Since The Little Man has
entered our lives, it hasn't exactly left scads of time for theatrical
pursuits. But I was able to perform in a
short-run production of ‘The Daly News’, a musical about a family in WWII-era
Milwaukee, scattered across the globe in various service roles. I've always hated the term ‘short-run’, which
makes it sound like there wasn't as much work involved somehow. 3 months of rehearsing begged to differ.
Anyway, I played the quippish
matriarch of the family, and at one point lamented rationing, and the
difficulties it caused in making a ‘Krantz’ for one of the kids’
birthdays. I had never heard of such a
beast before, so naturally I did a little homework and came up with my own
approximation of the recipe.
In all fairness, the original recipe was a bit different, more involved, etc. But I figure, if you got a good thing going, why mess with it, right? So, I ever so slightly tweaked my cinnamon roll recipe and used it here.
Chocolate Almond Krantz
Dough:
2 packages active dry
yeast
¼ c sugar
1/3 c butter, melted
1 c + 2 Tbs warm water
(about 110°F)
1 tsp salt
1 tsp vanilla
1 egg
1/2 tsp grated lemon zest
2 c bread flour
1 ½ c all-purpose flour
Filling:
1/3 c butter, melted
1/3 c dark chocolate
chips
½ c good-quality cocoa
½ c confectioner’s sugar
(plus more if needed)
¾ c slivered almonds,
toasted
2 Tbs sugar
Sugar syrup:
2/3 c water
1 ¼ c sugar
In the bowl of a stand
mixer, combine yeast, sugar, butter and water.
Stir to combine. Allow to sit for
15 minutes so the yeast can ‘bloom’ (prepare the filling below while you wait).
Attach a dough hook to
the mixer and add the salt, vanilla, lemon zest and egg.
Mix for a few seconds to break up the egg a bit. Add the flours all at once (the bread and a/p
flour was the combo I used, but I’m sure you could do it with all a/p – it just
won’t be quite as tender of a dough) and turn mixer on a medium-low setting,
allowing to mix until all of the flour is incorporated into the mixture. If the dough seems too sticky to work with,
add an additional ¼ - ½ cup of flour.
To make the filling: in a medium mixing bowl, melt the butter and
chocolate chips (either in the microwave or over a double-boiler). Stir in the cocoa and powdered sugar. The mixture should be the consistency of room
temperature butter, so add more powdered sugar if your mixture is too runny. Separate from the chocolate mixture, process
the almonds and sugar in a food processor until the almonds are finely chopped.
Sprinkle a work surface
with flour and turn out dough. Form into
a rectangle and roll out to about ½” thickness.
How wide should be determined by how you intend to form the krantz – for
two loaves, roll out to about 20” long.
For individual (‘mini’) size, roll out longer. Spread surface of dough with the chocolate
mixture to within about ½” of the edge.
Sprinkle evenly with the almond/sugar mixture. Roll the dough into a log starting at one of
the long ends and then even out the log so that it is a consistent diameter
from end to end (about 2” for minis and about 4” or so for the loaves). With a sharp knife, cut the roll lengthwise
down the center. Moisten one of the ends
with a little bit of water and press the other cut end to attach. Wind the two pieces around each other, forming
a ‘rope’, and keeping the cut side facing up.
Attach the other two ends together in the same manner that you did the
first end.
For loaves, cut the rope
in half and place in two greased loaf pans (cut side up). For the minis, cut into 2 – 3” pieces and
place cut side up into two greased muffin pans.
Cover lightly with plastic wrap and allow to rise an additional 15 – 20
minutes.
Meanwhile, preheat oven
to 375°F. When dough has finished
rising, place in oven. Bake
approximately 15 – 18 minutes for minis and approximately 30 minutes for loaves
(test for doneness by inserting wood skewer into center – should come out
clean). If tops begin to brown too
quickly, loosely cover with a piece of aluminum foil.
While krantz is baking,
prepare sugar glaze**: Combine water and
sugar in a saucepan on the stove. Bring
to a full rolling boil and then remove from heat. Allow to cool slightly.
When the krantz is done
(and still hot), remove from oven and immediately glaze with sugar syrup. As glaze is absorbed, add more. You will use most, if not all, of the glaze.
Serve krantz warm or at
room temperature.
**The sugar glaze is a
good way to ‘doctor’ the flavor a bit.
Add brandy, rum or bourbon (a Tablespoon, or up to ¼ cup) to the water
and sugar before cooking (reduce amount of water to compensate). Or add a scraped vanilla bean to the sugar
syrup after cooking and allow to steep for a few minutes.
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