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Ingredients
1 cup/225 grams unsalted butter, softened
½ cup to ⅔ cup/100 to 132 grams granulated sugar
¾ teaspoon fine sea or table salt
2 cups/250 grams all-purpose flour
¼ cup/36 grams white rice flour or cornstarch (or use more all-purpose flour)
Demerara sugar, as needed
Preparation
- Step 1
Using a stand mixer fitted with a paddle or electric beaters, cream the butter, sugar and salt until smooth, 1 to 3 minutes (colder butter will take longer). Do not overbeat; you want the ingredients blended without incorporating a lot of air into the mixture. You can also use a wooden spoon and elbow grease to do this.
- Step 2
Add the flours and beat until the dough just comes together in large clumps, 30 seconds to 1 minute more.
- Step 3
Form the dough into 2 fat logs about 1½-inches in diameter, and wrap in parchment or plastic wrap. Chill until firm, at least 1 hour and up to 3 days.
- Step 4
Heat the oven to 325 degrees and line 2 cookie sheets with parchment paper.
- Step 5
Put a couple of tablespoons of Demerara sugar into a small rimmed pan, unwrap the dough, and roll the logs in the sugar, adding more sugar as needed so they are well coated. Slice logs about ⅜-inch thick and arrange on parchment-lined cookie sheets. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes until golden brown. Transfer to a wire rack to cool.
- Step 6
The cookies will keep in an airtight container at room temperature for at least a week.
Private Notes
Comments
Substitute dutch processed cocoa powder for the rice flour/cornstarch and you have unbelievably good chocolate shortbread.
Feel free to riff on it with lemon zest, even a touch of lemon extract, pistachios... My dream is to devote several weeks to making many different variations of shortbread, just to see which ones are best. And then doing it again in case I'm wrong the first time...
I've been making shortbread for over 50 years, using the recipe in the marvelous British Bero cookbook, and I've been getting compliments for just as long. Three ingredients - sugar, salted butter, and flour, in the 1:2:3 ratio by weight. Zap them all together in a food processor until they are well combined, then form the dough however you wish.
Would brown rice flour work well, or does it have an entirely different flavor profile?
I have never written a comment before but this shortbread is frighteningly addictive. So good it is nearly impossible to stop eating them. Make it!
I baked and took them to a Mother’s Day, family gathering last weekend. They were inhaled by all! I received so many compliments especially from my partner’s mom! I just completed another batch.

