The perfect Mother's day-spoiling treat.
I’ve seen green tea biscuits trending in the food world for a while and decided I wanted to make some – the problem was that they require ‘matcha powder’ which is both very expensive and very hard to find. I decided to make biscuits using other kinds of tea and paired them with icings that I thought would compliment their flavour. It’s really easy and I have to say that people loved them – the overall winner being the Earl Grey cookies with orange frosting.
I’ve seen green tea biscuits trending in the food world for a while and decided I wanted to make some – the problem was that they require ‘matcha powder’ which is both very expensive and very hard to find. I decided to make biscuits using other kinds of tea and paired them with icings that I thought would compliment their flavour. It’s really easy and I have to say that people loved them – the overall winner being the Earl Grey cookies with orange frosting.
With these recipes I talk about ‘tea leaves’ – but you don’t
need to go out and buy loose-leaf tea, simply empty a few tea bags and use
those leaves. You can also experiment with different flavours of tea – Chai/Oolong/honeybush/Chamomile/various
types of Rooibos.
Earl Grey cookies with
orange frosting
Ingredients:
500g Sasko
Cookie Mix
1 ½ Tbsp Earl Grey
tea leaves
140g butter (at
room temperature)
1 extra large
egg
Icing:
250g icing
sugar
70ml orange
juice
1 tsp orange
zest
Method:
Preheat your
oven to 180*C.
Grease and line
two large baking trays.
Put the Sasko
Cookie mix into a mixing bowl with the tea leaves and stir with a whisk to
ensure that the leaves are well incorporated.
Add the butter
and rub into the cookie mix with your hands until a bread-crumb-like
consistency is formed.
Whisk the egg
in a smaller mixing bowl.
Add the egg to
the cookie mix and combine with a wooden spoon.
Remove
tablespoons of the dough from the mix and roll into little balls (about the
size of a R5 coin) and place them, 5cm apart, onto the lined baking trays. You
should get about 35-40 cookies from the mixture.
Bake for 12
minutes or until golden brown around the edges.
(Allow to cool
completely before icing.)
Mix the icing
sugar, orange juice and zest together in a bowl and, using the back of a
teaspoon, smear a small circle of the icing onto each biscuit. Allow the icing
to set completely before storing in an airtight container.
Rooibos cookies dipped in
white chocolate
Ingredients:
500g Sasko
Cookie Mix
1 ½ Tbsp
Rooibos/Chai Rooibos tea leaves
140g butter (at
room temperature)
1 extra large
egg
200g white
chocolate
Method:
Preheat your oven
to 180*C.
Grease and line
two large baking trays.
Put the Sasko
Cookie mix into a mixing bowl with the tea leaves and stir with a whisk to
ensure that the leaves are well incorporated.
Add the butter
and rub into the cookie mix with your hands until a bread-crumb-like
consistency is formed.
Whisk the egg
in a smaller mixing bowl.
Add the egg to
the cookie mix and combine with a wooden spoon.
Remove
tablespoons of the dough from the mix and roll into little balls (about the
size of a R5 coin) and place them, 5cm apart, onto the lined baking trays. You
should get about 35-40 cookies from the mixture.
Bake for 12
minutes or until golden brown around the edges.
(Allow to cool
completely before dipping into the chocolate.)
Break the
chocolate into small pieces and melt in a double boiler on low heat on top of
the stove.
Dip half of the
tops of each cookie into chocolate and place on a sheet of baking paper to dry.
Allow the chocolate
to set completely before storing in an airtight container. (This will take a
few hours.)
Jasmine tea biscuits with dark chocolate and
goji berries
Ingredients:
500g Sasko
Cookie Mix
1 ½ Tbsp Jasmine
tea leaves
140g butter (at
room temperature)
1 extra large
egg
200g dark chocolate
50g goji berries
Method:
Preheat your
oven to 180*C.
Grease and line
two large baking trays.
Put the Sasko
Cookie mix into a mixing bowl with the tea leaves and stir with a whisk to
ensure that the leaves are well incorporated.
Add the butter
and rub into the cookie mix with your hands until a bread-crumb-like
consistency is formed.
Whisk the egg
in a smaller mixing bowl.
Add the egg to
the cookie mix and combine with a wooden spoon.
Remove
tablespoons of the dough from the mix and roll into little balls (about the
size of a R5 coin) and place them, 5cm apart, onto the lined baking trays. You
should get about 35-40 cookies from the mixture.
Bake for 12
minutes or until golden brown around the edges.
(Allow to cool
completely before dipping in the chocolate.)
Break the
chocolate into small pieces and melt in a double boiler on low heat on top of
the stove.
Dip half of the
tops of each cookie into the melted chocolate, sprinkle over the goji berries and
place on a sheet of baking paper to dry.
Allow the
chocolate to set completely before storing in an airtight container. (This will
take a few hours.)
Top Tips:
1.
If
the tea leaves seem overly large simply pulse them a few times in a food
processor until they are smaller in size.
2.
If
you don’t have a double boiler you can use a heatproof bowl that fits snuggly
on top of one of your pots – it needs to fit tightly as you don’t want any
water from escaping steam to mix with the chocolate, as it will cause the
chocolate to congeal. It’s also important that the water in the pot does not
touch the bottom of the bowl as it could burn the chocolate.
3.
If
you are baking all of the cookies at the same time make sure that you keep a
good distance between the baking trays in the oven to ensure that there is even
heat distribution.
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