Main Menu

Extreme Vegan Makeover: Sweet and Savory Hamentashen Edition

It’s Purim and even though I am baking-challenged, I decided to try and make Hamentashen. And not just any Hamentashen: Vegan and gluten-free Hamentashen.

Purim has always been my favorite Jewish holiday. It’s one of the few happy holidays and as I recall, the only one where you get to sit in the synagogue and make noise – stamp your feet and play with graggers (noisemakers).

When I was a little girl, I used to love when Purim came along. Not just because I got to be loud in shul but because Purim is like the Jewish version of Halloween. In school, we would dress up in costumes and act out the Book of Esther (Megillah) and how she saved the Jews from persecution.

I always wanted to be Queen Esther but for some reason, the teachers always chose a blond girl for that. Maybe because the graggers we had showed Esther as a blond and Vashti as a brunette, I don’t know. The brunettes ended up being Queen Vashti, their dark tresses flowing as they were beheaded. Hmph!

Telling us that Purim was the Jewish version of Halloween turned out to be a big mistake on the teacher’s part, however. Imagine my embarassment and confusion as I rang people’s doorbells in our South Bronx apartment building, dressed in costume, asking for treats….IN MARCH!!!! I recall neighbors asking me why I was “trick-or-treating” in March instead of October and their befuddled looks as I tried to explain Purim to them. They probably suggested to my parents that I get some help.

As I got older, I not only stopped “trick-or-treating” in March but I understood the Story of Esther from a more feminist perspective. We were always taught that Queen Vashti was bad, that she was wrong, that she was defiant. In actuality, she was a feminist, a strong woman who refused to be told what to do, who refused to let her husband pass her around to his friends as entertainment and she died for it. Vashti became my brunette hero. 

“Vashti” by Edwin Long

And while Esther did save the Jews, she did it using her feminine wiles. Isn’t that what we criticize PETA for – using women as sexualized objects to help save animals? She’s still a hero but it’s a little more complicated now; a little more confusing than “trick-or-treating” in March.

“La Toilette d’Esther” by Theodore Chasseriau

Anyway, I read a great article on Shalom Veg, a web-based group for Jewish vegetarians, vegans and animal rights advocates, called “Purim – What are We Blotting Out?” The article states, “We are commanded on Purim to try to wipe away evil in our world. But we are also told that we must first hear, recognize and remember the evil. It is up to us to make the conscious choice to pay attention and do what we know is right, to be kind to each other, and do our best to bring healing instead of pain to the world.”

What a wonderful message. And it just so happens that this year Purim falls on the same day as Meatout Day and the first day of Spring. What a great way to celebrate Purim…a new beginning by going Vegan!
 
Back to the Hamentashen. Anyone who knows me knows that I don’t like sweets. I was making the Hamentashen for Tom and just to see if I could but what about me? Then I thought, why can’t I make savory Hamentashen? They would be like calzones but smaller. So I adapted the recipe by removing the sugar and adding some Italian spices. I made a sauteed mushroom and vegan feta cheese mixture that I love. Then I thought, why not pizza? After all, I am half-Italian so I whipped up a super-fast marinara sauce and got out my Daiya mozzarella cheese. This way Tom and I were both happy.
 

Since I’m so bad with dough, my Hamentanshen didn’t come out looking so great.

In fact, if Haman’s hat had looked like my Hamentashen, he would have been laughed at and run out of Persia before he even got a chance to start trouble. But they tasted delicious and that’s what really matters, right? Right.

Here are the recipes for both the sweet and the savory Hamentashen and the fillings. Make either one you like or both. Just don’t get dressed up in costume and go door-to-door unless you live in a very observant Jewish neighborhood 🙂
 
Happy Purim, Happy Meatout Day and Happy Spring!!!

Sweet Hamentashen
Note: I have updated and improved this recipe. Please see the new recipe posted on 3/8/12. Don’t use this one.

Ingredients
4 cups gluten-free, all purpose flour mix (I used Namaste brand)
4 3/4 tsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. salt
1 cup raw brown sugar
1 cup vegan unsalted margarine, room temperature
1/2 cup – 1 cup water
2 tsp. almond extract
Fillings: fig preserves, vegan chocolate chips

Directions
Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

Mix the dry ingredients into a large bowl. Add in the margarine and mix until flour is clumpy. Add water slowly, mixing, until the dough comes together.

Using a tablespoon, take pieces of dough and form into balls. Put each ball between two small pieces of wax paper. Press down on the ball with your hand to form a flat disk. Place about 1 tsp. of filling onto the center of each disk.

Fold the disk into a triangle (handling it by the wax paper makes it easier) and pinch the corners. Place hamentaschen onto a baking sheet sprayed with cooking spray. Spray hamentashen with cooking spray. Bake about 10 minutes or until hamentashen are browned. Remove from oven and let cool.

Fig
Chocolate Chip

Savory Hamentashen
I have updated and improved the dough recipe. See the post on 3/8/12. For this savory dough, simply add 2 tsps. of xanthan gum and 1/2 tsp. sea salt to the dry ingredients.
Ingredients
3 1/2 cups gluten-free all-purpose flour
1 Tbs. baking powder
1 tsp. each dried basil and oregano
1 cup vegan unsalted spread or margarine
4 Tbs. chickpea flour + 4 Tbs. water
4 Tbs. non-dairy milk

For fillings:
mushrooms and vegan feta cheese mix
marinara sauce and vegan mozzarella shreds

Mushrooms and Vegan Feta Filling

Ingredients
10 oz. baby bella mushrooms, finely chopped
1/4 red onion, finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp. olive oil
1/2 tsp. dried thyme
Salt and pepper to taste
2 tsp. vegan gluten-free worcestershire sauce
Vegan feta cheese, chopped

Directions
Heat oil in a skillet over medium heat. Add onions and let cook about 3 minutes. Add garlic and mushrooms. Let cook until mushrooms are brown and moist, about 6 minutes. Add spices and worscestershire sauce. Stir and let cook a few minutes more. Remove from heat and put mushrooms in a bowl. Add vegan feta cheese and mix.

Super Simple Marinara Sauce

See my recipe at http://thevword.net/2010/08/extreme-vegan-makeover-noodle-free/ or to make it super simple: open an 8 oz. can of tomato sauce, add some pinches of oregano, basil, crushed red pepper, salt and pepper. Mix and heat for a few minutes.

Directions:
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Spray baking sheets with cooking spray.

Mix the dry ingredients into a large bowl. Add in the margarine and mix until flour is clumpy. In a separate bowl or mug, mix the chickpea flour with the water until it becomes a paste. Add the milk to this mixture. Add the flour/milk paste slowly, mixing, until the dough comes together.

Using a tablespoon, take pieces of dough and form into balls. Put each ball between two small pieces of wax paper. Press down on the ball with your hand to form a flat disk. Place about 1 tsp. of filling onto the center of each disk.

Fold the disk into a triangle (handling it by the wax paper makes it easier) and pinch the corners. Place hamentashen onto a baking sheet sprayed with cooking spray. Spray hamentashen with cooking spray. Bake about 10 minutes or until hamentashen are browned. Remove from oven and let cool.

Have extra marinara sauce and/or gravy for dipping.

Pizza
Mushroom and Vegan Feta

Enjoy!

(Visited 838 times, 1 visits today)

, , ,

2 Responses to Extreme Vegan Makeover: Sweet and Savory Hamentashen Edition

  1. Renee March 13, 2014 at 6:03 pm #

    We also make savory hamentaschen at our house. We call them “pizzataschen”and “nachotaschen”. Pizza taschen are like the ones you describe here and we also make some with salsa and cheddar. We have an entire meal of little bite sized hamentaschen. We also serve Doritos and tortilla chips for their triangular shapes as well. Lotta fun!

    • Rhea March 24, 2014 at 2:41 pm #

      Hi Renee, savory hamantaschen are the best. I love the name “nachotaschen.” 🙂 Thanks for sharing!


Hit Counter provided by orange county property management