 
 This was another of the saved baking recipes I had got from Joy of Baking. The shape and color had me bowled over and I had to try these. Especially for the newly bought, still unused heart shaped cookie cutter! Followed the recipe almost as is, though I didn’t follow the measurements exactly. The outcome was good, and was well received. This is sure to be a keeper, especially with the variations in texture that can be made.
 Here’s how to make them....
Here’s how to make them....
 Here’s how to make them....
Here’s how to make them....| Shortbread Cookies | 
| Preparation time : 15 min + resting time Cooking time : 15 min Makes : ~20 Ingredients: All purpose Flour (maida) - 2 cups Unsalted butter - 1 cup, in room temperature Powdered Sugar - ½ cup Vanilla extract - 1 tsp Salt - a small pinch - ¼ tsp Method: • In a bowl mix flour and salt well • In another bowl, beat butter till creamy for about a minute or two • Mix in sugar and continue to beat till fluffy for another few minutes • Add vanilla extract and mix thoroughly • Fold in the flour and mix to combine. Do not knead. • Flatten the dough, wrap it in a sheet and place it in refrigerator for 30 min • After half an hour, remove from refrigerator, and flatten it using a rolling pin and cut out desired shapes. • Place these on a greased tray, till all the dough is used up • Place it in the refrigerator for 10 more minutes to firm up, so that the cookies retain the shape when baking • Preheat the oven at 180 ºC and bake for 15 minutes. Check after about 10 minutes and adjust the time, not to over bake or under bake. A slight golden at the edges should be enough • Let the cookies stand on the baking sheet till cool enough, else they crumble when tried to lift when hot • Allow it to cool completely and then store away the rest in a tight container Tips n Tricks: • I found the dough too brittle to roll and cut. So I pinched out a small ball and flattened it on palm and cut the same with a cookie cutter Variations: • For a slightly crunchy texture replace 1/4 cup of the all purpose flour with rice flour • For a more delicate tasting shortbread, with a melt-in-your-mouth texture, replace 1/2 cup of the all purpose flour with cornstarch (corn flour). | 
Sending these to Champa's Bake-off event.
 
 
 

 One good thing about the Semiya kesari bath is that it takes much much lesser ghee when compared to its regular soji/rava counterpart. And it tastes good when cold too.
One good thing about the Semiya kesari bath is that it takes much much lesser ghee when compared to its regular soji/rava counterpart. And it tastes good when cold too.
 More excited than me for baking was my little niece Hima, who eagerly waited for me to knead the dough and was desperately waiting to cut the cookies. Once done, she was hooked in front of the oven, waiting for me to get the crackers out of the oven. She tasted a little piece and said 'Wowwwwwww atte!! Suuuper'!! It came as a surprise to me as I was expecting her to like the sweet cookies I was making in parallel, than these. The next couple of days she'd suddenly remember about the crackers stored in the kitchen counter and demand a couple of them! Ok, Suma, the credit goes to you :)
More excited than me for baking was my little niece Hima, who eagerly waited for me to knead the dough and was desperately waiting to cut the cookies. Once done, she was hooked in front of the oven, waiting for me to get the crackers out of the oven. She tasted a little piece and said 'Wowwwwwww atte!! Suuuper'!! It came as a surprise to me as I was expecting her to like the sweet cookies I was making in parallel, than these. The next couple of days she'd suddenly remember about the crackers stored in the kitchen counter and demand a couple of them! Ok, Suma, the credit goes to you :) Here's the recipe with a slight change from the original...
Here's the recipe with a slight change from the original...