Aug 16, 2013 in breakfast, british, cherries, crescent rolls, dessert, ground almond, my newlywed cooking adventures recipe, pastry, sugar, vanilla. Read the original on: Everyday Cooking Adventures
This week I bought some locally grown Flathead Lake cherries and couldn't wait to scour my cookbooks for a good recipe. This recipe is inspired by a recipe called Cherry Bumpers in Laura Mason's Farmhouse Cookery. According to her cookbook this type of recipe (minus the modern day crescent rolls) is traditional to Buckinghamshire, England.I was hoping to make this a little less time intensive so I decided to try it with store-bought crescent roll dough. Here it goes!
Almond vanilla filling is in ©MyNewlywedCookingAdventures 2013 |
Cherry filling is in ©MyNewlywedCookingAdventures 2013 |
Stoning or removing the pit from the cherries, was labor intensive but pretty quick once I got in the rhythm of slicing them in half and scooping out the pit to discard. See video below--my very first on my blog! If I had a cherry pitter tool I'm sure it would have gone much faster though.
After prepping the cherries, it was a breeze. I rolled up the crescents from the long side to the tip carefully stuffing the cherries back in if they fell out the sides. They started to nicely puff up and brown in the oven and after 9 minutes they were really ready to take out. I left them in 1 more minute to make sure the insides were set and then let them cool on the baking sheet out of the oven for 5 minutes. I then removed them to a cooling rack.
Ready for the oven ©MyNewlywedCookingAdventures 2013 |
My husband and I had afternoon tea with them and they were so delicious! They aren't overly sweet but definitely not sour either. They were nice and flaky on the outside and the cherries stayed whole but softened more on the inside. I am so excited these worked!! I hope you will try these for a breakfast, snack, or dessert yourself.
 Cherry Turnovers ©MyNewlywedCookingAdventures 2013 |
Read the original on: Everyday Cooking Adventures
Teaching myself to cook by trying as many new recipes as I can and sharing with you what worked or didn't, to create a repertoire of some great recipes for years of cooking and baking joy to come.