This poppy seed filling can be used for cookies like hamantaschen, kolaches, strudel, coffee cakes and more. The natural bitterness of the poppy seeds mellows when ground and cooked with butter, milk, sugar, and honey. Tempered egg and cooking over gentle heat slowly thickens the filling. The result is a rich, delightful filling that won’t run out of baked goods as they cook.
During the Jewish holiday of Purim, poppy seed hamantaschen are a popular treat. The most traditional filling for hamantaschen cookies is poppy seed (known in Yiddish as mohn). Some people believe this tradition finds its roots in a pun. In Yiddish, Hamantaschen literally translates to “Haman’s pockets.” A slight variation of the word, ha-mohn-taschen, literally translates to “the poppy seed pockets.”
Whatever the reason, poppy seed is the most popular of all hamantachen fillings. This is my favorite recipe for poppy seed filling. I have also used it to make kolaches and coffee cakes with great results.
Some people purchase Solo canned filling to make their poppy seed baked goods. This homemade filling is comparable in terms of texture, with all the goodness of homemade.
To make this filling parve (dairy free), I’ve recommended some specific substitutes below. I really like this filling better using dairy, but you can get a descent parve result using the recommended substitutions.
Need a delicious and foolproof hamantaschen dough recipe? For my Dairy Free Hamantaschen dough, click here. For my Buttery Hamantaschen dough, click here.
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Poppy Seed Filling for Cookies, Pastries and Hamantaschen
Ingredients
- 8 ounces whole unground poppy seeds
- 1/4 cup unsalted butter (see cooking instructions for parve subs)
- 1 cup milk (see cooking instructions for parve subs)
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 1/4 cup honey
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 2 large eggs, beaten
NOTES
Instructions
- Grind the poppy seeds in a coffee grinder in batches for about 15-20 seconds per batch, until they are ground soft and powdery.
- Melt the butter in a saucepan over medium heat. Whisk in the milk, sugar, honey and salt (read the salt note in the notes section of this recipe before adding). Bring to a simmer, stirring occasionally, till the sugar dissolves and the honey melts.
- Pour about 1 cup of the hot liquid into a cup.
- Immediately but gradually being drizzling the hot liquid into the beaten eggs. Whisk briskly and constantly till all of the hot liquid is integrated into the eggs. Do not pour too quickly, or you'll scramble your eggs. It should take about a minute to drizzle all of the liquid.Slowly pour the heated, tempered egg mixture back into the hot liquid in the saucepan, whisking constantly.
- Continue to whisk and cook for 3-5 more minutes over medium heat till the mixture thickens and turns light yellow. It is ready when it thickly coats the back of a spoon.
- Remove the saucepan from heat. Whisk the ground poppy seeds into the buttery liquid and stir well to blend all ingredients.
- Allow filling to cool to room temperature before using. Store in a tightly covered container in the refrigerator for 4-5 days.
- To make this filling parve (dairy free), you will need to use a substitute for the milk and the butter. For the milk, I like SoDelicious coconut creamer, which gives it a creamy, very faint coconut taste (vegan, but produced on dairy equipment for those who are strictly kosher). You can also use regular coconut milk, rice milk, almond milk or soy milk as a sub.
Nutrition
tried this recipe?
Let us know in the comments!
Alan says
I made this and it came out terrible Very loose wet and bitter. Not sweet at all for a cookie. I added 4 table spoons of powdered sugar to help dry and sweeten. Still it wasn’t good. I used coconut milk and it seemed to curdle. Can you advise what went wrong?
Tori Avey says
Did you make any adjustments – convert it to metric, or adjust serving size? Did you grind the poppyseeds, as suggested? Would need more information to help you troubleshoot.
Olga Goldberg says
Yessss!!! My favorite!!! Thanks Tori! This recipe is worth saving and printing for best of all collection! 👍❤️🎯
Donna Greenberg says
I’m 71 years old and live in Philly. My mom taught me how to bake poppyseed (munn) hamantaschen, which her mom taught her (in Yiddish). I continued baking them as an adult until I had to give up sugar. Your filling looks wonderful. I wonder if I could bake them with stevia instead of sugar. Thanks for this post. It hit me right in the nostalgia kischkes!
Gittel says
This was perfect!!! Living in LA and craving a taste if my youth, I’m so thankful I found an easy solution. It satisfied my craving perfectly!
Noa vago says
Hi Tori! Thanks for sharing the recipe!
I’ll try it next week for mishloach manor this year 🙂
I’ve never done mohn before but I’d like the filling to be “crunchy” (poppy seeds crunchy…). Should I still grind the seeds ? Does the poppy seeds texture remains?
Thanks in advance!!
Sharon says
The ingredient weight calculator may pose a problem for some. When I adjust the total servings to 12 (from 32), it changes the weight in grams but still shows 1 1/2 cups of poppy seeds. Basically, the measurement isn’t changing when different servings are entered. Suggest you remove the 1 1/2 cups notation for the poppy seeds and just provide the weight in grams as that is the only portion that changes when you change the serving size.
Thank you
Tori Avey says
Excellent catch Sharon, thank you for letting me know.
Zoe says
1st time ever making this filling as well as hamantaschen. It was not easy, but turned out beautifully and super tasty to boot. Only issue is I definitely have a bunch of extra filling. Any experience with freezing the filling for later use?
Tori Avey says
Hi Zoe, unfortunately I am not sure how this will freeze.