January is the perfect time to bake. It is so cold outside
that we crave comfort food. We at the Russian Artists Team love to share good
ideas so here is a great recipe of delicate shortbread cookies made using an embossed
rolling pin. You can buy a pin like this on Etsy or use your regular one if you
want your cookies plain.
The recipe and photos were provided by our team member,
Tetyana Otruta ( https://www.etsy.com/shop/otruta ).
Ingredients for basic recipe*:
200 gr unsalted butter, softened
150 gr powdered sugar
1 medium egg
390 gr all-purpose flour, plus more for rolling
* If you'd like to make your cookies chocolate flavored, add
30 gr. of cocoa but reduce the flour (the same amount 30 gr). Add an orange or
lemon zest from 1 fruit to make them citrus flavored.
How to make them:
Beat the butter with a sugar
until creamy. Add the egg and flavor, if using (orange zest or cocoa),
then add a flour. The dough will be soft so wrap it in a plastic
wrap and refrigerate until firm, about an hour. Roll out the dough with your
regular pin 5-6mm thick, then use your embossed one. Using a floured cookie
cutter, cut out the cookies and place them to a freezer for several minutes
before baking them.
Preheat the oven to 375'F. Transfer the cookies to parchment
paper lined baking sheets and bake for about 5 to 7 minutes.
Enjoy!
по моему это идеальное печенье
ReplyDeleteLooks yummy, thanks for sharing :)
ReplyDeleteJust got my rolling pin! Looks Yummy cannot wait to make them!
ReplyDeleteCan someone please convert these measurements into standard U.S. baking measurements?
ReplyDeleteCan someone please convert these measurements into standard U.S. baking measurements?
ReplyDeleteU.S.conversions
Delete200 g butter=7/8 c
150 g sugar=3/4 c
390 g flour= 3.1 c
Try Google search for gram to oz or gram to cup
DeleteThat’s not entirely accurate. What this recipe calls for is measurements in weight. You’ll need a scale either way to complete this recipe. The problem is like rocks and feathers, a cup of sugar doesn’t weigh the same as a cup of butter. Butter is actually heavier in mass than sugar. To make this relatable, take rocks (such as pea gravel) and feathers. even though there is a cup of both (meaning they take up the same amount of space) the pea gravel is going to weigh significantly more than the feathers. Thus while one pound of rocks may indeed take up your 1 cup measuring cup. The same pound of feathers may take over your entire kitchen. I bake for a living. In the industry we have something called “the book of yields” it tells us things like how many ounces are in a cup of sugar (if you’re curious there are 7.10 ounces in one cup of sugar) but if you’re not wanting to sit and do a bunch of math, just go buy a cheap digital kitchen scale. They are around 20.00.
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I tried this recipe. It did not work with the 3D rolling pin.
ReplyDeleteHi, looks lovely. How many, roughly does this make? Thank you
ReplyDeleteThanks for the U.S. conversions, SuziQ. The conversion you listed for sugar is for granulated sugar, not powdered sugar. If using powdered sugar in the recipe, you would use 1 1/2 cups. Below is the conversion source I use based on the ingredients in a recipe.
ReplyDeleteWeight Converter for Common Ingredients
Looks like 1/2 plus 1/3 c butter, 1/2 c sugar, 3 1/4 c flour..haven't tried a recipe with powdered sugar before so we will see tonight!!
ReplyDelete