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I love the usual white shortbread, but my affection doesn't stop there. Have you ever tried brown sugar shortbread? Some recipes refer to it as butterscotch, but by either name that rich caramel taste is mellow and delectable. I suppose because of the added moisture inherent in brown sugar, the cookies come out less crunchy than you might expect. In fact, the batch I made yesterday has a nice, tender, chewy aspect and the flavor obviously deepened overnight. Yum.
The recipe below yields three 9" tart pans worth of shortbread; you can always freeze any cookies you don't want lying around to tempt you. That's yet another good thing about shortbread--it stores like a champ. Go ahead, give it a whirl!
BROWN SUGAR SHORTBREAD
Preheat oven to 300 degrees. Have ready three 9" tart pans (or you can use cake pans--this dough won't stick to them, so no need to grease, etc.)
1 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 cup vegetable shortening
1/2 granulated sugar
1 cup packed light brown sugar (or dark, if you're really into brown sugar)
4 1/2 cups AP flour, bleached
1 tsp. salt
In a large mixer bowl, beat the butter, shortening, and both sugars thoroughly (a couple of minutes).
In a small separate bowl, combine the flour and salt, then stir it into the butter and sugar mixture. Combine completely but use care not to overwork the dough (it will make the cookies rather tough if you do).
Divide the dough into three portions. Without compacting the dough too much, gently press each portion into one of your tart pans, urging dough into the scalloped sides so you'll have a nice clean edge.
With a thin sharp knife, carefully divide the dough into portions. Try not to make the cookies too large, as they are pretty rich. Using a fork, carefully pierce the dough here and there, down to the bottom of the pan; this helps the dough retain its nice shape by preventing it from puffing too much in the oven. Sprinkle a little granulated sugar evenly over the top, perhaps just a teaspoon or two for each tart pan.
Note as of August '09: When I originally posted this recipe, I accidentally listed the salt quantity needed as "2 tsp. salt" A reader just brought that mistake to my attention. I've since fixed the recipe to read "1 tsp. salt" My sincere apologies to anyone who made this recipe and wound up with inedible shortbread!
5 comments:
These look great! I'm going to try them this weekend.
These look great and so pretty. I'll have to remember to use my tarte pan next time. Have you tried it with chilled browned butter rather than the brown sugar? So good!
I just made these, and they're waaaaaaaay too salty.
Stephanie--Thanks for letting me know that! Two teaspoons does sound like way too much! (Arrrgghhh!) I'm going to see what my original recipe said. I'm so sorry yours turned out that way! The last batch I made was great. I really think that must be a typo. Again, my apologies!
Jane
Don't worry about it! They were good besides that. I ate a bunch before I realized anyways. :D
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