Refreshing Orange Icebox Cookies
- 170 grams Cake flour
- 70 grams Raw cane sugar (or castor sugar)
- 120 grams Unsalted butter (salted butter is also OK)
- 1 Egg yolk
- 1 Food colouring (red)
- 1 Food colouring (yellow)
- 20 grams Citrus peel (finely shredded)
- Begin withCute Strawberry Icebox Cookies Follow the recipe until you reach Step 9.
- Prepare the orange peel and the food colouring.
- This time I followed "yukijirushi"'s Carefree Lemon Peel recipe,, and used amanatsu peel.
- Feel free to use storebought peels if you prefer not to make your own.
- You should have about 370 g of dough.
- Divide this into 100 g and 270 g portions.
- Take the 270 g portion, and fold in the food colouring.
- To get the best colour, use the tip of a toothpick as a scoop, and add 2 scoops of red and 4 of yellow food colour to the dough.
- Once you have gotten a nice colour, you can add the peel.
- Your two balls of dough should look like this.
- Your orange coloured dough should now weigh 290 g. Divide this into a 190 g portion for the inside of the orange, and 100 g portion for the peel.
- Roll the 190 g portion into a log shape.
- Place the peel portion between two sheets of parchment paper, and roll te dough out until it is 1.5 mm thick.
- you want to make it the same width as the log you rolled in Step 8.
- The peel will be this portion in the finished cookie~
- Roll the white dough out to 1-1.5 mm.
- This will form the pith of your cookies.
- Put your shaped dough pieces in the freezer.
- When the orange log has chilled for 20 minutes, transfer it into the refrigerator for at least 10 minutes.
- The orange peel and pith sheets only need to chill for 5 minutes.
- After this, transfer them to the refrigerator.
- Cut the chilled log in half lengthwise.
- Do your best to make sure the cut portions are equal, as this will make the prettiest cookie.
- Cut each piece in half.
- Cut each piece in half again.
- You should now have 8 wedges.
- Remove the pith dough from the refrigerator.
- Place one wedge on the pith to measure the proper width, and use a knife to cut a strip of pith.
- Here's one piece that's finished!
- The center of the cookie will be wedges stuck together with a sheet of pith like this.
- You're halfway there!
- The second half should be made using the same method.
- Your 2 halves are done.
- Use a thin strip of pith dough to fill in the gap in the center.
- Gently pres the two halves together to create the center of the cookie.
- Adjust the shape and roundness by rolling the log on the countertop.
- Roll the remaining pith around the outside of the log.
- By this point the dough will have softened.
- so put it in the freezer to chill for a moment.
- Remove the peel section of the dough, it will be pretty hard, so leave it on the countertop to warm up a little bit.
- It is soft enough when you can bend it like in the photo without causing cracks to form.
- Remove the log from the freezer, and wrap thee orange peel around it.
- Press the parchment paper around the cookie, and roll it into shape.
- Put the finished log into the freezer for 20 minutes, transfer it into the refrigerator, and let it chill for an additional 10 minutes.
- Cut the cookies by slicing the log into 4-5 mm slices.
- Line the cookies on a baking sheet and cook at 180C for 17 minutes.
- The cookies will expand when baking, so be sure to leave plenty of space between them.
- When the cookies have been baking for 7 minutes, cover them with aluminum foil.
- The aluminum foil will prevent the cookies from browning, so you can enjoy their lovely colour.
- Be sure to use aluminum foil!
- !
- You may need to adjust the baking time to suit your oven.
- Check the cookies about 7 minutes after covering with aluminum foil to see how much time they might need.
- These are the finished cookies.
- Transfer them to a cooling rack.
- They will become crispy when cooled.
- For the iced version, you only have to prepare the orange-coloured dough.
- After letting it chill, cut the log into 4-5 mm slices.
- Bake these following the directions above.
- When the cookies have cooled, ice them to make an orange section (icing not included in ingredients).
- The icing will harden when set.
- This method is fast and easy.
- You can make these cookies as fancy as you want depending on how much time you have.
flour, cane sugar, butter, egg yolk, colouring, colouring, peel
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/147343-refreshing-orange-icebox-cookies (may not work)