Almond-Anise Butter Cookies!

I feel as though I start every post with superlatives, favorite this and best that, and while I’ve tried to come up with a different way to introduce these…I cannot! These almond-anise cookies are festive, packed with flavor, and fun to make and to eat. It’s a definite favorite cookie of mine, and also the one that’s received the most praise from cookie recipients this year.

As you can tell, these are a spin on Mexican wedding cookies / Russian tea cakes. Instead of pecans or walnuts, I use almonds and add ground anise seeds. The flavors work wonderfully with the structure of this cookie, and I don’t know if I’ll ever make it the traditional ways again!

I typically refrigerate or freeze any and all cookie dough that I make, and then scoop/bake off however much I need at a given time. Since the butter proportion in this dough is high, however, I recommend making and baking right away, or portioning/shaping the cookies before refrigerating/freezing so you don’t wind up chipping away at a cold block of dough when you’re ready to bake!

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Almond-Anise Butter Cookies

yields about 3 dozen

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 c (230 g) all-purpose flour

  • 1/2 t kosher salt

  • 1 t anise seeds, finely ground

  • 1 1/4 c (140 g) raw / blanched almonds, toasted & cooled

  • 1/4 c + 1 T (56 g) granulated sugar

  • 3/4 c (1 1/2 sticks; 171 g) unsalted butter, room temp

  • 1 t vanilla

  • 2 c (230 g) powdered sugar, for coating

Directions

  1. Whisk together the flour, salt, and ground anise seeds in a medium bowl and set aside.

  2. Process the almonds and 1 T sugar in a food processor until the almonds are finely chopped. (careful not to turn it into butter, though!) Set aside.

  3. With the paddle attachment, cream the remaining 1/4 c sugar, butter, and vanilla in the bowl of an electric mixer until light and fluffy, scraping down sides of bowl as needed.

  4. Add the flour mixture into the butter mixture, mixing slowly until the dough has almost come together. Add the almonds and gradually increase the speed until the mixture is evenly combined. Do not over-mix—remove bowl from mixer and target any spots that need incorporating by hand if need be!

  5. The high butter content renders this dough best to work with at room temp, so roll and bake the cookies right away or roll them to store in the refrigerator or freezer to bake off later.

  6. If baking right away—heat oven to 325 F, and line baking sheets with parchment paper. Roll the dough into 1” balls and place about an inch apart on the prepared baking sheets. Flatten them slightly with your palm. Bake the cookies for about 22-27 minutes (about 30-34 if baking from refrigerator, 35 if baking from frozen), until the bottoms are golden, and the tops are firm when pressed. You want these to be totally baked through/dried out—they need to be light and crisp! Take measures to ensure even baking—rotate the pan mid-bake, and if you’re baking multiple sheets at a time, switch them between the racks. While cookies are baking, place powdered sugar in a medium/small bowl.

  7. Once cookies out of the oven, transfer to a cooling rack. As soon as you can (I do this pretty much right away), toss each cookie in the powdered sugar to coat completely, and place back on cooling rack. Let cool & enjoy!!

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festive jammy dodger / Linzer cookies!

These cookies are my undeniable favorites for this time of year; since I’m not really one for cookie decorating, I just love how easily festive these are with a few miniature cookie cutters on hand. I’ve made them during the last several holiday seasons, and have to seriously rush to get them wrapped up and delivered to neighbors and friends before my husband steals them all!

A note on the name—”jammy dodgers” are a traditional British cookie consisting of butter cookies sandwiched with raspberry jam, and are common with or without a dusting of powdered sugar. The Linzer cookie, on the other hand, is a traditional Austrian cookie that’s quite similar but for that it typically contains ground almonds in its dough. That said, I have run across notable recipe sources for them that *do not* contain almonds, and as they’re always finished with the sugar dusting, I thought it appropriate to make the association here. Whatever you call them, make them and enjoy the buttery, jammy goodness!

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Festive Jammy Dodger / Linzer cookies

makes around 20

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Cookies:

  • scant 2 cups (250 g) all-purpose flour

  • 3/4 cup + 1 T (110 g) confectioners’ sugar

  • 1/2 c + 6 T (200 g) unsalted butter, softened

  • 2 egg yolks

  • pinch of kosher salt

To finish:

  • 130 g raspberry jam

  • 2 T confectioners’ sugar, for sprinkling

Directions

  1. Place all cookie ingredients into a food processor, and pulse until it begins to come together. Once that happens, turn it to high speed until a completely homogenous dough is formed. Wrap it in plastic and refrigerate for at least 3 hours, up to 3 days.

  2. When ready to roll/bake: Take dough out of the fridge and let temper for about 1 hour; preheat the oven to 325 F and line cookie sheets with parchment paper.

  3. Lightly flour a counter surface and roll dough out to 1/8”-1/4” thickness. Use a 3” round biscuit cutter (or a cup with 3” diameter) to cut rounds. Re-roll scraps for more cookies. Use a 1” round cutter (I use small patterned cookie cutters) to cut out the centers of half of the rounds. Transfer the cookies without a cut-out to one prepared cookie sheet, and the ones with a cut-out to another.

  4. Bake for around 10 minutes, or until the cookies take on a golden color around the edges, rotating the pans halfway through baking. The cookies with the cut-out will take a bit less time than the ones without. When ready, remove from oven and slide the cookies (still on parchment paper) onto a cooling rack.

  5. Once they’re just cool enough to handle but still quite warm, flip the base cookies over and place 1 tablespoon of jam onto each. Spread the jam gently toward the edges, and return to a baking sheet and into the warm oven. Leave in for about 1 minute, to let the jam loosen up. Meanwhile, lightly dust the tops of the cookies with the cut-outs with 2 T powdered sugar.

  6. Take the base rounds out of the oven, and top with the finished tops. Let set for about 20 minutes and enjoy! The sandwiched cookies will become softer as they sit overnight, which I honestly love just as much as when they’re fresh and still crispy!

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