If you want this delectable Jewish pastry, you’ll have to go to Cleveland

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Russian tea biscuit
(Photo by Sarah Bania-Dobyns)

By Sarah Bania-Dobyns

Russian tea biscuits are so much a part of Cleveland’s landscape that locals are surprised to learn that these rugelach-like pastries are from their hometown. As a Clevelander, I didn’t discover the truth until I moved to several cities and Russian tea biscuits were nowhere to be found, prompting me to do a little digging online. I discovered that the pastry’s origin story — a story that feels more like a legend — is connected to the Cleveland Jewish community.

Even though Salon published a lively discussion in 2011 about the origins of Russian tea biscuits, the pastry’s full story remains a mystery. How did these mammoth pastries come to Cleveland? Were they called Russian tea biscuits because they were brought to Cleveland by Russian immigrants?

Russian tea biscuits in Cleveland can be traced back to the first half of the 20th century when bakeries proliferated across the city. Many of these bakeries were started by Jewish immigrants from Eastern European countries. Among them were Sherwin’s Bakery, Lax and Mandel, Unger’s Bakery and Davis Bakery, all of which survived into the 1980s or later.

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According to an article in the Cleveland Jewish News, Sherwin’s Bakery sold Russian tea biscuits at three for a nickel during the Great Depression.

Of these first-generation bakeries, Unger’s and Davis are still open, along with many others that serve Russian tea biscuits. Just like in the early 20th century, today’s bakeries have loyal regulars who insist that their Russian tea biscuits are the best. Ask a Clevelander where they get their Russian tea biscuits and you will hear a story, not just a quick answer.

Russian tea biscuits have even traveled as far as California and Florida. Clevelanders started Bea’s Bakery in Los Angeles and 3G’s Deli in Delray Beach, Fla., bringing their recipes with them. Rumor has it also that a former Peruvian employee of the Stone Oven Bakery may have taken the pastry back home with her.

But what about their alleged Russian origins? The fact that the bakeries were started by immigrants from various Eastern European countries muddies the waters. What these iconic Cleveland bakery owners did have in common, however, was that they were all Jewish.

Could it be, then, that Russian tea biscuits should more accurately be called Jewish tea biscuits?

Maybe. Family-owned bakeries started by immigrants had to bring their recipes from somewhere. Countless women’s obituaries in the Cleveland Jewish News refer to the Russian tea biscuits they were known for sharing with friends and family. Many of these women were grandmothers who emigrated from Eastern European countries at around the same time as the first generation of family-owned Cleveland bakeries.

Then again, some stories from home bakers suggest the pastry might still have Russian origins. Two anonymous Cleveland bubbes in their 80s each separately said their family recipes came from Kiev at a time when the Ukraine was still part of Russia.

Yet Russian immigrant Tatyana Rehn, one of the owners of the Stone Oven Bakery, said she never encountered Russian tea biscuits until she immigrated to Cleveland in the 1970s. Her then-husband took her to Lax and Mandel, where she had her first. She carries on Lax and Mandel’s legacy by following their Russian tea biscuit recipe. Her theory?

“Raspberry jam is very Russian,” she said, explaining that adding raspberry jam to desserts made them a special treat.

One thing is clear: For generations of Clevelanders, Russian tea biscuits conjure up memories of gathering around family tables, being a regular at a family-owned bakery and sharing the pastries at shivah.

There’s no doubt these pastries loom large in people’s memories — and yes, it’s partly because Russian tea biscuits are so large. As Cleveland Russian tea biscuit eater Jerry Ferstman explained, he always liked rugelach, but Russian tea biscuits were so much better because there was so much more to eat.

Now you, too, can make and savor Russian tea biscuits at home.

Ingredients
For the dough
2 cups flour
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon baking powder
2 sticks room temperature butter
1 cup full-fat sour cream or crème fraiche
1 tsp vanilla extract
2 egg yolks (reserve the whites to glaze the pastries)

For the filling
18 ounces raspberry jam
1 ½ cups golden raisins
1 cup chopped walnuts
(or shredded coconut)
Splash of orange juice
Grated rind of ½ orange
Dash of cinnamon

Directions
In a large bowl, mix the dry ingredients for the dough.

Cut the butter into 12 pieces (or more). Then cut the butter into the dry ingredients until the butter pieces are the size of pecan halves.

In another bowl, mix the vanilla, egg yolks and sour cream. Gradually stir into the dry ingredients until they just come together.

Form the dough into two balls, flatten into discs, then use your fingers to smear the small pieces of butter to create streaks through the dough. Turn the dough over several times, smearing the butter each time.

Form the dough back into two balls, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for 3-4 hours, or overnight.

For the filling, mix all ingredients in a bowl. Use enough raisins and nuts (or coconut) to achieve a mortar-like texture to prevent the filling from oozing in the baking process.

Heat the oven to 350 degrees.

Remove the dough from the refrigerator. Flour a surface and roll each ball out into ¼ inch thick rectangles. Slice each rectangle into four equal pieces. Spread filling evenly on each piece, leaving ¼ inch of room on the edges. Roll up, then brush egg white generously on top. Bake for 30 minutes.

This article originally appeared in The Nosher, a 70 Faces Media Brand.

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1 COMMENT

  1. Dorothy Lane Market in Dayton, OH is the only location outside of Cleveland (that I know of) that sells these Russian Tea Biscuits. I grew up in Kettering, OH and now live in Cleveland. During my childhood, these biscuits were the ultimate bakery treat. Now that I’ve moved north, I can find them everywhere! Still love them as much as ever.

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