Shortbread Makes A Good Christmas Present
Christmas Recipes:
Edible Gifts. No.2 of 8 - Shortbread
by Paul Curran
Traditional Scottish produce and ideal in a box or tin for a
christmas gift. Christmas recipe makes: 2 to 3 dozen Calories
per biscuit: 180-270 Preparation time: 20 minutes Cooking time:
20 minutes Not suitable for freezing Christmas recipe
ingredients: * butter, 450 g (1 lb) * sugar, caster 225 g
(8 oz) * flour, plain white 450 g (1 lb) * rice, ground or
flour 225 g (8 oz) * salt, pinch * sugar, colored
granulated or golden * sugar, caster for sprinkling All these
recipe ingredients must be at room temperature. Christmas
recipe instructions: 1. Mix the sugar and butter until a
creamy and fluffy consistency. Mix together the salt, rice
flour and flour. Now blend with the creamy mixture and mix
until it is breadcrumb like. 2. Take some mixture in your hand
and form a ball shape that can be rolled into a 2-3 inch (5-7.5
cm) tube shape. Enclose in cling film and cool till hard. 3.
Cut the tube of dough into half inch slices (10 mm) and coat
the edges with the golden or granulated sugar. Bake until
slightly golden at 190 degrees centigrade(gas mark 5, 375 F)
for about 25 minutes. Sprinkle with caster sugar after removing
from the oven. 4. After 10 minutes transfer to a wire rack for
complete cooling. Changes you can make to the recipe: *
Add a spice such as 'mixed spice' to the flours to make a
Spiced Shortbread. * To make a Ginger Shortbread add ground
ginger to the flours and crystallized ginger to the dough from
step 1. * For Chocolate Chip Shortbread blend chocolate pieces
into the dough. * For Lavender Shortbread, add half a dozen
lavender flower tops into the dough. This time roll the dough
into thin pieces, cut intobiscuit shape and bake for about
quarter of an hour. * For Rosemary Shortbread, just replace the
lavender with fresh chopped rosemary and carry on as above.
About the author: (c) Paul Curran, CEO of Cuzcom Internet
Publishing Group and webmaster at Gifts-for-Christmas.com,
bringing you christmas recipes and unique gifts for
christmas including their online home collectibles, russian
gifts, cookies, jewelry. This article may be re-published in
its entirety as long as the author bylines in the resource box
are included and urls kept live.
Perfect Shortbread: the Art and Science of Baking
Ann Zuccardy
Contrary to popular belief, I did not grow up in a Scottish
family with an old family recipe for shortbread. Initially,
shortbread appeared easy to me. How difficult could it be to
throw together butter, sugar, and flour to create a tasty
cookie?
It isn't difficult. But, there is some science involved and
I'm here to tell you about the science and history of
shortbread. Imagine that, a literature and creative writing
nerd teaching science...I'm spewing coffee out my nose at the
silliness of it all as I write. This article concentrates on
the science of shortbread in unscientific language. My hope is
that the insights gleaned from hours of trial and error will be
of use to all novice bakers.
Initially I was drawn to baking because it's an exact
science. You follow the recipe to the T and you get a perfect
baked good, right? In the beginning, I could bake a perfect
baguette if I followed the directions, but heaven help me if I
had to be creative with spices and seasonings for a meal. When
I first started cooking, I never understood how people tasted
their work and just intuitively knew what it needed. Thus, I
was drawn to baking. For this cooking novice, it felt more
exact and scientific than the creative art of throwing together
a meal from my imagination.
Originally Vermont Shortbread Company started out as a
seasonal business out of my own kitchen. Back in the mid-90s, I
didn't even own a Kitchen-Aid mixer. I mixed the dough by hand.
And anyone who knows shortbread, can attest to the fact that
the dough is very heavy with no liquid ingredients. Back in
those days I had forearms the size of tree trunks from all that
hand mixing. The good thing was I learned exactly what
consistency the dough had to be to make the best shortbread. I
learned exactly how much handling the dough could take before
it became overworked and made a tough shortbread round. I
learned not only by looking, but by feeling and of course,
tasting.
As the business grew and people realized that shortbread was
a perfect year round gift for any occasion the call to bake
during the warmer months became apparent. However, summer
shortbread did not always look as nice as winter shortbread.
Most people didn't notice, but having baked thousands of rounds
by hand, I was not satisfied with my summer shortbread. It took
me a couple years to realize there were four factors at work
here contributing to the texture, color, and taste of the final
shortbread product: humidity, oven hot spots, butter
temperature, and mixing time.
Humidity:
I don't know the chemistry behind this, but I can tell you
that it's much harder to create a perfect shortbread round when
the weather is humid. Perhaps the moisture makes the flour less
fluffy...I don't know. I can only tell you that humid-weather
shortbread is not as pretty, golden, and tasty as cold weather
shortbread. For this reason, when I built my commercial bakery,
I installed dehumidifiers in the bakery. So now, no matter what
the season, we produce a perfect shortbread every time.
Oven hot spots:
When I began baking shortbread out of my home kitchen in the
90s, I had only a small household Whirlpool electric oven. I
could only bake three 8" rounds at a time and the production
was slooooooow. I hate cooking with electric and believe that
the best cooks use gas, however, I have to hand it to that
little oven that served me well for nearly a decade. All ovens
have spots that are hotter than others. I intimately learned
where all my oven's hot spots were and with each batch of
shortbread shifted the position of each pan halfway through the
baking time to ensure even browning of my product every time.
The Whirlpool electric model was retired to appliance heaven in
2005. Now with my commercial oven (a big Imperial gas model), I
can bake up to forty 8" rounds at a time in an environment with
better convection (air flow around the items). Still, I shift
the pans around in the middle of the baking period as I learn
where this new oven's hot spots are.
Butter temperature:
When I began baking shortbread, I liked to remove the butter
from the fridge a couple hours before I planned to use it so
that it would be soft. Remember, I was mixing by hand and
wanted to make it as easy as possible. When I began baking
summer shortbread, however, the butter became runny and began
separating. This did not make for a good texture in the final
product. I don't know how to explain this scientifically; I can
only tell you how it felt to me. The final product was dense
and too doughy. What I really wanted was a crisp golden
flakiness on the outside with a little bit of chewiness on the
inside. I learned that if I was going to bake in the summer I
had to use butter almost directly from the fridge. If the
butter got too soft, I had to toss it in the garbage and start
over. That's when I bought my first mixer with a dough hook to
make the job of mixing hard butter easier. Butter directly from
the fridge, not too hard, not too soft is the only way to make
perfect shortbread. Again, I just had to learn by feeling my
way how long to let the butter sit on the counter before it was
perfect. Longer in the winter, shorter in the summer.
Mixing time:
Any dough mixed too long or not enough affects the final
product. With shortbread, you first cream the sugar and butter
together. That's the easy part. The tricky part is knowing how
to incorporate the flour. I like to do it a pound at a time
(remember I am now baking in pounds of flour, sugar, and butter
rather than cups). Once the dough is completely incorporated
and forms a ball with no bits of flour on the side of the
mixing bowl, I know it's ready for baking. Now, when I got
Trixie (my commercial mixer), I had to relearn the timing all
over. Trixie can mix bricks. My hands and my old Kitchen-Aid
could not. Therefore mixing time is much shorter now.
Shortbread dough (as with any dough) becomes tough the more you
mix it. The trick, which I learned by trial and error, is to
find the exact timing for your dough. I am not an expert on all
dough, but I've perfected shortbread dough.
You know, the funny thing about all of this learning how to
make the perfect shortbread is that I never had any real
training. Now that I've hired a professional baker, she's
taught me a few things about making the process more efficient
and making the final product more tasty and beautiful. When I
think about it, that's pretty much how I learn: just doing it
over and over.
When science and our imaginations work together, we create
food art. With the holidays quickly approaching, this scientist
and dreamer must retreat to the bakery to create new
masterpieces. I hope that this essay provides you with creative
insights for your own dough (shortbread or otherwise) and a
little peek inside the art and science of perfect dough from a
little Vermont company that handcrafts every item with love,
imagination, and tender care (with a little science thrown
in).
Copyright 2006 Ann Zuccardy, Vermont Shortbread Company. All
rights reserved.
Ann Zuccardy, creative entrepreneur, food lover and owner of
the Vermont Shortbread Company, invites you to sample a taste
of her buttery-rich, authentic Vermont Shortbread. Place your
online order for shortbread boxed fresh from the oven and
shipped right to your doorstep at http://VermontShortbread.com
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