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Apricot Dumplings

By Caroline Cummins, from the Culinate Kitchen collection
Total Time 1½ hours

Introduction

This classic Central European dessert recipe comes from a friend whose family makes annual batches of strudel and German Christmas cookies. Make this dessert when summer’s apricots are at their ripest, and serve with a glass of Riesling.

Ingredients

10 to 16 ripe apricots, depending on size
2 eggs, well beaten
2 cups (16 ounces) ricotta
1 cup Cream of Wheat, farina, or other quick-cooking small cereal grain
½ cup flour
~ Pinch of salt
½ cup to 1 cup breadcrumbs
4 to 6 Tbsp. butter
~ Confectioner’s sugar, for dusting

Steps

  1. In a bowl, mix together the eggs, ricotta, cereal, flour, and salt into a thick, wet dough. Let sit for half an hour.
  2. Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Pinch off a piece of the dough and roll it around an apricot; be sure the dough is completely sealed around the apricot. When the water is boiling and all the apricots are wrapped in dough, drop the apricots into the water. When they float, scoop them out with a skimmer. Roll them in the breadcrumbs.
  3. In a large saucepan, melt the butter until it foams. Add the dumplings and sauté until golden brown, then remove them from the pan. If you wish, roll the dumplings again in breadcrumbs; otherwise, serve them hot, dusted with about a tablespoon each of confectioner’s sugar.

This content is from the Culinate Kitchen collection.

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1. by anonymous on Aug 6, 2008 at 5:02 PM PDT

Are you suppose to pit the apricots? Thanks.

M.E.

2. by anonymous on Aug 7, 2008 at 11:46 AM PDT

i have seen a recipe similar to this and yes, you’re supposed to pit it, but keep it as intact as you can, cause you can insert some brown sugar or a regular sugar cube or something comparable (maybe even a little of the unused ricotta? anything’ll work, i guess...) into the cavity where the pit used to be...it makes for a nice addition, just be careful to let them cool a bit so you don’t get a mouthful of molten sugar.

3. by anonymous on Aug 7, 2008 at 11:49 AM PDT

also...the name of this dumpling is Marillenknodel, so you can look for other variations.

4. by Caroline on Aug 7, 2008 at 12:20 PM PDT

The way my friend taught me to make them, you don’t pit the apricots at all. You just eat around them -- easy enough to do when the apricot flesh is soft from being cooked and just falls away from the pits.

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