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Whipped Shortbread Cookies – A Christmas Essential!

Published on December 16, 2013 • Last updated November 17, 2024 by Elizabeth
Jump to Recipe Print Recipe

Get ready for the holiday season with whipped shortbread cookies. Learn how to make these delicious treats from scratch. These delicious, melt-in-the-mouth whipped shortbread cookies are topped with little dollops of frosting and a tiny glace cherry. They’re super easy to make, too.

Prep Time: 10 minutes

Cooking Time: 12 minutes

Difficulty: Easy

whipped-shortbread-2
Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Where did shortbread originate?
  • What is in Scottish shortbread?
  • Canadian nostalgia
  • Whipped Shortbread Cookies
  • Other Christmas recipes you might like

One of my favourite things about this time of year, besides the twinkling Christmas lights illuminating the long, dark nights, is all the festive baking: Christmas cakes, mincemeat tarts, the smell of wafting cinnamon, ginger, and cloves… and shortbread cookies!

Where did shortbread originate?

Shortbread, a popular Christmas and Hogmanay treat, is considered to have originated in Scotland. It was widely made as far back as the 12th century. However, the earliest written recipe dates back to 1736 and Mrs McLintoch’s Receipts for Cookery and Pastry-work. This cookery book was, incidentally, Scotland’s first published recipe book!

Here’s an 18th-century recipe credited to Mrs Frazer and her recipe book The Practice of Cookery: Pastry, Confectionary, Pickling, Preserving & C.

Take a peck of flour…beat and sift a pound of sugar; take orange-peel, citron, and blanched almonds, of each half a pound, cut in pretty long thin pieces: mix these well in the flour; then make a hole in the middle of the flour, put in three table-spoons of good yeast; then work it up, but not too much…roll out; prickle them on top, pinch them neat round the edges, and strew sugar, carraways, peel, and citron, on the top. Fire it…in a moderate oven.

Mrs Frazer

It is thought that Scottish shortbread was derived from a twice-baked medieval yeasted biscuit bread flavoured with spices and dusted with sugar. Mary Queen of Scots refined the recipe, possibly using French food inspiration to create the triangular petticoat tail shortbread shapes we now love.

What is in Scottish shortbread?

Traditional Scottish shortbread contains just three ingredients: butter, flour, and sugar, in a ratio of two parts butter, one part sugar, and three parts plain flour. This mixture is either formed into a large circle, which is baked, then cut into triangular shapes, into individual round biscuits, or into a large 2 cm thick slab, which is then cut into shortbread fingers. The biscuits are usually marked with the tines of a fork before baking.

Canadian nostalgia

The recipe I’ve shared here is not a traditional Scottish shortbread recipe. Rather, it originates from my Canadian childhood, where the older ladies in the village made it to share with friends and family at church socials and get-togethers.

It was my favourite Christmas cookie, the creamy, smooth, buttery biscuit topped with a tiny dollop of sweet frosting and a decorative piece of glace cherry—in both green and red for variety.

Christmas, for me, starts when a batch of these cookies has been made.

whipped-shortbread

Recipe Difficulty Levels

Easy

Requires basic cooking skills and ingredients you most likely already have in your kitchen.

Moderate

Requires more experience, preparation and/or cooking time. You may have to source special ingredients.

Challenging

Recipes requiring more advanced skills and experience and maybe some special equipment.

Whipped Shortbread Cookies

Get ready for the holiday season with whipped shortbread cookies. Learn how to make these delicious treats from scratch.
Enjoyed the recipe? Leave a rating!
Print Rate
Course: Snack
Cuisine: American
Prep Time: 10 minutes minutes
Cook Time: 12 minutes minutes
Servings: 30 cookies
Calories: 126kcal
Author: Elizabeth

Ingredients

  • 225 grams butter
  • 90 grams icing sugar
  • 80 grams cornflour
  • ½ tsp vanilla extract
  • 250 grams plain flour

To decorate

  • 150 grams icing sugar
  • 4-5 tsp cold water
  • glace cherries cut into 8ths

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Equipment

1 food processor
1 baking tray
1 small bowl
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Instructions 

  • Preheat your oven to 160 C.
  • Place 225 grams butter, 90 grams icing sugar, 80 grams cornflour, ½ tsp vanilla extract and 250 grams plain flour into the bowl of a food processor and blend until they come together to form a soft dough.
  • Roll the dough into teapsoonful size balls and place on a lined baking tray.
  • Bake in the centre of your preheated oven for 10-12 minutes, until slightly golden around the edges.
  • Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.
  • To decorate, mix 150 grams icing sugar with 4-5 tsp cold water to make a slightly runny frosting. Place a small dollop of the frosting on the top of each whipped shortbread and decorate with glace cherries.

Nutrition

Calories: 126kcal | Carbohydrates: 17g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 6g | Saturated Fat: 4g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Trans Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 16mg | Sodium: 49mg | Potassium: 11mg | Fiber: 0.2g | Sugar: 8g | Vitamin A: 187IU | Calcium: 3mg | Iron: 0.4mg

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Category: Christmas Recipes, Cookies, Recipe

About Elizabeth

Solivagant. Foodie. Calls Shetland home.

Previous Post:Spelt and Orange Date Squares & ProWare Review
Next Post:Food Poverty in Shetland

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Farhana

    November 10, 2014 at 11:29 pm

    Lovely little treats!

    Reply
  2. Johanna GGG

    December 21, 2013 at 12:41 pm

    I love your photos – they look very festive cookies – and I love your story about your christmases in Canada – shortbread has always seemed like Christmas to me but I’ve never seen it presented this way. Hope you have a very happy christmas

    Reply
    • Elizabeth S

      December 21, 2013 at 12:44 pm

      Thank you Johanna 🙂 Merry Christmas to you too, and all the best for 2014! xx

      Reply
  3. Stuart Vettese

    December 21, 2013 at 1:38 pm

    So cute Elizabeth and festive too. Thanks for entering Treat Petite. Happy Holidays 🙂

    Reply

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Cooking up a storm at the edge of the world

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Welcome to Elizabeth’s Kitchen Diary, Scotland’s most northerly award-winning food blog.

I’m based in the wild and remote Shetland Islands, where I’ve been sharing my adventure-fuelling recipes since 2011.

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