Food & Drink Magazine

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

By Zoebakeforhappykids @bake4happykids
I'm loving these Viennese biscuits when I first saw them at Love and Sugar. Instantly, I was thinking of the Mark and Spencer Viennese biscuits that are either dipped or sandwiched with gooey melted chocolate.
I really want to bake these biscuits and so I suggested the theme, Viennese Shortbread for our bake along with Joyce from Kitchen Flavours and Lena from Frozen wings.
Viennese biscuits? These feather-light but buttery kind are typically made with soft buttery kind of cookie dough that is piped into whirls or fingers. While browsing for more Viennese biscuits recipes for my references, I have noticed that most recipes do not contain eggs at here, here, here and here. However, some recipes suggest the addition of eggs and egg yolk at here and here as it helps to hold the shapes of the biscuits after baking. To stabilize the structure of biscuits further, some at here and here even suggest the addition of egg white.
Soft buttery kind of cookie dough that is piped into whirls or fingers??? I can't help to associate these Viennese biscuits with the Donna Hay's melting moments that I have baked before. When I had a closer look at both Donna Hay's melting moments and Love and Sugar's Viennese biscuits recipes and noticed that the proportion of flour to butter of both recipes are about the same!!! Interestingly, both recipes do not contain eggs to stabilize the structure of the biscuits and this explained why my Donna Hay's melting moments lost their shapes really really really badly after baking them.
Lesson learnt... but I'm giving up baking the recipe from Love and Sugar because I know that these biscuits are going to feathery light and melting in my mouth too, just like the Donna Hay's melting moments. After researching further, I have managed to bake these Viennese biscuits successfully with these great tips...


Viennese biscuits shortbread fingers

A beautiful afternoon tea classic, Viennese Biscuits


Tip One: Do not use an electric mixer to mix the cookie dough!

Yes that you don't need a powerful Kenwood or a fanciful Kitchen Aid electric mixer to bake these cookies as over-beating the butter will cause the air pockets in the fluffy batter to expand too much and destroy the shapes of the cookies during baking. For this reason, all you need is a mixing spoon!


Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

Sorry, my sexy KA... I'm not using you today.


Tip Two: The butter has to be very soft!

Try not to bake these biscuits on a freezing day! If you really have to bake these biscuits on a cold day, wrap a warm towel around a bowl of grated butter... this will guarantee creamy and soft butter in less than 15 mins :)


Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

Yeah... This is the kind of soft butter that I'm talking about.

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

Next, beat in the vanilla paste or extract.


Tip Three: Use less but not completely no baking powder!

As you know, the addition of baking powder creates small air pockets in these biscuits for a feather-light texture but too much baking powder can cause them to look ugly being overly puffy. Instead of adding pinches of baking powder as suggested by the original recipe, I have added 1/8 tsp and the amount is still ok. Yeah... You can add pinches of small teaspoonful of baking powder but remember not to add too much!!!

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

Mix, mix, mix...

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

You can use either a piping bag fitted with a star nozzle or a cookie press like this.

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

I have piped my dough into these two shapes.

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

phew!!! They don't look so bad after baking!

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

They should be COOL enough to be dunk into the melted chocolate.

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

Mum, can I have one of these?

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

Hands off!!! Shoo!!! You have to wait for the chocolate to set!!!

While waiting, I have been hearing this question: Mum, can I have one please? Not just once but repeatedly!!! See... Kids can be naggy!!!

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

Now, son... You can enjoy this!
Me? I need a cuppa to fully enjoy these...


Here's the recipe that is mostly adapted from Love and Sugar and Marie Claire

Makes about 20 - I made 10 whirls and 10 broad wavy ones

For the biscuits:

125g unsalted butter, very softened - very important!!!
25g icing sugar
1/8 tsp baking powder
125g all purpose flour
1/4 tsp vanilla paste or 1/2 tsp vanilla extract

To coat:

50g dark or milk chocolate, preferably the best quality ones like Callebaut dark chocolate callets with 70% cocoa if using the dark chocolate

Preheat oven at 325ºF or 170ºC or 150ºC fan forced.

Place butter and sugar in a mixing bowl. Using a spoon, beat them until they are well combined. Then, beat in the vanilla.

In another bowl, combine flour and baking powder. Sift the flour mixture into the butter mixture and stir to for a fairly firm dough.

Spoon dough into a piping bag or cookie press fitted with a star nozzle.

Line baking trays with baking papers. Pipe the dough into whirls or wavy fingers, spaced well apart onto the prepared trays. Bake for 13-15 mins until pale golden brown. Allow the biscuits to cool slightly (about 10 mins) on the trays and then transfer them onto the wire rack to cool completely.

To coat the biscuits with chocolate:

Line trays with baking papers. Place chocolate in a heat proof bowl. To melt the chocolate, either place the bowl 1) over a pot of simmering water 2) in a microwave for several pulses of 10 secs in medium power. Stir until the chocolate is completely melted. Dip one side of the biscuits into the melted chocolate and place them onto the baking papers. Allow the chocolate to set before removing them from the baking papers.

Happy Baking


Here are our friends that have joined us for this bake-along. Please visit their blogs for more of their Viennese shortbread baking.

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

Please submit your details if you wish to link your post with this bake-along. This linking tool is open from 23 Apr to 2 May 2015.


An InLinkz Link-up

For our next bake-along, we are baking cheesecake for our 4th bake-along anniversary which is to be posted on 7 May 2015. Please bake-along with us! All you need to do is to bake this recipe and blog hop with us for the next 10 days.

To blog hop with us, simply copy and paste this linky HTML code into your blog post where you want the blog hop list to appear. Make sure you are in HTML view/mode when you paste in the code.get the InLinkz code
Before using this linky tool, please make sure that: (1) Your post must be a current post. (2) Please mention Bake-Along in your post and link back to any of our hosts' Bake-Along post, (Joyce, Lena or Zoe). (3) Appreciate if you can display the Bake-Along badge in your post when linking up with us. Cheers!


Would you like to have a nice and relaxing afternoon tea with Twinings tea?

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

An Aussie cuppa? Anybody? 

On behalf of Twinings, I'm giving away three boxes of Twinings teas plus two packs of five tea samples each as shown here... to one winner.


Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits
Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

To take part, simply complete the Rafflecopter below. Open to all international readers. Submission ends on 7th May 2015.

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I like to make a disclaimer here that I'm not paid by Twinings. I was given these teas to try and like to share some of them through my blog. Cheers!

Plus, don't forget to participate my another giveaway... ABC Delicious, Harper Collins Australia and I are giving this latest released book to one lucky winner. This giveaway is open to ALL international readers and the submission ends on 5th May 2015. Good Luck!

Melt-in-your-mouth Viennese Biscuits

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