My husband grew up with a Scandinavian mother who always made rosettes for Christmas. He loves rosettes because of the wonderful memories that go with them. This is a really wonderful cookie that is light and delicate, and to be honest with you a real pain in the rear to make.
These cookies are so delicate that any wrong move while removing them from the rosette irons will cause them to break. If the batter is too thick the cookies don’t turn out, if you fry them too hot they don’t turn out, and if you live in a humid climate like I do they take forever to dry out enough to stay crispy and half the time they don’t stay crisp.
If you have the time and patience to make these I highly recommend doing so. They may even become a tradition in your home like they are in ours.
Ingredients:
- 2 eggs
- 1 tablespoon white sugar
- 1 cup sifted all-purpose flour
- 1 cup milk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- Vegetable oil for frying
- Sifted confectioners’ sugar
Directions:
- Combine eggs, sugar and salt; beat well. Add remaining ingredients and beat until smooth.
- Heat a rosette iron in deep, hot oil (375 degrees) for 2 minutes.
- Drain excess oil from iron. Dip in batter to 1/4 inch from the top of the iron, then dip iron immediately into hot oil (375 degrees).
- Fry rosette until golden, about 30 seconds. Lift out; tip upside down to drain. With fork, push rosette off iron onto a rack placed over paper towels.
- Reheat iron 1 minute; make next rosette.
- Sprinkle rosettes with confectioners’ sugar.
Original Recipe Source
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I LOVE Swedish Rosettes! Those looks so good — If I wasn't trying to lose weight I would go downstairs right now and heat up the iron… *argh* why did you post this when I'm dieting???
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Rosettes are my favorite. My mom used to make this when I was young. Though, I haven't really tried making them myself.
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