Pistachio & Cranberry Shortbread

This is my version of a recipe that I translated from all-purpose flour to a gf 1-1 blend with a few other tweaks to make it even better.

This holiday shortbread cookie is pretty easy to make and with fresh orange zest in the dough it has a delightful flavor. Of course, I made it with butter, so it has the proper shortbread texture and flavor. No one will ever guess that they are gluten free. They will just keep eating them!

Pistachio and Cranberry Shortbread Cookies

INGREDIENTS:

2 sticks (1 cup) softened butter

2/3 cup sugar

Grated zest of a large orange; do that before you squeeze some fresh juice for these cookies. If small orange do zest of 2

1 Tbsp. fresh orange juice

1/2 tsp. vanilla extract

2 1/3 cup King Arthur 1-1 GF flour blend

1/4 tsp. salt if using unsalted butter; leave out if you went with salted butter

3/4 cup pistachios, roughly chopped after measuring

3/4 cup dried cranberries, roughly chopped after measuring

INSTRUCTIONS;

Put softened butter and sugar in stand mixer bowl, beat until creamy, about 2 minutes. Can use a portable mixer if that’s what you have. Add juice and extract, beat until blended in. Add flour, salt and zest on low speed, blend well. Fold in the nuts and cranberries on low or with a spatula. Form dough into 2 logs; about 2-2.5 inches in diameter. Wrap in plastic wrap and put in your freezer for 30 minutes. Heat oven to 350. Put parchment paper on 2 baking sheets. Slice dough in 1/4-inch diameter coins. Place an inch apart on the parchment papered sheets. Bake 12-15 minutes, I did 15 minutes until edges are golden brown. Let them cool on the baking sheet for 5-9 minutes and then carefully move to a cooling rack. Let cool completely before eating so they have the desired crunchy texture. Store in a cookie jar. Makes about 40 cookies. Enjoy!

Note: I only baked half; other log is tightly sealed in plastic to bake in a week.

Mexican Wedding Cookies – A Classic

These miniature snowball cookies were the foundation of the Christmas cookie baking season when I was a kid.  They were always made every year, sometimes a second batch had to be baked as we had eaten them all well before the big day!   Some people call them Russian Teacakes… For me it is not Christmas without these cookies so I was extremely pleased to find a great gf recipe. My sisters think they are better tasting than the old regular recipe!

They are easy to make with not too many ingredients.  Don’t make them too big or they become very fragile… stick with the size as given. Be very careful lifting them off the pan as they are delicate until fully cooled. The texture and subtle flavor of this GF version is actually superior to the wheat flour recipe of my childhood. When you bite into one it shatters into a delicious mouthful of sweet cookie. They are delightful with a cup of tea or coffee.  My family clamors for a few to take home!

You can use pecans, but I rarely do; walnuts are somewhat cheaper, and I sort of prefer their flavor for this cookie. If you like them really sweet sprinkle on extra powdered sugar, less of it makes them perfect for those who are not used to too much sweetness. This recipe is from Annalise Roberts’ fabulous Gluten-Free Baking Classics with some minor changes by me. I have not tried them with any but this flour blend. I bet they might work with a measure for measure flour mix; just leave out the xanthan gum in that case.

Storage: they keep well; I put mine in an empty butter cookie tin with wax paper between the 2 layers; no more than 2 layers or they tend to break up easily. Or a cookie jar but do be careful about too many stacked on top of each other.  No one will ever know they are GF, and you will get complements on their flavor and texture.  Enjoy: they are rather addictive cookies!

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Mexican Wedding Cookies

1 cup unsalted butter, room temperature

6 tbsp. powdered (confectioners) sugar

2 tsp. vanilla extract

2 cups King Arther Basic GF blend flour – aka brown rice mix (recipe below)

1 tsp xanthan gum

1 cup walnuts or pecans chopped fine

Confectioner’s sugar for sprinkling

Directions: beat butter and powdered sugar in large bowl of stand mixer until light and creamy.  Add vanilla, beat in.  Add flour and gum, mix in until well blended, stir in walnuts until distributed.  Chill dough for an hour, more than 2 hours; dough gets too stiff.

Heat oven to 350 degrees.  Form dough into 1-inch balls. Roll in powdered sugar if you like.  Place on cookie sheet lightly sprayed with Pam (not the baker’s version that has flour).  Place about 1 ½ inches apart.  Bake 13 to 15 minutes until lightly browned on top and bottom.  Cool on pan for 5 min and then sprinkle with lots of powdered sugar before placing on wire rack to cool. I like to sift it onto the cookies so the coating is even.  You could put a sheet of wax paper under the wire rack to catch the excess sugar.  Store well wrapped: in airtight container, in fridge for a week or freezer for up to 30 days.  You could store unbaked dough in fridge for a few days.

Brown Rice Flour Mix base mix  (same as King Arthur’s Basic gf blend)
2 c brown rice flour

2/3 c potato starch *not potato flour

1/3 c tapioca flour

Note: First posted December 2014 on my blog.  Minor revisions have been made since then.

Sugar Cut Out Cookies… My Best Ever!

I have to say that sugar cookies are difficult to make out of gf flour; they have to be sturdy enough when rolled out that you can handle them and get them to the baking sheet and still taste delicate and delicious. I had trouble finding a great recipe; not terrible but just not the best. A few years ago, I tried a totally different tack; I used my favorite Betty Croker cookie cookbook recipe that is normally made with all-purpose flour and just subbed in 1 for 1 GF flour; I used Bob’s Redmill. Exact same amount. They were a bit fragile in the cut-out process, but I was able to do it and the flavor and texture is superior in my opinion. Making a batch this afternoon with friends!

Notes: I added lemon extract to give a bit more flavor and I sprinkled them with colored sugar. Do suggest you sprinkle as you make and not get the baking sheet coated in colored sugar as it burns and can have a negative flavor impact as well as causing cookie edges to burn. Let them cool on the cookie sheet for about 3 minutes so they are a bit firmed up and be gentle in that moving process to the cooling rack.

I kinda got these too brown; there was a lot of stray colored sugar on the baking sheet and I think 400 degrees was just too hot; I tend to generally lower the oven 20-30 degrees to keep things from over baking.

Angie’s GF Sugar Cookies

Ingredients:

3/4 cup butter or other solid butter substitute at room temp but not squishy

1 cup granulated sugar

2 room temp eggs, large

1/4 tsp. vanilla extract

1/4-1/2 tsp. lemon extract (or orange or more vanilla)

2 1/2 cups 1 for 1 GF flour mixture (I used Bob’s Redmill)

1 tsp. baking powder

1 tsp. salt

Directions: Put butter and sugar in stand mixer bowl, Beat until very smooth and light. You might want to stop a couple of times to scrape the bowl sides to help it blend. Add eggs one at a time, beating until blended in. Add extracts. Mix the flour and dry ingredients in a small pour spout bowl. Add to dough mixture in bowl, at slowest speed. Blend until smooth. Chill 1-3 hours. Use 1/4 of the dough at a time to roll out on lightly floured bread board. Roll to 1/8-1/4 inch thick. Use more flour to help it to not stick to rolling pin. I actually used a thin flat metal pancake turner/spatula to shove under th dough edges to release the dough from the board as it kept sticking. Too much flour will make them tough so the pancake turner helped keep me from excessive flouring. Cut with your favorite cookie cutters. Use that same turner to move them to the baking sheet. I strongly urge that you decorate before placing on an ungreased cookie sheet. Our favorites are green and red decorating sugar for much of the cookies, a blue for stars, and some tiny colored decorating balls on the Christmas trees. We love Christmas pigs and fish as well as the traditional trees and stars. Don’t try any super fancy cutouts; this dough is not so good for fancy shapes. Narrow necks, complex curves etc are not do-able.

As you are cutting them out get the oven ready. Put oven shelves on two middle racks. Heat oven to 380 degrees (the 400 degrees of the original recipe seems too hot). Leave 1 to 1.5 inches between cookies. Bake 6-9 inches. I like to put all the small cutouts on one sheet and the bigger ones on its own baking sheet as the small ones will bake a bit faster. Watch them closely; the outer cookies bake faster and smaller ones faster too. Pull out when the edges are a light brown. let stand on sheet for 3-5 minutes. Gently move each cookie to a cooling rack using that flat metal spatula. Best consumed when they are fully cooled; warm they don’t have the correct texture.

I did only make a half recipe last year; with 6 tbsp. of butter. as I just didn’t have the audience to eat a whole batch of them. I have half the dough wrapped tightly and stored in the fridge for making fresh next week. I save all the scraps and roll them out as the last roll out of dough. More than 2 roll outs will make that dough tough and dry, so some scraps end up in the trash as they get too reworked. Enjoy these cookies; they are definitely worth the effort and are a blast from my Christmases before my diagnosis of celiac disease.