I've visited Chicago half a dozen times over the last few years and each time I go I enjoy and appreciate the city more. I live in a small town so the size of a large city can be overwhelming, but it offers the most wonderful range of experiences and diversity that are unknown here. We shopped in an Italian deli where we purchased cannoli filled to order and in a Polish bakery where we sampled many delicious breads and pastries. I saw the largest wine store I've ever seen in my life and visited Fox & Obel in downtown Chicago where one can purchase just about any specialty food item you could think of. I would be in big trouble if I lived close to that amazing place.
We sampled all kinds of pastries and one of my favorites was kolachky, a Polish fruit filled cookie with a shortbread base available with apricot, berry, cherry, poppy seed and cheese fillings. I loved them all but started out with raspberry and apricot for today's baking session. I used Solo fruit fillings, delicious, but didn't care for the dough recipe on the label so instead used my old standby shortbread style dough. The result was just what I wanted, a flaky, not too sweet cookie base that holds up well to the fruit topping.
Kolachky ...recipe from Wives with Knives
1 cup butter
6 ounces cream cheese
2 cups flour
1/4 cup powdered sugar
Fruit filling, either homemade or purchased
Powdered sugar for garnish
In a large bowl blend butter and cream cheese together. Add flour and combine well. Cover the dough with plastic wrap and refrigerate several hours or overnight.
Flour counter surface and roll out dough, one half at a time, to approximately 1/4 inch thickness. Cut into desired shapes. Make a depression on the cookie with your thumb or the back of a spoon and fill with about a half teaspoon of filling, depending on the size of the cookie. Bake on parchment lined cookie sheets at 375 degrees for 10-12 minutes or until lightly browned. When cold sprinkle with powdered sugar.
Many countries have versions of this delicious cookie, but to me they are kolachky, a cookie I discovered in a wonderful bakery in Chicago.
Cathy, my husband grew up with a Bohemian mother who baked many Czech pastries. She tried to me teach me Czech Kolaches..very similar to these, but with a yeast dough base. I was not a good student and, honesty, she did not give me her perfected recipe...or no one else. But, love the kolaches..
ReplyDeleteI have never tried these. I love the edges of your cookies. They look like mini cakes! Bet they taste great. One of these days when I am adventurous? Maybe when I retire!
ReplyDeleteOh, Cathy, these look delicious. I think I'll try to make these this week!
ReplyDeleteI would enjoy a couple of these with my coffee in the morning. One or two, or three.....
ReplyDeletethey look great.
These really look spectacular, Cathy. Isn't Fox & Obel fantastic?
ReplyDeleteThis is a cookie I would love! Really beautiful!
ReplyDeleteThese look wonderful! What a perfect cookie for the holidays!
ReplyDeleteLook delicious - now you have me thinking of thumbprints and Linzer cookies!!
ReplyDeleteThey are a good cookie and easy but the recipe has not traveled to the prairie -- however, as a favor to friends, I found a recipe and made some
ReplyDeletehttp://www.linesfromlinderhof.com/2009/08/german-makes-polish-cookie.html
They pronounced them good! I like the way you cut them out.
I grew up on these, thanks for the recipe!
ReplyDeleteI love cream cheese doughs..Thank you..I have never made these and now I most certainly must:)
ReplyDeleteThose look wonderful! I never met a cookie I didn't like! I have been to NYC with my Mom and we LOVED the deli's and eateries....and little Italy, etc..etc...!!!
ReplyDeleteThey look lovely Cathy...
ReplyDeleteL~xo
That's what I love about Chicago, so many different ethnic neighborhoods around. I love your version of kolachky Cathy! Fox and Obel, great place. I drool at everything when I go in there, especially the deli, baked goods and all the cheese!
ReplyDeleteThese are so pretty. I love the delicate sprinkling of powdered sugar on top.
ReplyDeleteI would love to visit the "Windy City" sometime!
I'm impressed! You saw this in Chicago, came home and made them? They look store bought! I love these kind of cookies - by whatever name.
ReplyDeleteGeez...if you were in Chicago, you could have dropped down to Kansas and visited me! Glad you had a fun visit there! Look forward to seeing more pictures. The cookies look delicious! Thanks for sharing yet another great recipe. Might have to make those beauties for the holidays!
ReplyDeleteSmiles, Nancy
These look so beautiful - like they came straight from a professional bakery.
ReplyDeleteMy family loves kolachky (We spell it kolacky- guess we've been wrong.). I just made some a couple weeks ago. Yours are so much prettier than mine- with their fluted egdes.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pastry. Lots of eye appeal. The shortbread dough sounds great.
ReplyDeleteSo pretty and tasty - I love, love, love kolachky.
ReplyDeleteCathy, those look positively sinful! They remind me of a dessert a friend fixes, and I could dive head first into them. That's what scares me! LOL! They would be great for the holidays, and I appreciate the recipe.
ReplyDeleteXO,
Sheila :-)
this look so similar to a treat my grandma would make every thanksgiving called tarts. so yummy and fun, thanks for the good memory!
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry I'm drooling all over your Kolachky! I would love to try making these. Thank you for the recipe, Cathy!
ReplyDeleteThese look scrumptious!
ReplyDeleteThese look and sound so yummy :D
ReplyDeleteOOOHHH AAAHHH.. one of my most favorite cookies. My grandmother made something so similiar evry easter and christmas..
ReplyDeleteI have heard about kolachky from a friend online, but never tried one. Now you tempt me.
ReplyDeleteHi Cathy...these look delish and being half Polish I think I need to try them....is using that small amount of powdered sugar enough to make them sweet enough?....But I guess a shortbread is more about the butter content then the sweetness....and what type of cutter did you use?
ReplyDeleteI heart Chicago!!
ReplyDeleteThese cookies look amazing! I want some.
These sound wonderful! I have a friend moving to Chicago. I can't wait to visit.
ReplyDeleteHi Sue - The cookie gets lots of sweetness from the fruit filling and powdered sugar. I got my nifty cutter at Home Goods. Its got a little thing you press to push the cookie out of the cutter so the scallops don't come off. I love that place!
ReplyDeleteThis is one of my favorite versions of cookies. They look fabulous!!!
ReplyDeleteThese look SOOO pretty and yummy. I love tarts or anything tart-like, big , small, shortbread base, puff pastry base , you name it !! N the recipe looks straightforward n easy..ill gv it a go ! :) tq
ReplyDeleteThese cookies are beautiful! And your dough looks so light and tender, just like cookies should be. Cream cheese dough with fruit filling sounds divine. So pretty too!
ReplyDeleteI love kolachy, but have never made them. I'm bookmarking your recipe to try at Christmas.
ReplyDelete