Gozinaki is a traditional Christmas and New Year's treat from the country of Georgia. It is made with only walnuts, honey and sugar, resulting in a unique, nutty flavor.
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Georgian
Keyword: brown sugar, Christmas, honey, New Year's, walnuts
Ingredients
2poundsshelled walnuts
12heaping tablespoons honey
2tablespoonssugar
Instructions
In a large, dry skillet, roast the walnuts over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, until they're warm and fragrant.
Remove the walnuts from the pan and chop them roughly.
Add the honey to your skillet and heat over medium-low heat, stirring constantly, for about 10 minutes. Reduce the heat to low and add the sugar and keep stirring until the mixture thickens (this took quite awhile for me—maybe 15 more minutes).
Pour in the walnuts, and stir until they are coated evenly.
Set up an area of your counter with a large piece of waxed paper.
Wet a wooden cutting board with water (wipe off any excess), and transfer about one cup of the walnut mixture to the board. With your hands (wet them first) or a metal spoon, press the mixture together firmly while shaping it into a rectangle shape.
Once the mixture is well compacted and shaped, take a sharp knife and cut the mixture into pieces (I did mine about two-inches long). Traditionally, it's cut into diamond shapes, but cut it however you want for serving. (It will very likely fall apart a bit. Don't let it frustrate you.)
Carefully transfer the cut pieces with a spatula to your waxed paper so they can set up.
Toss any pieces that came apart back into the pan and repeat until you have all of the gozinaki formed and cut.
Leave the gozinaki on your countertop until it's fully set, and you can pick it up without it falling apart. (I left mine over night.) Store in an airtight container.