MY MOST VERSATILE COOKIE DOUGH

I have used this simple recipe in countless ways and it simply never disappoints me. Because it has no leavening agent, it holds its shape either as a cutout or as a stamped cookie. You can also use it for thumbprint cookies. You can paint it, you can stencil it. And of course, you can treat it as a regular sugar cookie and decorate it with Royal icing. I will give you the basic formula and a few variations, but they will all perform exactly the same way.

HAZELNUT COOKIE DOUGH
(from The Bewitching Kitchen)

226 g butter
150g total sugar (100 + 50 white and brown or reversed, see comments)
30g egg (must weigh)
1 tsp hazelnut emulsion (variations in comments)
¼ tsp vanilla extract
380g all purpose flour
½ tsp salt

Soften butter on low mixer setting. Add sugars and mix on low until butter is incorporated. Add egg, extracts, mix on low. Add flour and salt and mix until dough comes together.

Form disc, wrap in plastic and place in fridge 10 minutes.

Roll out, press stamps or cut. Refrigerate for 90 minutes or freeze for 15 minutes before baking at 350F until done, depends on size and thickness of your cookie.

ENJOY!

to print the recipe, click here

Comments: Let’s talk extracts. I really love the Hazelnut Bakery Emulsion from LorAnn (click here). It has a strong smell but don’t let that scare you, it bakes with a wonderful flavor. Variations: use Pistachio Bakery Emulsion, or Natural Orange, all from LorAnn. As to sugars, you can either use 100g white and 50g brown, or the opposite. Some brown sugar is important, if you want a slightly crispier cookie, go for higher amount of white sugar. The cookie will also be obviously lighter, so that might be more appropriate for some designs. Finally, it is very important to weight the egg. I know, if you don’t own a scale, it is a problem but if you add one full egg it will be too much. I rarely need to adjust anything in the dough if I follow this recipe to a T. Having covered the basics, let me show you a few ideas to put this baby to use.

.

.

I used 100g white sugar and 50g brown for this one. Roll the cookie, cut the shape, make little holes with a toothpick for added cuteness. Press your finger twice to form a little heart shape. Fill with jam (do not add too much). Bake. Decorate with Royal icing once cool. If you don’t want to use the decoration, just make a round shape and fill it with jam.

.

Super fun technique. You will brush a little cocoa powder on the raw cookie using a stencil, then bake. I have also used a cocoa paste made with softened butter, powdered sugar and flour, but managed to lose that recipe. Could not retrieve it, don’t remember where I saw it. Very sorry, but cocoa powder by itself works great (you can see my full blog post about it here).

.

For these cookies, I went with 100g brown sugar and 50g white. I wanted a darker shade to start with. After baking, I painted the design with luster powder, either gold or bronze. The cookie stamp is available here.

.

.

Higher proportion of white sugar for all of those. Notice how the impression stays nicely, no matter the technique you choose to work with the dough.

.

.

.

You can leave the cookie unpainted, or have some fun with colors. I do like luster powder for this type of decoration, it comes with a natural shine I adore. When I leave the cookies unpainted, I sometimes like to spray a little PME luster pearl, but that is totally optional.

.

.


Those were tiny little cookies, baked, cooled, and painted with different colors of luster powder + vodka. Also pretty cute if left unpainted. But you know I find it hard to resist the call of color…

.

I hope you will give this recipe a try, and love it as much as I do.

ONE YEAR AGO: White Chicken, a Cantonese Classic

TWO YEARS AGO: Baking with the Heart

THREE YEARS AGO: Roasted Cauliflower with Chickpeas and Quinoa

FOUR YEARS AGO: A Savory Phyllo Pie

FIVE YEARS AGO: Nut-Free Lady Grey Macarons

SIX YEARS AGO: Mini-Heart Cakes for your Valentine

SEVEN YEARS AGO: Blue Moon Milk

EIGHT YEARS AGO: Slow-Cooked Chicken Meatballs

NINE YEARS AGO: Zesty Flourless Chocolate Cake

TEN YEARS AGO: Maple Pumpkin Pecan Snacking Cake

ELEVEN YEARS AGOSilky Gingered Zucchini Soup

TWELVE YEARS AGO: Sweet Fifteen!

THIRTEEN YEARS AGO: Sesame and Flaxseed Sourdough

FOURTEEN YEARS AGO: Green Beans with Miso and Almonds

FIFTEEN YEARS AGO: Saturday Morning Scones

SIXTEEN YEARS AGO: White Bread

COOKIES FOR THE HOLIDAYS: SPRINGERLE

Springerle cookies have been around for more than 700 years, and just that thought brings me a smile. It fascinates me that after hundreds of years we still talk about them and so many bakers – particularly in Europe – preserve the tradition by baking batches and batches during the holiday season. The name translates from German as “little jumpers”. Some say that indicates the way they seem to jump in the oven when they bake. Others believe that in the beginning the images imprinted on the cookies showed men on horses, like little jumpers. We’ll probably never know for sure, but what we do know is that they are flavored with anise, leavened with a special ingredient (ammonium carbonate, aka Hartshorn), and the dough takes a large amount of eggs beaten for a long time. Back in the 1300’s, a baker not only had to make the cookies, but also carve the wooden molds they were shaped in. The reputation of a baker would rest not only on the cookies themselves, but in the complexity and beauty of the mold he had produced. Absolutely amazing. Disclaimer: I did not carve my own molds. Please don’t judge.

SPRINGERLE COOKIES
(scaled down from House on the Hill)

1/4 teaspoon baker’s ammonia (Hartshorn)
1 tablespoons milk
3 large eggs, room temperature
360g powdered sugar
57g (1/4 cup) unsalted butter, softened but not melted
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon of anise oil
454g sifted cake flour (I used Softasilk)
grated rind of orange

to paint the cookies (optional):
powder luster (mine are from Oh Sweet Art)
vodka or lemon extract

Make the cookies: Dissolve baker’s ammonia in milk and set aside (avoid the temptation to take a sniff, you will regret it). Beat eggs until very thick, this will take from 10 to 15 minutes. Slowly beat in the powdered sugar, then the softened butter. Add the the mixture of baker’s ammonia and milk, salt, anise oil and orange zest.

Gradually beat in as much flour as you can with the mixer, then stir in the remainder of the flour to make a stiff dough. Turn onto floured surface and knead in enough flour to make a good print without sticking. Refrigerate for one hour, but keep in mind the dough can be refrigerate the dough for up to 3 days.

On a floured surface, roll dough depending on the depth of the carving in the cookie press you are using. Shallow carvings will need to be thinner while deeper carvings will need to be thicker. Flour your cookie mold for each and every pressing. Press the mold firmly and straight down into the dough, then lift, cut with the cookie cutter of your choice, and place the formed cookie onto a flat surface to dry.

Do not cover the cookies while they dry. The goal of drying is to set the design. Let the cookies dry at least for 24 hours. It is better to leave them alone for a couple of days, so the design will be better retained during baking.

On baking day, heat the oven to 255F to 325F (depending on the size of your cookie and how white you like to have them), for 10 to 15 minutes. Let the cookies cool and paint, if you so desire.

ENJOY!

to print the recipe, click here

Comments: I cannot lie to you, Springerle baking can be tricky. I only do it in December, because it is so deeply associated with this time of the year. In fact, it is quickly becoming a personal holiday tradition for me. First thing to keep in mind, you need the special leavening agent. It has a crystal, grainy structure and gives the cookie its unique texture. If you bake them with regular baking powder, you lose that component. Second, be patient. These cookies cannot be baked on the same day you shape them because the pattern needs to set by drying, sometimes it can take 3 days, depending on your environment. I never had to wait more than 48 hours.

most of my molds are from www.springerle.com

If they are not dry, when they go into the oven, the pattern will be quickly lost as the cookie expands. If they are fully dry but the oven a little too hot, they will form cracks and might even explode, like you can see on my first composite photo above. That brings me to my third advice: always, always, ALWAYS bake a test cookie. I normally place three, one large, one medium, one small, and see how they behave. The temperature that works best for me (for all cookie sizes, in fact) is 275F. It might be different for your oven.

Painting them is the part I enjoy the most. It is a good idea to get very fine brushes so that you can highlight details. I think pastel tones, silver, white and gold are my favorites, particularly to decorate more classic designs.

But this year I pushed the boundaries a bit and used more dramatic colors in some of my cookies…

I also used more modern shapes, that would quite likely horrify bakers from old Swabia…

These were bought from Fun Food Tools (at etsy.com). They definitely take Springerle into a totally new direction… My apologies to the purists. Since they were already such a dramatic departure, I went crazy with the colors also…

As you know, the main flavor of these cookies is anise, which not everyone is fond of. For real anise lovers, you can go one step further and bake them over a layer of anise seeds. I like the flavor, but don’t care for the texture of the seeds at the bottom, so I always skip this step.

I hope you enjoyed this final post on Holiday Cookies. Springerle baking will definitely be part of my end of the year routine. As to the other 11 months, I will practice baking molded cookies using regular baking powder and different flavors. Stay tuned!

ONE YEAR AGO: Bread – Episode 2 of Great American Baking Show

TWO YEARS AGO: Apple and Sobacha Caramel Dome Cake

THREE YEARS AGO: Cocktail Spiced Nuts

FOUR YEARS AGO: How the Mighty Have Fallen

FIVE YEARS AGO: Festive Night at Central

SIX YEARS AGO: The Perfect Boiled Egg

SEVEN YEARS AGO: Light Rye Sourdough with Cumin and Orange

EIGHT YEARS AGO: Homemade Calziones

NINE YEARS AGO: Plum-Glazed Duck Breasts

TEN YEARS AGO: Holiday Double-Decker

ELEVEN YEARS AGO: New York Deli Rye