“Named for their diamond shape, these date pastries are usually sold at market stalls and village feasts. Eating them hot with ice-cream and honey is a real treat,” says Busuttil Nishimura.
Ingredients
Method
For pastry, combine flour, sugar, aniseed and a pinch of salt in a bowl. Rub in butter with your fingertips until coarse crumbs form. Stir in marsala, orange blossom water and egg and with a fork, mix to combine. Turn mixture onto a clean work bench and bring together to form a smooth dough (if it is not coming together easily, add 1-2 tbsp water). Wrap in plastic wrap and rest at room temperature (30 minutes).
For date and orange filling, place dates in a heatproof bowl and cover with boiling water; set aside until softened (10 minutes). Drain. Transfer to a bowl; add remaining ingredients. Mash with a fork and set aside.
Roll pastry out on a lightly floured surface to a 50cm x 12cm rectangle (about 2mm thick). Form the filling into an even cylinder along the centre of the pastry. Brush edge of pastry with water. Tightly fold pastry over and press edges to seal. Trim excess pastry. Flatten slightly, then cut diagonally into 4cm-thick pieces (Makes 12).
Half fill a large saucepan with oil. Place over medium heat until oil reaches 180°C on a deep-frying thermometer. Fry in batches, turning occasionally, until golden and crisp (2-3 minutes). Drain on paper towel.
Drizzle pastries with honey, scatter with salt flakes, and serve with vanilla ice-cream.
This recipe also calls for resting (see method).
Use Tunisian Deglet Noor or medjool dates.
Note