Cookie dough consistency problems

Cookie dough consistency problems - Person Holding White Hexagonal Baking Mold

I have used the same rugelach recipe for years with out a problem. This year however, the dough is pulling apart and shredding when being rolled out and up. There are 2 different things this year, I used a different flour and we have been getting endless amounts of rain, so the humidity has been high. The dough is also very soft. Any ideas?


The recipe for the dough is as follows:

  • 8 ounces cream cheese
  • 1/2 lb butter
  • 1/4 c sugar
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 2 cups flour

-> mix all, refrigerate at least an hour ( I did over night). When I rolled it out onto a floured surface, it fell apart and became almost stringy.



Best Answer

This happens to me when I am in humid climates, worse still hot and humid climates. Moisture condensing out of the air on to the dough is the main cause. In a hot humid climate, taking a chilled dough out of the fridge only makes the condensation problem much worse.

I have tried estimating the amount of added water from condensation, but there are too many variables to make the results workable.

With your recipe, you do not have many degrees of freedom to counter the additional water from condensation. It is not as if you could control the moisture contents of butter and cream cheese. Perhaps you can begin by playing with more flour. Also, counter-intuitively, try not to have such a cold dough to reduce condensation. It is a balancing act in a hot-humid environment, not cold enough, the butter softens too much for a workable dough, colder, you get disproportionately more condensation and the dough becomes stringy.

This is in fact a constant nightmare with recipes when moving from one climate to another and one season to another.

The only rather unhelpful suggestion I have is that you have to keep experimenting with small adjustments and make meticulous notes, including relative humidity, kitchen temperature and dough temperatures at various stages of working.

--

Also, as @jay asked, it is best to use weight rather than volume. Did you change measuring cups?




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Quick Answer about "Cookie dough consistency problems"

  • Tough – For rolled cookies, your dough can become “tough” by adding too much flour to your pin or counter before rolling it out. ...
  • Dry – “Dry” or “Crumbly” dough is a product of over-mixing or using too much of any ingredient during the mixing process.


How do you fix the consistency of cookie dough?

If your cookie dough is indeed too runny, try adding a tablespoon of flour at a time and mixing until fully incorporated after each addition. Give the flour some time to soak up the moisture, do not rush. Stop adding as soon as the dough reaches your desired consistency.

Why is my cookie dough liquidy?

Why is My Dough Runny? Kind of like how crumbly dough is usually because there's too much of the dry ingredients, runny cookie dough comes from having too much of the liquid ingredients.

How do I make cookie dough more consistent?

They should be thin and crisp. It is usually best to work with a small amount of dough at a time. Chill the dough if it is too soft to handle easily. For rolled cookies, the dough should be chilled for 15 to 30 minutes before rolling.



How to Get Perfect Cookie Dough Consistency




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