Shortbread.....at last!!!!
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1 | It's taken me many years, but have at last produced some great shortbread. I've posted the recipe below as originally written. I beat the butter and sugar for 10mins. The mixture was a little sticky so I used some extra rice flour to shape into logs and chilled for 15 mins before slicing. My oven took 25mins. Soften a pound of butter and beat with 1 cup caster sugar. Sift together 4 cups plain flour, 1/2 cup rice flour,1/2 tsp mixed spice. Mix altogether. I roll in to two logs and chill to firm then slice logs and place each biscuit on baking paper allowing room to spread. You can also roll mixture out between two sheets of grease proof and use cookie cutters. Bake 20 mins or so ( till slightly golden ) 150 degrees in oven. rarogal - 2013-12-07 17:43:00 |
2 | This message was deleted. cookessentials - 2013-12-07 21:07:00 |
3 | Can you tell me.....does shortbread freeze well? rarogal - 2013-12-07 22:31:00 |
4 | Yes, it freezes fine. Both the dough and cooked shortbread nauru - 2013-12-07 23:03:00 |
5 | cookessentials wrote:
more traditional where, aktow - 2013-12-07 23:24:00 |
6 | TY Nauru! rarogal - 2013-12-08 01:21:00 |
7 | Hmmm, my recipe is a James Martin one, it uses very little standard flour and cornflour not rice flour. lythande1 - 2013-12-08 07:31:00 |
8 | I love shortbread that melts in your mouth, what's the best recipe julz29 - 2013-12-08 07:55:00 |
9 | This message was deleted. cookessentials - 2013-12-08 08:06:00 |
10 | Julz, I was delighted with this recipe. My MIL made the best short bread, but I had no success with even her recipe. Ive given up making it over the years, but thought I'd give it another go this Xmas. This is definitely melt in the mouth stuff. rarogal - 2013-12-08 08:10:00 |
11 | cookessentials wrote:
When I learnt to make shortbread about 55 years ago we used ordinary flour and cornflour. And that was what was in my grandmother's recipe books that she had had for many years. But this was NZ. Edited by olwen at 8:12 am, Sun 8 Dec olwen - 2013-12-08 08:11:00 |
12 | This is a great SAVOURY shortbread recipe ... I made them for staff where I worked last Christmas and they said it was the most memorably delicious shortbread they's ever tasted :) Pesto | Walnuts, Orange Zest, Parmesan, and Fresh Basil | Yield about 2 dozen. bluetigerrr - 2013-12-08 08:57:00 |
13 | Bump :) unknowndisorder - 2014-12-02 22:32:00 |
14 | I like James Martins shortbread, little flour, lots of cornflour and icing sugar. lythande1 - 2014-12-03 07:06:00 |
15 | The "beautiful biscuits" AWW cookbook has a whole section on shortbreads. It's a really good cookbook all round actually, highly recommend. twelve12 - 2014-12-03 09:16:00 |
16 | I always use the following recipe from my Bero book (UK) Edited by nauru at 8:23 pm, Wed 3 Dec nauru - 2014-12-03 20:12:00 |
17 | Rice flour in biscuits is fantastic! wheelz - 2014-12-04 11:57:00 |
18 | I used some rice flour in my Christmas mince pie pastry today, results are good. nauru - 2014-12-04 19:57:00 |
19 | Thanks for the savory shortbread recipe, I made it yesterday. jhan - 2014-12-05 07:42:00 |
20 | Saturday Herald has some shortbread recipes. I have never made any, but always thought I'd add orange zest. Lo and behold, the Herald recipe today uses lemon zest or orange zest. socram - 2014-12-06 15:45:00 |
21 | bump for shortbread season uli - 2015-12-05 15:59:00 |
22 | I have a bag of coconut flour, wondering if I could use it in shortbread. korbo - 2015-12-06 07:52:00 |
23 | you need a specific recipe - coconut flour is notoriously difficult to bake with without a recipe made for it. uli - 2015-12-06 10:30:00 |
24 | cookessentials wrote: Edited by aktow at 3:39 am, Mon 7 Dec aktow - 2015-12-07 03:37:00 |
25 | aktow wrote:
You will note that if you bing or google, a number of Scottish Shortbreads do use Rice Flour instead of Cornflour but still use normal flour. valentino - 2015-12-07 08:57:00 |
26 | valentino wrote:
They do now but the traditional ones did not. Rice flour is a new adaption. kay141 - 2015-12-07 09:04:00 |
27 | kay141 wrote:
http://www.scottish-at-heart.com/scottish-shortbread-recipe. Pam initially noted Rice flour against Cornflour re sweetness.... valentino - 2015-12-07 09:15:00 |
28 | valentino wrote:
That does not make it traditional. 50 years ago, there was no such product as rice flour. The recipe for shortbread, like most has changed over the years to suit tastes. Like a lot of things it is now sweeter than it used to be, and is no longer just the butter, sugar and flour mix of the old recipe. kay141 - 2015-12-07 09:23:00 |
29 | Note the inclusion of rice flour in this recipe. http://www.historic-uk.com/HistoryUK/HistoryofScotland/Scott davidt4 - 2015-12-07 09:37:00 |
30 | kay141 wrote:
To me when someone noted as such then it is as one sees it. Sure, many years ago it may be different to today, actually about 99% of recipes today never existed a very long time ago but when various Scottish sites note their traditional shortbread containing certain ingredients then normally one goes along with it and continue as such. Sure, there is always the odd one who will buck this trend, so be it but I see things along with many other whom sees it the same. Personally I do not use Rice Flour in my shortbreads but that is not the thing..... It was how one noted the sweetness but end up being questioned re use of "Rice Flour" in the Traditional sense. Davidt4 added another website backing the use of Rice Flour.... Cheers Edited by valentino at 10:18 am, Mon 7 Dec valentino - 2015-12-07 10:16:00 |
31 | There's one of those womans weekly cookbooks called "Beautiful Biscuits". It has a whole section on shortbread... and some of them are very good. twelve12 - 2015-12-07 12:07:00 |
32 | actually rice flour was available 50+ years ago as my mother has a couple of recipes that use it BUT it was very expensive so not often used and substituted with either cornflour or plain flour. Eg belgium biscuit recipe circa 1960 used half rice flour half plain flour (Edmonds cookbook). cgvl - 2015-12-07 12:11:00 |
33 | and again bev00 - 2016-12-06 22:49:00 |
34 | rub the butter into combined flour and sugar. This is the recipe I have used for many years from my UK Be-ro flour cookbook. Edited by nauru at 7:45 pm, Sat 5 Dec Quote SHORT BREAD PS..mixture seemed a bit tacky for rolling, I just sliced it. Makes quite a few. Quote bev00 - 2016-12-06 22:53:00 |
35 | This is the (updated) recipe I've used for years, never fails, lovely and crisp. Shortbread: Method Quote Edited by bev00 at 10:58 pm, Tue 6 Dec bev00 - 2016-12-06 22:55:00 |
36 | kay141 wrote: sarahb5 - 2017-08-13 17:06:00 |
37 | cgvl wrote: sarahb5 - 2017-08-13 17:13:00 |
38 | My mother in law was the worst cook out but man could she make amazing shortbread. Unfortunately I don't have her recipe. I do know that when she had a morning baking shortbread was the last thing she made and it was put in the hot oven and the oven was immediately turned off, she left it in there till oven was cold. I tried it once and it was an abject failure, lol. jia5 - 2017-08-13 18:42:00 |
39 | bump bev00 - 2018-08-12 08:16:00 |
40 | I have never had complaints about my shortbread being too sweet, it is a simple recipe that has never failed yet. 4oz icing sugar beaten with 8oz butter until creamy, add 4oz cornflour and 8oz plain flour and mix until combined. Divide in two, roll each piece into sausage shape and cut into slices. Place on baking paper on baking tray. Press down with wet fork. Bake 5 minutes at 180C and then reduce heat to 150C and bake for another 10 minutes. mcdaff - 2018-08-12 09:11:00 |
41 | That is how Mum made it and it was delicious. malcovy - 2018-08-12 16:44:00 |
42 | korbo wrote:
Yes you can pickles7 - 2019-06-17 17:04:00 |
43 | My Canadian aunt from Nova Scotia and of Scottish descent always made her delightful shortbread using a little custard powder in with the flour. I have no idea of the proportion and cannot find out as she has passed on but I would guess at a couple of tablespoons. It made shortbread that was to die for. I recall her saying it was traditional Scottish shortbread kiwigoose1 - 2019-06-17 23:52:00 |
44 | Well I'm going to give all you bakers a fit lol......my aunty who was a beautiful baker told me to use ordinary (table) sugar in my shortbread. Always have and it comes out beautifully. Have had heaps of compliments, and I'm no Allison Holst believe me! Everyone has a different method though and that's what makes things interesting. hound31 - 2019-06-18 21:13:00 |