Sunflower Seed Halva (Халва)
Based on the recipe at russiancuisine.us
Ingredients:
2
cups sunflower kernels*
1½
cups flour
½
cup sugar
¼
cup canola oil
½
cup water
Preparation of a
Light-Colored (Untoasted Seed) Halva
Use
a food processor or blender to finely grate the sunflower seeds. I don’t see why you couldn’t chop them to any
desired consistency, but typical Russian halvah is made of ground seeds that
are of a consistency close to that of rough-ground flour.
For
the batch I’m preparing today, I’m not going to toast the seeds any further than
they may have already been.
Light-colored halva is reminiscent of store-bought variety that
Anastasia has bought many times in St. Petersburg (i.e., it’s very light). Later in this blog post, I’ll walk you
through the toasting process with pictures of my first batch from a few months
ago.
In
a frying pan (cast iron is the best!), heat at
medium until the flower reaches a light cream color. If you’ve ever made a roux, dry-toasting
flour seems to take less heat and time…so be careful. Mix the flour frequently to ensure complete
toasting. You should turn the flame off
about one minute before you expect
the flour to reach the desired color.
This will give the pan enough time to cool down.
Once
the flour has cooled, add it to the food processor and mix with the sunflower
seeds. This will not only mix the two
completely, but also break up any remaining clumps of flour.
In
a large saucepan, heat the half cup water and then add the sugar. Mix well until the sugar dissolves and add
the oil. Add the sunflower-flour mixture
and mix well to an even consistency.
You
can alter the flavor of your halva by toasting the sunflower kernels before
processing. I haven’t experimented with
different amounts of toasting, I presume the flavor will change with more or
less toasting, much in way that coffee beans’ flavor changes with the intensity
of roasting.
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