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Florentine Wedding Cakes





Yields
Makes 5 dozen

The melt-in-your-mouth classic, Mexican wedding cakes, takes on an Italian veil as Lynn Tremble, replaces the traditional walnuts with hazelnuts and adds a sprinkle of cocoa.

 3/4 cup hazelnuts
 1 cup (1/2 lb.) butter or margarine, at room temperature
  About 1 1/4 cups powdered sugar
 1 teaspoon vanilla
 2 cups all-purpose flour
 1/4 teaspoon salt
 2 teaspoons Dutch-process cocoa
Step 1
1

Put nuts in a 9-inch cake or pie pan. Bake in a 350° oven until pale gold under skin, 10 to 12 minutes. Pour nuts into a towel and rub briskly with the cloth to remove as much skin as possible. Lift nuts from towel and finely chop. Wipe out pan.

Step 2
2

Cut butter into chunks and put in a large bowl. Beat with a mixer on high speed until fluffy. Add 1/3 cup of the powdered sugar and the vanilla; beat on slow speed to incorporate, then beat on high speed until fluffy.

Step 3
3

On low speed, mix in flour and salt, then beat until blended.

Step 4
4

Stir in nuts.

Step 5
5

Shape dough into 1-inch balls. Place about 2 inches apart on baking sheets.

Step 6
6

Bake in a 300° oven until cookies no longer feel soft when gently touched but are not browned, about 18 minutes. (If using one oven, alternate pan positions after 8 to 10 minutes.) Cool on pans about 5 minutes.

Step 7
7

Place remaining powdered sugar in cake pan. Gently roll hot cookies, a few at a time, in sugar to coat well. Set cookies slightly apart on piece of waxed paper (about 20 in. long) until almost cool, then roll in sugar again. Return cookies to paper in a single layer. Shake cocoa through fine strainer over cookies. Let cookies cool.

Step 8
8

Serve, or store airtight at once for up to 3 days. Freeze to store longer.

Step 9
9

Nutritional analysis per cookie.

Nutrition Facts

0 servings

Serving size


Amount per serving
Calories61
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 4g6%

Saturated Fat 2g10%
Cholesterol 8.3mg3%
Sodium 41mg2%
Total Carbohydrate 5.9g3%

Dietary Fiber 0.2g1%
Protein 0.7g

* The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a serving of food contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice.