarta de Santiago (“St. James’ cake). Popularized through its omnipresence in the bakeries along the Camino de Santiago, this delectable cake is also found all over Spain as a simple but oh-so-delicious merienda with afternoon coffee or breakfast. Made of a mix of ground almonds, a cloud of meringue, sugar, and citrus zest, this cake has become emblematic of the Camino – and yet it also lays claim to a secret Jewish past that very few who eat it know.

During the 12th and 13th centuries, a wave of Almohads conquered their way from Morocco across the Gibraltar through the caliphate of Al-Andalus. (Al-Andalus, ruled by the caliph Abd al-Rahman III, later became known as Andalusia). The Almohads were very different from their intellectual, liberal Umayyad predecessors: with their more austere interpretation of Islam, they also brought a much less friendly attitude towards Andalusi Jews, who had integrated profoundly in the sociopolitical and cultural milieu of the Umayyad society. Though, technically, the Sephardic Jews of the time were still consider dhimmi, or protected people in Islamic law (mostly they paid a poll tax and couldn’t build their synagogues higher than any mosque), the Almohads bred a much more violent relationship with the Jews, so different than the flourishing convivencia of the Umayyads. This resulted in waves of pogroms and mass conversions of Jews in the south of Spain, from which droves of Jews fled to the northern Christian territories of Spain, at that moment much more tolerant of the Sephardic community. The Sephardic refugees even including such Sephardi notables as Abraham ibn Ezra, an important poet at the time, who wrote the following about his flight from Andalusia:

The Exile dwelt there blamelessly in safety
Without interruption for a thousand seventy years.
But the day came when her people were banished and she became like a widow
Without Torah study or biblical recitation, the Mishnah sealed shut
…That is why I weep and beat my hands, lament forever on my lips.
(trans. Ross Brann, Mark R. Cohen)

Fleeing to the north of Spain, the Sephardim not only brought their intellectual and economic acumen to their new northern Christian courts, but also their recipes and traditional dishes.

And not just any food: according to Claudia Roden, one of my favorite food historians, the Sephardim fleeing Almohad persecution brought their sweets with them. One in particular, a Passover cake made of ground almonds, eggs, sugar, and citrus, made its way all the way to northern Galicia. Sounds familiar right? As Devra Ferst writes: “The widely available tarta de Santiago de Compostela, an almond cake that is made with orange-and-lemon zest and named for a cathedral to which pilgrims travel, was originally a Passover dish from Andalusia in the South” (Ferst, from here).

Even though they were forced to relocate across the country, the cake remained a favorite of Andalusian Sephardim. After waves of forced conversions, it transcended its role as a dessert for Passover – as it has no leavening, it fits the halakhic stipulations for the observance of the holiday – later becoming a staple of judeoconversos. It seems that though they changed religion, these Jewish converts to Christianity didn’t see anything wrong with continuing to make the delicious cake, and evidently their tastes didn’t also change with their religion. Who would have thought that a cake named for a Christian saint and his pilgrimage really was a Passover dessert?

An even more fascinating addendum to this history is that the tarta de Santiago was chosen to represent Spain in the 2006 Café Europa initiative of the European Union. Seems like an ironic, though in this historian’s eyes, an oh-so-fitting selection. But whether you’re fleeing Almohad persecution or making a Christian pilgrimage, everyone, regardless of religious affiliation, can agree this cake is definitely delicious.

Tarta de Santiago

This recipe is adapted from Claudia Roden’s brilliant cookbook The Book of Spanish Food. While this cake can come together in moments with the use of an electric mixer, I opted (read: was forced) to go the medieval route and hand-whip the egg whites into meringue. If you’re up for the arm workout, I recommend it. As Roden explains, and in my experience, this cake sometimes comes with a  pastry base or served, as in Navarre, with a thin layer of jam on top. Personally, I like to keep it simple with a generous amount of orange zest in the batter and quick final dusting of confectioner’s sugar (without the customary cross of St. James though). However, if you feel like experimenting, the cake takes phenomenally well to other types of citrus (did someone say lime?!) or other flavorings, like cinnamon or vanilla. Let your imagination run free!

½ pound (1 ¾ cups) blanched whole almonds
6 large eggs, separated
1 ¼ cups sugar
Grated zest of 1 orange
Grated zest of 1 lemon
A few drops of almond or vanilla extract
½ teaspoon cinnamon (optional)

Preheat the oven to 350°F/160°C. Finely grind the almonds into a flour-like texture in a food processor.

With an electric mixer (or by hand), beat the egg yolks with the sugar into a smooth pale yellow cream. Beat in the zest and extract and any other flavorings you want to add. Add the ground almonds and mix well. (The batter will be a little stiff but don’t worry).

With clean beaters (or a clean whisk), beat the egg whites in a large bowl until stiff peaks form. Fold the egg whites into the egg and almond mixture – this will take a while because the egg and almond mixture is so thick, but keep at it until the egg whites are thoroughly incorporated.

Grease an 11-inch springform pan with butter and dust it with flour. Pour the batter into the pan and bake for 40 minutes, or until it feels firm to the touch (Note: this depends on your oven – mine took almost an hour to become fully firm and even then it was just on the edge of underdone. If the top starts to brown too much, just slip a piece of aluminum foil on top, without sealing the pan, of it to protect it). Let the cake cool completely before turning out.

Once cool, dust with a cloud of confectioners’ sugar and, if you’d like, for a traditional effect, cut out a cross of St. James before (see here) and then dust with the sugar. Or, for a Navarre-inspired version, forego the sugar and spread a thin layer of apricot jam on top of the cake. Enjoy!

In Boka Dulse, history, Sweets, Sephardic Food Tags desserts, citrus, spanish food, spain tourism, breakfast, passover, sefardi
4 Comments

A cookie by any other name...

November 10, 2016 Sara Gardner
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The cold has come to Madrid. Late autumn, or more precisely, winter has settled in here in La Ciudad Real. And I have to be honest, I’m not loving it (warm weather is much more my shtick). At the same time, being from the Northeast of the United States, where there are always four full seasons, I feel very deeply connected to the changing of the seasons and the different celebrations, phases of life, and –of course!– foods that those transitions bring. With that in mind, I have a post for you all today about Sukkot, one of the holidays in the Jewish calendar that marks the end of a season and the transition into another. Particularly, I want to tell you about a food that represents the multiple meanings of this holiday: biscochikos.

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Biscochikos are small, twisted cookie rings. Much like Italian biscotti, they are often twice-baked, resulting in a crumbly, pleasantly crunchy cookie. The history of this cookie goes back to medieval Iberia, their country of origin and where they first were incorporated into the Sephardic culinary repertoire. In medieval Andalusia, the Sephardim combined the Islamic zeal and preparation techniques for desserts, or repostería, as is said in Spanish, with their own unique tastes and religious observances to create the biscochiko. Gil Marks explains in the Encyclopedia of Jewish Food, that “early Sephardim rarely baked with butter” as it was a food associated with the Christian Spanish community “and cookies instead contained oil” combined with other pareve (kosher) ingredients such as flour, sugar, and eggs, “creating a dough that’s easy to shape and a tender cookie.” The use of oil in the cookie dough is a distinctly Sephardic element of the dessert, as it resulted in a cookie that could be eaten with any meal, milk or meat, without transgressing on the laws of kashrut. Most Sephardic desserts, even to this day, are characterized by the use of oil in place of butter as the recipe’s main fat. After the expulsion in 1492, the Sephardim took their biscochikos with them to their various new homes, where they began to add new ingredients native to those adopted communities to flavor and decorate the otherwise pretty plain ring cookies. For instance, Sephardic communities in Greece perfume their biscochikos with cinnamon and coat them in sesame seeds while Turkish Sephardic communities add walnuts and orange blossom water. Depending on where you are in the world, these cookies can be called biscochikos de huevo or guevo, biscotios, vizcochikos, roskitas, or kaak. In that way, the physically represent the journey of Sephardic cooking and communities in diaspora.

Despite the multiple names for this same cookie, they are a staple in Sephardic diasporic communities for both festive and every day meals, as common on the Shabbat desayuno table as on Rosh Hashanah dessert plates. Sukkot, the Jewish holiday celebrating the final major autumn harvest and the 40-year passage of the Israelites through the desert, is no exception. As Gil Marks shows, they can even factor into the decoration of the traditional sukkah, as “on sukkot, some families hang biscochos from the branches of the sukkah.” Sukkot comes two weeks after Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, and is celebrated for a week, in which Jews all over the world erect sukkot (tents) and live in them for the duration of the holiday. It’s a holiday celebrating bounty – corresponding with the year’s last burst of agricultural abundance – and the consolidation of Jewish identity – as the period of wandering in the desert is reenacted by the dwelling in the sukkah.

Interestingly, food is central to the “proper” celebration of Sukkot. Even in the building of the sukkah, rabbinic commentators argued in the Mishnah about the proper size of a sukkah, finally settling on a structure that “measure[s] at least 7 x 7 handbreadths to contain the head, major part of the body, and the table of the occupant: 6 x 6 handbreadths for himself, and 1 x 1 for the table.” Pretty notable that the main structure that symbolizes the holiday is required to make room for a table on which the sukkah’s occupants can eat. This is because, as the rabbis continue to explain, to fulfill the requirement to dwell in the sukkah, its occupant must eat at least two meals a day. In the logic of the rabbis, it’s not considered really dwelling in the sukkah unless you’re eating in it. Living and eating are considered so intimately linked in Jewish tradition that the proper celebration of a holiday depends on it. Cool, right?

And even cooler, these cookies also appear in a seemingly opposite, non-Jewish celebration here in Spain: Las Fiestas de San Isidro, or the Festival of San Isidore. Las Fiestas de San Isidro take place here in Madrid every May and are perhaps the most specifically madrileño of all holidays in the city. It’s a week of festivities that celebrates the Madrilenian Saint Isidro who lived in the tenth century and had to flee the city during the Almohad rule of the city – around the same time that biscochikos came into existence. Plus, one of the most important celebratory foods of this holiday is the rosquilla, a ring-shaped, oil-and-egg-based cookie that comes with a variety of toppings: tontas (nothing but an egg wash that are widely acknowledged to come from the Middle Ages), listas (with a coating of sugar), de Santa Clara o francesas (topped with a type of merengue), or the popular de Tía Javiera o de Fuenlabrada (that come in twists). Sounds familiar, no? Even the definition in the Diccionario de la Real Academía Española seems like a version of a quick recipe for a biscochiko: “a dessert in the form of a small ring, made of a dough of flour with eggs, sugar, and another ingredient [dulce en forma de rosca pequeña, hecho de masa de harina con huevos, azúcar y algún otro ingrediente] (my translation).” 

From Dulce Frivolidades

From Dulce Frivolidades

And if you’re still not convinced, check out this recipe from Directo al Paladar, or this one from Dulces Frivolidades. The recipe for rosquillas tontas and biscochikos are pretty darn similar. Coincidence? I like to think not. But whatever way you make them, and by whatever name you call them, they’re exactly the treat to celebrate life’s bounty, whether for Sukkot or San Isidro’s Feast. I hope you enjoy them!

Biscochikos de huevo with plum-pear compote

To evoke the agricultural bounty of Sukkot, when it is customary to eat dishes that center on vegetables and fruits, I decided to pair these biscochikos with a fruit compote of plums and pears accentuated with a bit of orange zest and juice. The slightly acidic compote makes a great accompaniment for the subtlety sweet cookies. What’s more, both recipes make an abundance of sweet treats, which makes them ideal to serve to guests in a sukkah. Feel free to customize both the biscochikos and compote to your tastes – whether that’s more or less orange zest, the addition of spices like clove or anise, or a pre-oven sprinkling of almonds or any other nut or seed… And if you want a little bit of everything, this recipe makes enough to customize each cookie as you see fit!

Biscochikos (makes about 48 cookie rings):

4 cups all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon double-acting baking powder
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
4 large eggs
1 cup sugar
1 cup vegetable oil
1-1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 egg beaten, mixed with 1 teaspoon of water
½ cup white sesame seeds
½ finely chopped walnuts

Preheat your oven to 350°F/180°C. Position a rack in the idle of the oven. Lightly grease a 9” x 13” baking sheet or cover it with a sheet of aluminum foil.

In a medium bowl, sift together the flour, salt, and baking powder. In another lightly beat the eggs, then add the sugar, oil, cinnamon, and/or any other flavoring you’d like to add (anise, orange zest, and vanilla are all great options). Add the dry ingredients to the wet mixture and mix until a soft dough forms (once all the flour is mixed in, you’re there).

Lightly dust your work surface with flour. Dump dough out onto the counter. Divide it into 4 equal pieces. Take one of the four pieces and divide it in half. Take that eighth of the dough and divide it into 3 even balls of dough.

To form basic cookie rings, take one of those 3 dough balls and roll it into a log approximately 10 to 12 inches in length, depending on how thin you want the rings to be. Cut the log in half on a diagonal. Take one of the rolled halves and bring the ends together. Squeeze them to form a closed ring. Place on the prepared baking sheet.

To form twists, follow the same technique as with the basic ring, except before bringing the ends of the log together, roll out one the halves into a log approximately twice the length of the log for a regular ring. Take one end of the dough and bring it next to the other. Pick up the folded end of the dough and begin gently winding the halves around each other (my advice: do this slowly and coat the log in a little extra flour because the dough is very fragile). Once the twist is made, bring the ends together as you would for a normal ring and squeeze them to close the twisted ring. Place on the baking sheet.

Once you have your completed rings on the baking sheet (I was able to fit 16 on mine, which meant 3 separate rounds of baking, but of course you can do multiple pans at a time), brush the rings with the egg and water mixture. From here, let your imagination go wild: leave them as is, top with walnuts or sesame seeds, or dust them with raw sugar. Bake the rings for 20 minutes or until golden brown. Leave on a rack to cool completely.

If you like your cookies crispier, turn off the oven and place all the baked cookies in it until it cools completely. This will act almost as a second baking, which will leave the cookies with a texture closer to a biscotti and much browner appearance.

Compote (makes about 4 cups of compote):

8 plums
4 medium pears, preferably Bartlett or a more tart variety
juice of an orange
zest of half an orange
1/8 to a ¼ cup of sugar, depending on taste
1/3 cup water
pinch of salt

Cut the plums into 8 slices and chunk the pears in ½-inch pieces. Place cut fruit in a medium saucepan with the orange juice, zest, sugar, water, and salt. Mix to combine. Bring mixture to a boil then turn it down to a simmer. Let the mixture cook, covered, for about 20-30 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the fruit begins to break down and the cooking liquid reduces and thickens. Don’t overcook the mixture: the fruit should still hold its shape. Serve with biscochikos and enjoy!

In Holiday Food, Boka Dulse, Sephardic Food, Sweets Tags Boka Dulse, biscochikos, desserts, sukkot, jewish holidays, fall, fruit compote, cookies, spanish food
3 Comments

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© 2017 Sara M. Gardner