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Showing posts with label polvoron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label polvoron. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Milo and Classic Polvoron


 



2  cups All-Purpose Flour
1/2  cup sugar
1/2  cup powdered milk
1/3  cup butter
2-3 sachets (22g) Milo

-Toast flour in a pan for 15 minutes or until color turns light brown.  Make sure that you stir it continuously to prevent the flour from being burnt.

-Let it cool for a few minutes and then, mix in sugar, powdered milk and butter.

-Divide the mixture into two.

- Mix Milo to one portion.

- The second portion will served as the Classic Polvoron.  You can add pinipig if your want.

- Mold your Polvoron into circles or oval shapes using a Polvoron molder.  Then wrap it up in Japanese papers or cellophane.

-Serve and enjoy.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Chocolate Polvoron


 
 
 
3/4  cup All-purpose flour
1/4  cup sifted cocoa powder
1/2  cup full cream powdered milk
3/4  cup granulated white sugar
1/2 cup soft butter
 
 
1.  Using a non-stick frying pan, toast the flour over medium heat until light brown  Remove from heat and transfer to a largge mixing bowl  Add the rest of the ingredients and mix well.
 
 
2.  Form into ovals or rounds using the polvoron molder  Refrigerate for half an hour before wrapping.
 
 
 
 
Courtesy of Dorothy's Cooking School Cookbook

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Cookies and Cream Polvoron

Polvoron is a powdery Philippine sweet. It is Spanish in origin (polvo is Spanish for "powder"). The original Spanish polvoron is a flaky, soft, rich, shortbread-type cookie made with flour, lard or vegetable shortening, powdered sugar and cinnamon. The dough is refrigerated, then rolled out, cut and baked. The Philippine version is very different, being made of a mixture of toasted flour, powdered milk, sugar, and melted butter. Other ingredients like pinipig, chocolate cookies or chopped nuts may be added. The mixture is molded into oval or round shapes with a polvorera (a special mold which allows the formed sweets to be discharged easily without crumbling). Once molded, polvoron is wrapped in cellophane or Japanese paper. The sweet powder may also be used to fill small barquillos (rolled cookies) for a cookie called barqueron.


Toasted flour



Powdered milk



Sugar



Chocolate cookies



Butter



Cookies and Cream Polvoron






1 1/2 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup powdered milk
3/4 cup sugar
1/2 cup crushed chocolate cookies
1/2 cup butter, melted
1/2 cup butter, melted

Toast flour until brown in color while stirring constantly. In a bowl, combine the toasted flour, powdered milk, sugar and chocolate cookies Add melted butter and mix well. Using oval or round-shaped polvoron molder, mold and wrap individually in colored Japanese paper or cellophane.

* Do not crush the chocolate cookies finely or its color would dominate your polvoron. You want the polvoron to look like the classic polvoron with specks of cookies