Let’s talk pigs in blankets.
(Yeah. We go big or go home here at TCJewfolk.)
Have you ever gotten a strange food craving? You know what I’m talking about. Sitting, minding your own business when out of the blue, you are hit with it. A monster craving. One so powerful that would sell your annoying younger sibling for it.
Today at work, I was minding my own business when I was hit with a craving for a favorite childhood snack – pigs in blankets. Being the savvy, well-rounded college student that I am, I happened to know I already had everything I would need to make them.
(Hot dogs and croissants.)
Unfortunately for me, my roommate has the same evil genius mind that I do. And when I said I was going to make pigs in blankets, the biddy dibsed them.
Dibs: To reserve; call rights on.
Biddy: Annoying girl.
Fortunately for me, my evil genius mind remembered an important lesson from a few weeks ago: kosher hot dogs are infinitely better than general Ball Park Franks. So, if I was going to use kosher hot dogs, I might as well make the entire dish kosher.
Challenge accepted.
Ingredients
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 tablespoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 tablespoon white sugar
- 1/3 cup margarine (I used Land O’ Lakes sticks)
- 1 cup soy milk
- Kosher hot dogs (Hebrew National, of course.)
Directions
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (180 degrees C).
- In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, salt, and sugar. Cut in the margarine until the mixture forms a coarse meal. Gradually stir in milk until dough forms a ball in center of the bowl.
- Take small clumps of dough and knead them into balls, before flattening and rolling a hot dog inside.
- Bake for 10-13 minutes, or until the dough becomes golden.
The Results:
There is definitely a difference between Pigs in Blankets with Grands versus this homemade dough. Personally, I’ll always be a fan of the Grands croissants version because they’re flakier, greasier, and overall worse for you. (So delicious.)
This dough is a great replication of a baking powder biscuit, just with a hot dog on the inside. (Who would have thought?) It’s still delicious. Just in a different, kosher way.
For those of you who don’t just trust my word (rude.), I did have a friend taste test these and give his stamp of approval. And he keeps kosher, so his opinion is legit.
As for my life, I fulfilled my craving. The Pigs in Blankets turned out. Nothing started on fire or blew up.
It was a good night!
(The recipe for the biscuits is from allrecipes.com, which I adapted for these to be kosher.)
“he keeps kosher,so his opinion is legit”. I thought that articles submitted were at least
checked out before publication. How can anyone designate this recipe as kosher when
it calls for MILK in the dough? Please, more scrutiny!
The milk in the recipe is soy. The dough is totally pareve. And brilliantly so.
Zayde, I really appreciate how much you care about keeping kosher, and that is why I strove to make this recipe as such.
As for the troll on TCJewfolk and my article, please, more scrutiny before such flagrant criticism. I might be a Shiksa, but I understand that basic aspect of kosher standards.
The ingredients clearly call for SOY MILK, which- last time I checked- meant non-dairy.
why in the h….. wasn’t that mentioned in the recipe–or did i just goof?
I think the confusion was because the body of the recipe says “Gradually stir in milk,” while the list of ingredients clearly says the “milk” is “soy milk.”
Let’s give Alyssa a big hand for coming up with this great kosher recipe, and not bother her with details like her kitchen not being kashered, etc.
As always, thanks Susan! 🙂
You just goofed. I’ll apologize to Alyssa on your behalf.
Thank you, Jeff!
I humbly apologize for not being more diligent in my reading. As an older man who loves to cook, I often simply scan these recipes. I will definitely be more careful in the future.
Sorry, I just saw this comment. I appreciate your apology. Don’t worry, I need to have a thick skin as someone who’s posting onto a public forum. 🙂