Sfogliatelle Ricce
Sfogliatelle Ricce
Ingredients
Dough:
12 ⅓ ounces bread flour
5 ⅓ ounces semolina flour
⅓ ounce kosher salt
6 ½ fluid ounces water, or more if needed
⅔ fluid ounce honey
Filling:
1 ⅔ cups whole milk ricotta cheese
1 cup water
½ cup white sugar
⅔ cup semolina flour
2 large egg yolks
2 tablespoons finely chopped candied orange peel
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon
Other:
½ cup unsalted butter, room temperature
½ cup lard, room temperature
¼ cup confectioners' sugar for dusting
Directions
Make the dough: Mix bread flour, semolina flour, and kosher
salt together in a large bowl. Mix in water and honey; the dough will be very
dry, like pasta. If there is still dry flour after a few minutes of mixing, add
up to 2 teaspoons more water to ensure all flour is moistened.
Turn dough out onto a work surface and knead for a few
minutes until smooth, firm, and not tacky. While you want a firm dough, it must
still be workable. Divide dough into four pieces and flatten. Cover dough with
plastic wrap when not working with it. Run each piece through a pasta machine
on its widest setting a dozen or so times, folding it in half and rotating the
sheet 45 degrees each time (see Tips). Dust with flour very sparingly, only if
needed to prevent tearing. Repeat with remaining dough pieces. Wrap dough in
plastic wrap and refrigerate for 2 hours.
Meanwhile, make the filling: Blend ricotta cheese in a food
processor until smooth. Bring water to a boil in a saucepan, then stir in
sugar. Sift in semolina flour, whisking to avoid clumping; it will immediately
thicken up. Reduce the heat to low, fold in blended ricotta, and cook for 2
more minutes, stirring constantly.
Remove from the heat and transfer filling to the food
processor. Add egg yolks, one at a time with the processor running, until fully
combined. Add orange peel, vanilla, and cinnamon, then pulse to mix. Transfer
filling to a bowl and cool to room temperature. Cover with plastic wrap and
refrigerate.
Divide each dough piece into four smaller pieces and cover
with plastic wrap. Place clean kitchen towels over a work surface so you can
lay each sheet of dough on the towels while you roll out the remaining sheets.
Run each piece of dough through a pasta machine on
progressively smaller settings until dough is as thin as possible. After
running it through the machine, stretch each sheet as wide as you can without
tearing. Dough sheets should stretch to three times their original width and be
so thin you can see through them.
Melt butter and lard in a saucepan. Place a sheet of
parchment paper onto a work surface, and place the first sheet of pastry onto
the parchment. Brush pastry with butter mixture. Place the second sheet above
the first, overlapping 1/2 inch or so. Roll sheets up into a tight cylinder,
leaving about 1 inch to overlap the next sheet. Place the third dough sheet
onto the parchment, overlapping the second sheet, and brush with butter
mixture. Continue rolling up the log of dough, repeating until all dough pieces
are brushed with butter mixture and rolled. Wrap dough log in the parchment
sheet, then wrap entirely with plastic wrap. Refrigerate for 2 hours.
Preheat the oven to 400 degrees F (200 degrees C). Line a
baking sheet with parchment paper. Transfer chilled filling to a pastry bag or
a 1-gallon zip-top bag with the corner snipped off.
Cut dough log into 1/2-inch slices; you should have 16 to 20
pieces. Holding it in both hands, use your thumbs to flatten each slice from
the center outwards, then shape it into a cone. Pipe some filling into the
center, close partially, and repeat to form remaining pastries.
Bake in the preheated oven until dough turns golden brown
and starts to peel back from the pastries, 20 to 30 minutes, basting a couple
of times with any leftover butter mixture if desired. Serve warm pastries
dusted with confectioners' sugar.
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