Easy Lemon Shortbread Recipe - thinlyspread.co.uk (2024)

by Chris Mosler

Homemade buttery lemon shortbread is a billion times better than the dry offerings in tartan tins at Christmas. This version with its citrus zing is perfect for afternoon tea on this beautiful spring day or for a summerypicnicon a blanket under the apple tree.

Easy Lemon Shortbread Recipe - thinlyspread.co.uk (1)

I think I need a gingham table cloth, a little table and chairs, maybe a big straw hat and a floaty dress – oh and possibly a handsome gentleman to serve me my tea and shortbread this afternoon, don’t you?

How To Make Lemon Shortbread

Shortbread is one of the easiest biscuits to bake. Its origins lie with Medieval biscuit bread which was similar to a sweetened rusk.

Appetising as that sounds, I am quite glad that shortbread evolved a little bit through the centuries!

Mary Queen of Scots is said to have favoured a thin, buttery shortbread flavoured with caraway seeds which she nibbled on happily in the 16th century.

The most basic shortbread recipe uses only flour, butter and sugar but, for this lemony version, I have replaced a little of the plain flour with cornflour. Cornflour makes this lemon shortbread a little bit crisper, perfect for dunking in a cup of tea!

I’ve also used icing sugar in this recipe instead of the caster sugar I use in my basic recipe. Both give an excellent result with icing sugar being marginally easier to mix in with the butter.

It’s really important here that you allow time for your biscuit dough to rest and recover in the fridge before slicing, this helps prevent any spreading during baking.

Easy Lemon Shortbread Recipe - thinlyspread.co.uk (2)

Decorating Lemon Shortbread

I decorated my lemon shortbread with a sprinkle of gloriously delicious sugar scented with yellow mirabelle plums – my daughter brought it back for me from a school trip to France, she knows me very well!

I haven’t managed to track it down here in the UK buta scattering ofgolden caster sugar on top of your lemon shortbread biscuits is a good substitute.

You could also make some glacé icing by mixing a little lemon juice with some icing sugar to form a paste and drizzling it over cooled shortbread biscuits.

Shortbread Flavours

Ring the changes by:

  • Replacing the lemon zest with orange or lime.
  • Adding a teaspoonful of rosewater to the mixture and topping the finished biscuits with rose petals. Perfect for you Valentine!
  • Mixing in a teaspoonful of chopped lavender for easy lavender shortbread

Oh the afternoon tea possibilities!

More Easy Biscuit Recipes

If you’re feeling very biscuity after all that have a look at my:

  • Vegan Gingerbread Men
  • Easy Vegan Shortbread (my Granny’s super simple three ingredient recipe)
  • Simple Fork Biscuits
  • Cornish Fairings – delicious ginger biscuits.
  • Lavender Biscuits

If you make my recipe I’d love to hear how it turns out for you. Please leave a comment and a star rating below and share your pictures with me on social media. Tag me @thinlyspread and include the hashtag #thinlyspread so I can see them!

Follow me on Pinterest, Facebook,Twitter and Instagram where I share recipe ideas, links to vegan events and articles and where I natter on about my favourite subject – vegan food

Easy Lemon Shortbread Recipe - thinlyspread.co.uk (3)

Lemon Shortbread for Afternoon Tea

Print Pin Rate

Course: Baked Goods, Biscuits and Cookies, Treats

Cuisine: Scottish

Prep Time: 45 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 15 minutes minutes

Total Time: 1 hour hour

Servings: 10

Calories: 73kcal

Author: Chris Mosler | Thinly Spread

Equipment

  • Lightly greased baking tray

  • Baking parchment

Ingredients

  • 125 g vegan butter or margarine chopped
  • 1 lemon Just the finely grated zest
  • 25 g sifted icing sugar
  • 100 g plain flour
  • 50 g cornflour
  • Golden caster sugar or yellow sugar crystals to decorate

UK Measurements - US Measurements

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 180°C/360°F

  • Beat chopped butter and icing sugar together until golden and well combined

  • Add the finely grated lemon zest and mix to combine

  • Sift the flours together and stir into the butter mixture until you have a soft dough

  • Roll into a log shape, wrap in baking parchment and refrigerate for half an hour

  • Slice 1cm thick biscuit shapes off the log, lay on a lightly greased baking tray and bake for about 15 minutes until lightly browned

  • Cool on the tray for 5 minutes then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely (or scoff while warm)

  • Decorate with a sprinkle of sugar and serve with your favourite tea

Notes

Nutritional information is only an approximate guideline. Calculations will vary according to the ingredients you use and your cooking methods.

Nutrition

Calories: 73kcal | Carbohydrates: 15g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 1g | Saturated Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 1mg | Sodium: 14mg | Potassium: 28mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 3g | Vitamin A: 21IU | Calcium: 16mg | Iron: 1mg

Like this recipe?Follow @ThinlySpread or tag #thinlyspread!

  1. Chiswick Mum on February 24, 2016 at 2:24 pm

    Wow that looks amazing… I’m going to attempt to try that! I’d like to try tonight but not sure I can find cornflour that quickly after work. You obviously have a well stocked cupboard!

    Reply

    • Chris Mosler on February 24, 2016 at 2:59 pm

      I have a ridiculously well stocked cupboard – cornflour is a must for after school gloop!

      Reply

  2. Andrew West on February 25, 2016 at 12:15 pm

    Made these the other day. Gorgeous! “Unfortunately” I didn’t realise how much they would spread in the oven, made them too thin, several broke, so had to eat all the damaged ones immediately! 🙂

    Reply

    • Chris Mosler on February 26, 2016 at 9:55 am

      I’m so glad you enjoyed them! As for the spreading – it may be that your oven is a bot hotter than mine, try reducing them temp a bit and increasing the cook time for a couple of minutes to see if that makes a difference. This article about spreading biscuits may help! (I like that they did an experiemnt to see what difference a lower temperature made, I’m thinking I might do the same just for research purposes of course, nothing to do with having to eat all those cookies! 😉

      Reply

  3. Choclette on February 27, 2016 at 7:08 pm

    Oh yes to floaty dresses and gingham table cloths AND sunshine! Your lemon shortbread looks superb and I’m now rather despartelty wanting to tuck into one – lemon biscuits are one of the best.

    BTW have stumbled and yummed, but you don’t have a yum button to make it easy for those that don’t have their own.

    Reply

    • Chris Mosler on February 29, 2016 at 10:01 am

      It’s gorgeously sunny here today but I still need my thermals and thick sweaters yet! Thanks for the tip re Yummly, will investigate!

      Reply

  4. helloitsgemma on April 25, 2016 at 7:34 pm

    ah, this all sounds lovely. I might not have time for the gingham table cloth, I’d haven’t eaten these biscuits before the table cloth was smooth.

    That sugar sounds so divine!

    Reply

    • Chris Mosler on April 26, 2016 at 9:50 am

      Sugar was amazing, such a good gift. She’s off to Iceland in June, I have high hopes. I think the Afternoon Tea ritual calls for gingham every time, I love the ceremony of it, the slow pace, the anticipation of deliciousness to come (but, yes, I ate a biscuit or two before they got to the gingham)

      Reply

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Easy Lemon Shortbread Recipe - thinlyspread.co.uk (2024)

FAQs

What are common mistakes when making shortbread? ›

The most common mistakes when making shortbread are over-working the dough, and incorporating too much flour. The less you work the dough, the more crumbly and melt-in-your-mouth your shortbread cookies will be.

What is the secret to making good shortbread? ›

Tips To Make the Best Shortbread Cookies
  • Choose High Quality Butter. No matter what brand of butter you buy, if it's real butter, you can rest assured that it's the best. ...
  • Keep Ingredients Simple. ...
  • Add Flavor. ...
  • Don't Overwork. ...
  • Shape Dough. ...
  • Chill Before Baking. ...
  • Bake Until Golden. ...
  • Add Finishing Touches.

Why did my shortbread turn out chewy? ›

Check doneness by looking for an even, light brown colour across the top of the biscuits, with slight darkening at the edges. Begin checking at the tail end of the cooking time. Undercooked shortbread will be doughy and chewy. Slightly overcooked and it will become chalky, brittle and hard.

What makes shortbread extra short? ›

Shortbread is so named because of its crumbly texture (from an old meaning of the word "short", as opposed to "long", or stretchy). The cause of this texture is its high fat content, provided by the butter. The short or crumbly texture is a result of the fat inhibiting the formation of long protein (gluten) strands.

What is the difference between Scottish shortbread and regular shortbread? ›

Traditional Scottish shortbread is a simple recipe made with sugar, butter, flour, and salt. Other shortbread styles will include leavening agents like baking powder and baking soda, which makes them crisp instead of crumbly like traditional Scottish shortbread.

What's the difference between Irish shortbread and Scottish shortbread? ›

Irish Shortbread Is Distinct From Scottish Shortbread

Irish shortbread not only sometimes changes up the butter-to-sugar ratio (possibly going with 2/3 a cup of sugar to 1 cup of butter), but also adds cornstarch in place of some of the flour present in the traditional recipe.

Why do you put an egg in shortbread? ›

This unexpected addition will make buttery confections like shortbreads and shortcakes even more tender and flaky. “Biscuits should be crumbly, buttery and sweet,” reads a headnote for a cinnamon sugar-spiced shortbread recipe in the Ritz London Cookbook.

Should you chill shortbread dough before rolling? ›

Roll out the shortbread dough.

On a lightly floured surface, roll it out to a ½ cm (¼ inch) thick. Note: if the dough is too soft at this point then wrap it in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 10-15 minutes or longer until it firms up slightly and makes it easier to roll out.

Should butter be cold for shortbread? ›

If it's too warm, the butter and sugar cannot properly cream and the cookies will taste dense. Many shortbread recipes call for cold butter worked into the dry ingredients and that gives you a wonderfully flaky cookie but if not mixed properly, the results can be inconsistent.

Why do you put holes in shortbread? ›

The word "bread" comes from "biscuit bread" which was made from leftover bread dough that was sweetened and dried out in the oven to make biscuits. Why do you poke holes in shortbread? The holes allow the moisture to escape during baking and more even heat distribution. This helps dry out and crisp up the cookies.

What happens if you put too much butter in shortbread? ›

Greasy mess: Extra butter means more fat, making the dough greasy and difficult to handle. Spreading like crazy: Cookies lose their shape, spreading thin and flat instead of staying nice and round. Uneven baking: The excess fat can burn easily on the edges while leaving the center undercooked.

Why does my shortbread have a bitter aftertaste? ›

However, most often it isn't old butter that's the culprit when it comes to bitter shortbread, but rather duration and temperature. Bake Club claims that over-baking, or even baking shortbread on too high a heat, can cause the butter to burn, leading to a sour or pungent aftertaste in the cookies.

Why is it called Millionaire shortbread? ›

The name "millionaire's shortbread" appears to have originated in Scotland. The "millionaire" prefix to millionaire's shortbread or millionaires slice implies a level of decadence and wealth to the sweet treat, that it is an upgrade from regular shortbread.

Why is shortbread called petticoat tails? ›

These dainty shortbreads gain their distinctive shape and name by resembling the pieces of fabric used to create the elaborate petticoats of the 12th century – including that of Mary Queen of Scots.

What is the tradition of shortbread in Scotland? ›

Shortbread was an expensive luxury and for ordinary people, shortbread was a special treat reserved just for special occasions such as weddings, Christmas and New Year. In Shetland it was traditional to break a decorated shortbread cake over the head of a new bride on the threshold of her new home.

Should the butter be cold when making shortbread? ›

If it's too warm, the butter and sugar cannot properly cream and the cookies will taste dense. Many shortbread recipes call for cold butter worked into the dry ingredients and that gives you a wonderfully flaky cookie but if not mixed properly, the results can be inconsistent.

What happens if you over mix shortbread? ›

It's important to avoid over-mixing shortbread dough, which will develop gluten and make the finished product tough, not tender. To make sure that the flour mixes completely with little effort, sift the flour first to get out all of the lumps.

What happens if you add too much butter to shortbread cookies? ›

Butter is an emulsifier and it makes cookies tender. It also adds in the crispy-around-the-edges element. Adding too much butter can cause the cookies to be flat and greasy. Adding too little butter can cause the cookies to be tough and crumbly.

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