Baked, Barcelona, Catalan
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Catalan traditions: Panellets

Being in a relationship with someone from a completely different culture than I am surely is enlightening. Each time we enter a new weather season there’s a new tradition to be immersed in. This has made me begin a series within my blog where every time I try a different tradition, I’ll share it on here. Call it “Joanne and a series of catalan traditions” if you will. Fall brings ‘Panellets’. Panellets are probably the most traditional sweet pastries in all Catalunya. They’re made of almond flour, sugar and pine nuts. Think: marzipan with less sugar. Don’t tell Marc’s mom I compared them to marzipan.

In Catalunya you know fall is officially here when pastry shops and grocery stores start getting ready for “La Castañada” (the chestnut party). It’s the holiday where everyone take the streets to eat roasted chestnuts and sweet potatoes. I like to think of it as a street food festival. Everyone is drinking moscatell and eating chestnuts and sweet potatoes. On the following morning, to cure your moscatell hangover you eat panellets (I made up the hangover part). This weekend I learned how to make them, these you don’t enjoy on the street, you have them at home, I made them with guidance from Marc’s mom (Lourdes), of course. Not as traditional without a Mama present. But don’t worry, I’ll show you guys how to make them!

Panellets1

 

This is what you’ll need to make pine nuts, cherry, coconut, and membrillo (quince cheese) panellets:

 

  • 400gr Almond flour
  • 200gr Sugar
  • 100 gr Pine nuts
  • 4-5 Candied cherries
  • 100 gr Shredded coconut
  • 1 Egg nicely beaten
  • 1 small potato, cooked and mashed
  • Membrillo

First:

Pine nut panellets:

In a medium-large bowl mix the almond flour, sugar and mashed potato with your hands until you have a really uniform and manageable dough. Use that dough to make small balls (think small meatball size). Use just half of the dough to make the pine nuts panellets, you’ll use the other half to make the coconut and membrillo ones.

Panellets2Panellets3 Panellets4

 

They don’t have to be perfect little balls, they can have an artisan flare, it’s all good. In another bowl, -a small one- beat the two eggs and mix them with the pine nuts.

 

pinenuts_Panellets

Use the pine nuts to cover the dough balls.

 

Panellets_pinenuts2

 

And press them in with your fingers.

 

eggy_Panellets

Place them to on a baking sheet/tray.

 

Panellets_bake

Cherry panellets:

Cut the cherries into halfs and use them to top some of the dough balls.

PanelletsCherry

Let them hang out with the rest of the panellets.

PanelletsCherry2

Membrillo (quince cheese) panellets:

On a flat surface with plastic paper lay some of the dough you set aside in a rectangular shape, smear some membrillo in the center, this is going to be the filling.

PanelletsMembrillo

Once you do that, wrap it around as if you’re making a sushi roll and pop it in the freezer. This is so it can solidify and won’t turn to mush when you put them in the oven. Speaking about oven start preheating that bad boy to 180*C / 350*F. (A special hello to the hands of Marc’s mama!)

PanelletsMembrillo2

Coconut panellets:

Mix the shredded coconut with the rest of your dough and make little cone like shapes, put them with the rest of your sweet delights.

PanelletsCoco

Now all you have to do is pop these sweet little babies in the oven and bake for about 10 minutes until golden. Your kitchen is going to smell like the sweetest almond festival ever!

PanelletsBakey

After they’re perfectly baked, let them rest and cool off for a while. Enjoy them with coffee, tea, sweet wine like Moscatell or all at once! Stuff your face why don’t you!

PanelletsDone

 

Learning how to make this was particularly relaxing for me. Trying to attach the pine nuts to the almond dough can be difficult, but for me, caring for each little piece of dough can be really therapeutic. Lourdes (Marc’s mama) didn’t hesitate to remind me that there’s no level of precision needed, they don’t have to be perfect. Which took me back to the memories of me as a little kid learning how to bake cakes with my mom. Sure, baking is a science and adding the wrong amount of anything can result in a pastry catastrophe, but at the same time baking with family is more about the experience; making something sweet together. Forget about the perfection and the nitpicking. Crafting treats for the rest to enjoy is the moment most enjoyable rather than eating them afterward. Sure, I love to eat, but not more than I seeing loved ones enjoying what you’ve just created. That’s the real reward!

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