My Grandma's Shortbread Cookies
I have never really been a cookie person except for these shortbread cookies. I find most cookies too sweet. This is my grandmother’s recipe and whenever she made these cookies, I would eat a whole batch in a couple of days. These cookies are still one of the two desserts I always request from her. Last year, I finally asked her for the recipe..
The keys to these cookies are clarified butter and lots of flour. I have no idea how these two main ingredients plus sugar can create such magic. The center of the cookie has a little bit of a snap but the moment it comes in contact with your tongue, it starts melting.
With the holidays approaching, everyone is baking cookies as gifts. I selfishly baked the whole batch for myself and ate it too. No regrets. These cookies do however, make great gifts mainly because they keep really well. And if you want to jazz them up, you can even dip one corner in melted chocolate before serving.
Yields: 24 cookies Time: 1 hour 15 minutes
Ingredients
2 1/2 sticks unsalted butter
3/4 cup powdered sugar
1 1/2 tbsp vegetable oil
3 1/2 - 4 cups all purpose flour
Preparation
1. To make clarified butter, place the butter in a saucepan and melt over very low heat. We don’t want the butter to boil and burn so low heat is key. The goal is to separate the butter from all the milk solids.
2. Once all the butter is melted, you will see white milk solids coming to the top. Let the butter cool for 10-15 minutes, this will help settle the milk solids to the bottom of the pot.
3. Without pouring the milk solids, slowly pour the cooled down, melted butter into a mixing bowl. With a spoon, skim any leftover clarified butter from the top of the pot and transfer to the mixing bowl. You should now have clarified butter in your mixing bowl and all the white milk solids in the pot. You can discard the milk solids or keep them to add into eggs, pancakes, biscuits, etc.
4. Let the clarified butter solidify in the fridge for 10-15 minutes. We want the clarified butter to be pretty soft for kneading. If you forget the butter in the fridge for too long, take it out and bring it back to room temperature.
5. Once the butter is solid yet soft, take it out of the fridge. Add powdered sugar and vegetable oil into the mixing bowl. Mix using your hands or a mixer until the sugar is fully incorporated and the mixture has a paste-like texture.
6. Add in the flour, 1 cup at a time. Incorporate the flour completely before adding the next cup. Depending on how much clarified butter you have, you might need a little more or less flour. We are aiming for a dough that is soft and that does not stick to your fingers. It should hold shape without crumbling. If the dough gets too crumbly, add a tablespoon vegetable oil to soften.
7. I find this dough easier to shape after chilling in the fridge for 15 minutes. If you are in a rush, you can skip this step and continue with shaping.
8. Line a baking sheet with parchment. Preheat the oven to 340 F.
9. Working in batches, roll the dough into a 1 inch thick log. Using a sharp knife, cut 3 inches long cookies with angled edges as shown in the picture below.
10. To give cookies their S shape, hold from the top left and the bottom right corners and push the dough inwards as shown in the pictures below. (I prefer the S shape but these cookies can be shaped in any way you like.)
11. Place cookies 1 inch apart on the prepared baking sheet. Bake until the cookies turn white on the top, for 15 minutes.
12. Let cool completely before transferring to a plate. The dough needs to set for at least an hour before you can handle the cookies. Store in a tightly covered container at room temperature. These cookies are even more delicious the next day.