Recipe: Coriander Shortbread

| 9 Comments

Or- Belgian wheat beer inspired shortbread?

Seeds on the stem

So this gardening thing, it's an ongoing experiment. My little herb garden I planted is thriving, the Cilantro being the first to take off. I had a pretty green fountain of Coriander leaves and then one day it had suddenly bolted (flowering and gone to seed) and all the leaves were gone. At first I was disappointed I didn't harvest more not realizing it did this so quickly but then realized I now had my own coriander seeds!

Freshly picked

I harvested the seeds and thought about what I could make with them. We use the seeds and ground coriander frequently in Indian cooking but I really wanted something simple that would let my little trove of spice shine. And I wanted it to be a baked good, because I have a compulsion.

Shortbread immediately came to mind, and I've often seen it made with different herb/spice variations. Coriander seeds have a nutty aroma with citrus notes of the lemony/orange persuasion. It is often used in Belgian wheat beer along with orange (Blue Moon being a recent favorite lent additional inspiration). I dry roasted the seeds to bring out their flavor further and ground them in my mortar and pestle - woh do they pack a much more concentrated aroma punch than store bought!

crumbly goodness...

Coriander Shortbread

1/4 cup powdered sugar
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1 1/4 cups cold unsalted butter
1/4 teaspoon orange extract/zest (optional)
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons ground coriander (slightly less if using freshly ground)
1/2 teaspoon salt

Preheat oven to 275°F.

This can be made using a food processor or mixer.

For the food processor:
Process the sugars for a minute until sugars are very fine.
Add the butter, cut into 1 inch cubes and pulse until all sugar is combined. Add extract/zest if using.
In a separate bowl combine flour, coriander and salt.
Add flour mixture to butter mixture and pulse until crumbly and combined
Turn out dough and knead slightly to bring mixture together.

For an electric mixer or by hand:
Using softened butter, beat until smooth. Add sugars and beat until creamed together and light and fluffy.
Add flour in two parts mixing until holds together.

For both methods:
Divide the dough into 2 equal parts. Press each half into an ungreased 8-inch round cake or tart pan.
Use the tines of a fork to press 3/4-inch lines radiating like rays of sun all around the perimeter of the dough. Prick the rest of the dough all over with the tines of the fork.
Bake for 60-70 minutes or until pale golden (do not brown). For even baking, rotate the pans from top to bottom and front to back halfway through the baking period.
Cool in the pans, on a wire rack, for 10 minutes.
Invert the shortbread onto flat cookie sheet and slide it onto a cutting board. While still warm, use a long sharp knife to cut each 8-inch round of shortbread into 8 pie-shaped wedges.
Transfer the wedges to wire racks to cool completely.

Have a good 4th of July!

9 Comments

Ooo, I can't wait to try that! I love shortbread and tea, and I have cilantro in my garden that should be bolting any day now too!

Hee hee, it's all over my yard now, and when my husband mows the grass, the entire neighborhood smells like a Mexican restaurant .. .

I shall try that one as well. Maybe I can even trick my little one in trying a bite, he's amazingly brave with foods and we "learn about spices" right now...

Fascinating! We have a large garden with veggies and flowers but I've never had much luck with herbs. Definitely something to aspire to.

Have a safe and happy holiday weekend!

I am bookmarking this baby! I can just imagine the heavenly aroma.

I love herbs that are multi function!!!!! shortbread is one of my favorites - this looks amazing! I may just have to let some of my cilantro bolt too!

thank you so very much for posting this. those cookies look beautiful and you taught me a thing or two about coriander.

i love coriander and have never thought of putting it in shortbread! thanks for sharing the recipe!~

hey man come on this is good stuff

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This page contains a single entry by pieknits published on July 4, 2008 10:22 AM.

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