My Russian Teacakes are too crumbly
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I am making Russian Teacakes. They have been refrigerated per the recipe for approximately 4 hours. I cannot roll the Teacakes into balls as the dough is too crumbly. Help!
cookies
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I am making Russian Teacakes. They have been refrigerated per the recipe for approximately 4 hours. I cannot roll the Teacakes into balls as the dough is too crumbly. Help!
cookies
New contributor
1
Welcome to Seasoned Advice! Could you share the recipe you're using? It will be hard for others to offer advice otherwise.
– mech
5 hours ago
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1
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favorite
up vote
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down vote
favorite
I am making Russian Teacakes. They have been refrigerated per the recipe for approximately 4 hours. I cannot roll the Teacakes into balls as the dough is too crumbly. Help!
cookies
New contributor
I am making Russian Teacakes. They have been refrigerated per the recipe for approximately 4 hours. I cannot roll the Teacakes into balls as the dough is too crumbly. Help!
cookies
cookies
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 5 hours ago
Suzanne
61
61
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New contributor
1
Welcome to Seasoned Advice! Could you share the recipe you're using? It will be hard for others to offer advice otherwise.
– mech
5 hours ago
add a comment |
1
Welcome to Seasoned Advice! Could you share the recipe you're using? It will be hard for others to offer advice otherwise.
– mech
5 hours ago
1
1
Welcome to Seasoned Advice! Could you share the recipe you're using? It will be hard for others to offer advice otherwise.
– mech
5 hours ago
Welcome to Seasoned Advice! Could you share the recipe you're using? It will be hard for others to offer advice otherwise.
– mech
5 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
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up vote
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In the Russian teacake recipes I have seen, there are four main ingredients:
- flour
- butter
- nuts
- powdered sugar
If you cannot get your cookies to bind, you need to add more butter (the only ingredient with moisture). If you are refrigerating your dough, make sure to cover it so it does not dry out.
Those are the ingredients in my recipe, and I have the dough covered.
– Suzanne
4 hours ago
You missed the important bit: add more butter @Suzanne Please feed back after you've tried and if this answer helped, please don't forget to accept it... ;-)
– Fabby
3 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
If you do not let this sort of dough warm up a bit after refrigerating, it will frequently crumble. Let the dough sit on the counter for 10-15 minutes and see if it's workable then. I sometimes let a dough like this come nearly all the way back up to room temperature in order to be able to shape it.
If after letting it warm back up, it's still too crumbly to shape, then add a little bit more butter, like mattm suggested.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
Funny you ask this question; I just finished making Russian tea-cakes. A bit of vanilla flavouring helps; I usually put in around 2 teaspoons for a batch of 40 (equivalent to 1 cup of butter and 3/4 cup of confectioner's sugar, if my memory serves me).
The trick that I use, which really helps, though, is actually a technique in rolling. We generally think that the way to make roll cookies is to take a blob of batter and simply roll it between the palms of one's hands. This technique works very poorly for Russian Tea Cakes, however, even if the batter is moist enough to work.
It works much better to take a blob of batter of the correct size to make a cookie and squash it flat between the palms of the hands. With the palms squashed against each other, start rolling them around as though you were rolling a cookie, but with your hands virtually touching each other. Slowly release the pressure while continuing to roll until the cookie is round and smooth, and voila!
The advantage of this technique actually also has a hidden benefit: the cookies (form my experience) tend to disintegrate less while coating them in icing sugar after cooing.
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
1
down vote
In the Russian teacake recipes I have seen, there are four main ingredients:
- flour
- butter
- nuts
- powdered sugar
If you cannot get your cookies to bind, you need to add more butter (the only ingredient with moisture). If you are refrigerating your dough, make sure to cover it so it does not dry out.
Those are the ingredients in my recipe, and I have the dough covered.
– Suzanne
4 hours ago
You missed the important bit: add more butter @Suzanne Please feed back after you've tried and if this answer helped, please don't forget to accept it... ;-)
– Fabby
3 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
In the Russian teacake recipes I have seen, there are four main ingredients:
- flour
- butter
- nuts
- powdered sugar
If you cannot get your cookies to bind, you need to add more butter (the only ingredient with moisture). If you are refrigerating your dough, make sure to cover it so it does not dry out.
Those are the ingredients in my recipe, and I have the dough covered.
– Suzanne
4 hours ago
You missed the important bit: add more butter @Suzanne Please feed back after you've tried and if this answer helped, please don't forget to accept it... ;-)
– Fabby
3 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
In the Russian teacake recipes I have seen, there are four main ingredients:
- flour
- butter
- nuts
- powdered sugar
If you cannot get your cookies to bind, you need to add more butter (the only ingredient with moisture). If you are refrigerating your dough, make sure to cover it so it does not dry out.
In the Russian teacake recipes I have seen, there are four main ingredients:
- flour
- butter
- nuts
- powdered sugar
If you cannot get your cookies to bind, you need to add more butter (the only ingredient with moisture). If you are refrigerating your dough, make sure to cover it so it does not dry out.
answered 5 hours ago
mattm
1,7771122
1,7771122
Those are the ingredients in my recipe, and I have the dough covered.
– Suzanne
4 hours ago
You missed the important bit: add more butter @Suzanne Please feed back after you've tried and if this answer helped, please don't forget to accept it... ;-)
– Fabby
3 hours ago
add a comment |
Those are the ingredients in my recipe, and I have the dough covered.
– Suzanne
4 hours ago
You missed the important bit: add more butter @Suzanne Please feed back after you've tried and if this answer helped, please don't forget to accept it... ;-)
– Fabby
3 hours ago
Those are the ingredients in my recipe, and I have the dough covered.
– Suzanne
4 hours ago
Those are the ingredients in my recipe, and I have the dough covered.
– Suzanne
4 hours ago
You missed the important bit: add more butter @Suzanne Please feed back after you've tried and if this answer helped, please don't forget to accept it... ;-)
– Fabby
3 hours ago
You missed the important bit: add more butter @Suzanne Please feed back after you've tried and if this answer helped, please don't forget to accept it... ;-)
– Fabby
3 hours ago
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
If you do not let this sort of dough warm up a bit after refrigerating, it will frequently crumble. Let the dough sit on the counter for 10-15 minutes and see if it's workable then. I sometimes let a dough like this come nearly all the way back up to room temperature in order to be able to shape it.
If after letting it warm back up, it's still too crumbly to shape, then add a little bit more butter, like mattm suggested.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
If you do not let this sort of dough warm up a bit after refrigerating, it will frequently crumble. Let the dough sit on the counter for 10-15 minutes and see if it's workable then. I sometimes let a dough like this come nearly all the way back up to room temperature in order to be able to shape it.
If after letting it warm back up, it's still too crumbly to shape, then add a little bit more butter, like mattm suggested.
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
If you do not let this sort of dough warm up a bit after refrigerating, it will frequently crumble. Let the dough sit on the counter for 10-15 minutes and see if it's workable then. I sometimes let a dough like this come nearly all the way back up to room temperature in order to be able to shape it.
If after letting it warm back up, it's still too crumbly to shape, then add a little bit more butter, like mattm suggested.
If you do not let this sort of dough warm up a bit after refrigerating, it will frequently crumble. Let the dough sit on the counter for 10-15 minutes and see if it's workable then. I sometimes let a dough like this come nearly all the way back up to room temperature in order to be able to shape it.
If after letting it warm back up, it's still too crumbly to shape, then add a little bit more butter, like mattm suggested.
answered 4 hours ago
Guildenstern
1864
1864
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
Funny you ask this question; I just finished making Russian tea-cakes. A bit of vanilla flavouring helps; I usually put in around 2 teaspoons for a batch of 40 (equivalent to 1 cup of butter and 3/4 cup of confectioner's sugar, if my memory serves me).
The trick that I use, which really helps, though, is actually a technique in rolling. We generally think that the way to make roll cookies is to take a blob of batter and simply roll it between the palms of one's hands. This technique works very poorly for Russian Tea Cakes, however, even if the batter is moist enough to work.
It works much better to take a blob of batter of the correct size to make a cookie and squash it flat between the palms of the hands. With the palms squashed against each other, start rolling them around as though you were rolling a cookie, but with your hands virtually touching each other. Slowly release the pressure while continuing to roll until the cookie is round and smooth, and voila!
The advantage of this technique actually also has a hidden benefit: the cookies (form my experience) tend to disintegrate less while coating them in icing sugar after cooing.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
Funny you ask this question; I just finished making Russian tea-cakes. A bit of vanilla flavouring helps; I usually put in around 2 teaspoons for a batch of 40 (equivalent to 1 cup of butter and 3/4 cup of confectioner's sugar, if my memory serves me).
The trick that I use, which really helps, though, is actually a technique in rolling. We generally think that the way to make roll cookies is to take a blob of batter and simply roll it between the palms of one's hands. This technique works very poorly for Russian Tea Cakes, however, even if the batter is moist enough to work.
It works much better to take a blob of batter of the correct size to make a cookie and squash it flat between the palms of the hands. With the palms squashed against each other, start rolling them around as though you were rolling a cookie, but with your hands virtually touching each other. Slowly release the pressure while continuing to roll until the cookie is round and smooth, and voila!
The advantage of this technique actually also has a hidden benefit: the cookies (form my experience) tend to disintegrate less while coating them in icing sugar after cooing.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
Funny you ask this question; I just finished making Russian tea-cakes. A bit of vanilla flavouring helps; I usually put in around 2 teaspoons for a batch of 40 (equivalent to 1 cup of butter and 3/4 cup of confectioner's sugar, if my memory serves me).
The trick that I use, which really helps, though, is actually a technique in rolling. We generally think that the way to make roll cookies is to take a blob of batter and simply roll it between the palms of one's hands. This technique works very poorly for Russian Tea Cakes, however, even if the batter is moist enough to work.
It works much better to take a blob of batter of the correct size to make a cookie and squash it flat between the palms of the hands. With the palms squashed against each other, start rolling them around as though you were rolling a cookie, but with your hands virtually touching each other. Slowly release the pressure while continuing to roll until the cookie is round and smooth, and voila!
The advantage of this technique actually also has a hidden benefit: the cookies (form my experience) tend to disintegrate less while coating them in icing sugar after cooing.
New contributor
Funny you ask this question; I just finished making Russian tea-cakes. A bit of vanilla flavouring helps; I usually put in around 2 teaspoons for a batch of 40 (equivalent to 1 cup of butter and 3/4 cup of confectioner's sugar, if my memory serves me).
The trick that I use, which really helps, though, is actually a technique in rolling. We generally think that the way to make roll cookies is to take a blob of batter and simply roll it between the palms of one's hands. This technique works very poorly for Russian Tea Cakes, however, even if the batter is moist enough to work.
It works much better to take a blob of batter of the correct size to make a cookie and squash it flat between the palms of the hands. With the palms squashed against each other, start rolling them around as though you were rolling a cookie, but with your hands virtually touching each other. Slowly release the pressure while continuing to roll until the cookie is round and smooth, and voila!
The advantage of this technique actually also has a hidden benefit: the cookies (form my experience) tend to disintegrate less while coating them in icing sugar after cooing.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 3 hours ago
anonymous2
1113
1113
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
Suzanne is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Suzanne is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Suzanne is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Suzanne is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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Welcome to Seasoned Advice! Could you share the recipe you're using? It will be hard for others to offer advice otherwise.
– mech
5 hours ago