News
Blintzes in a blitz
CHEESE BLINTZES WITH ORANGE CONFIT (or without it’s just as delicious)
LAUREN BOOLKIN
For the blinis
3 eggs
2½ cups cold water
1½ cups flour, sifted
¼ tsp salt
½ tsp baking powder
Oil/butter for frying
For the filling
250g cream cheese
1 tbsp cream
2 tsp flour
1 egg
¼ cup castor sugar
¼ tsp cinnamon
Method
Beat eggs and water. Sift flour, baking powder, and salt. Add to the eggs, and whisk till blended. Pour into a jug through a sieve.
Refrigerate the batter for an hour or up to 24 hours.
Beat the egg and castor sugar together. Add the cream, cream cheese, flour, and cinnamon.
Beat until smooth.
To fry
Heat a small, non-stick frying pan over medium heat. Add a teaspoon of oil, and swirl to coat the base. When it begins to sizzle, pour in a little batter. Cover the base of the pan in batter, and pour the rest back into the jug. Cook over a medium heat until you can lift the edge of the blini and see a light brown base. Flip onto a plate. Bear in mind that the first one or two flop. Don’t give up!
To assemble
Lay one crepe on a plate cooked side down. Put two thirds of a teaspoon of the filling in the centre of the uncooked side and roll up by first tucking in the sides. Fry immediately or refrigerate for up to two days. Unfried blintzes can also be frozen.
Orange confit
Segment the oranges over a bowl. Four oranges would be good for this quantity of blintzes. Squeeze the remaining juice out with your hands into the same bowl. The pith is bitter, so be sure not to include it.
Drain the oranges, and reserve the juice in a jug. Add double the amount of castor sugar to the juice. (If you have a quarter of a cup of juice, you will add half a cup castor sugar, and so on.) Bring the mixture to the boil, and then turn the stove down to very low. Keep stirring until you have a jammy mixture. Add this to your orange segments, and refrigerate without stealing any.
Serve the hot blintze with a spoonful of confit on top.