Tonight! The gifted musician who is my fella is premiering a composition that he wrote for marimba, string quintet, and chorus. He has literally worked his fingers to their blistering bones to write this piece, which was inspired by the water-themed African folk songs that he and his classmates studied this semester. Joey was tapped by his school to be one of two student composers debuting original work at this evening's performance, and I'm bursting at the seams with excitement for him. In the past year, he has somehow managed to learn and excel at playing marimba (with four mallets!) and learned how to use composition software that makes everything sound like a video game, and which will undoubtedly translate into some seriously beautiful and bewitching music; his future is all kinds of bright and shiny.
After this composition endeavor, Joey heads to to Vermont with his band (link to old songs) for a year of intensive writing and recording, punctuated by extensive touring. Obviously I will be sending them baked goods all the while. These cookies—a solid airmail possibility—were recently featured on my all-time favorite food blog, and they are a total snap to make. While Lottie + Doof finished his with sugar alone, I thought the coffee-sugar combo nicely complemented the sturdy wheat flavor, and the cookies topped with cinnamon tasted just like buñuelos. Joey, I see you your bright future and raise you a buttery one!
Whole-Wheat Shortbread Cookies
Adapted from Lottie + Doof
Makes about 70 one-inch cookies
Obviously this recipe calls for a scale, something that I highly recommend purchasing. They save time, dishes, and ingredients—seriously one of the best $25 you can spend for your kitchen!
10.5 ounces all-purpose flour
5.5 ounces whole-wheat flour
4.75 ounces cornstarch
16 ounces high-fat butter (Plurga is recommended), at cool room temperature
4.75 ounces natural sugar
1 teaspoon salt
Superfine sugar, superfine coffee grinds, and ground cinnamon, for dusting
1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees F. Line cookie sheets with parchment paper.
2. Combine the flours and cornstarch in a medium bowl and set aside. In a large bowl, cream the butter, sugar, and salt with an electric mixer (or KitchenAid with the paddle attachment) until fluffy, about three minutes. Add the flour mixture to the butter mixture and combine, but be careful not to overmix. (I did the last bits of combining with cold hands and a rubber spatula since I’m paranoid about my oft overzealous electric mixer.)
3. On a lightly floured surface, roll out the dough to a quarter-inch thick and cut into desired shapes (Tim used a two-inch cutter; I used a one-inch inverted glass); you may reroll and cut scraps. Arrange one inch apart on cookie sheets and bake for 10 to 15 minutes until edges have browned. Let cool on sheets for two minutes, then dust with sugar or your desired sugar mix (ratios follow). Store in an airtight container once cookies are totally cool. They’ll last a couple of days!
For coffee topping: Combine 1/4 cup of sugar with 1 scant tablespoon superfinely ground coffee, or to taste.
For cinnamon topping: Combine 1/4 cup sugar with 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon, or to taste.


i have been putting off purchasing a kitchen scale for some time now, but these cookies may be my breaking point. thanks for sharing. :)
ReplyDeleteI've found way more occasions to use mine than I was expecting. Especially handy for ratios. Thanks for stopping by!
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