Mandel Rolls
Submitted by themaillady
Mandel rolls (mandelbrot) made with cake meal, matzo meal, potato starch, and chopped nuts. Twice-baked Jewish biscotti that are crisp, cinnamon-spiced, and Passover-friendly.
YIELD
3 dozenPREP
20 minCOOK
45 minREADY
1 hrsMandel rolls are the Jewish answer to Italian biscotti: twice-baked, crunchy, and loaded with chopped nuts. This Passover-friendly version uses cake meal, matzo meal, and potato starch instead of regular flour, so they’re perfect for the holiday table but honestly good enough to make year-round.
The dough gets shaped into logs, baked until lightly browned, then sliced and returned to the cooling oven to dry out and crisp up. That second bake in residual heat is gentler than blasting them at full temperature, giving you an even crunch without burning the edges. Cinnamon perfumes each bite, and the finely chopped nuts add texture throughout.
Pro Tips
- Refrigerate the dough before shaping. It’s oily and soft, and cold dough is much easier to form into neat logs.
- Slice the rolls while they’re still slightly warm. Fully cooled rolls tend to crumble and crack when you cut them.
- Turn the oven off before returning the slices. The residual heat dries them slowly for even crispness without scorching.
- Press the dough into logs no wider than 3 inches. Thicker rolls won’t bake through in the center before the outside overbrowns.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
Sift potato starch cake meal, matzo meal, salt and cinnamon together.
Beat eggs and sugar together.
Add oil, beating well. Add sifted dry ingredients and nuts and blend well.
Refrigerate for a while.
Lightly oil a cookie sheet.
Shape dough on sheet into 3 x 1 inch rolls.
Bake at 350℉ (180℃).for 30 min or until lightly browned.
Cool slightly.
Slice rolls and place, cut side up, on cookie sheet.
Return to hot oven after turning heat off.
Let stand in oven until lightly browned and crisp.
One tablespoon lemon or orange rind may be added instead of cinnamon.
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