Introduction: Cinnamon Bacon Shortbread

About: I'm an animation director by day and Queen of the monsters by night. I picked up most of my costume and prop building skills through hands on experimentation with materials. Experimentation led to addiction,…

I recently published my mom's classic recipe for shortbread cookies, which you can find here.

Having made several batches of traditional shortbread over the holidays, I decided to experiment with toppings to make this recipe my own. This christmas was full of sweet treats, leaving me craving something on the saltier side to offset all the cakes and candies. Enter the fan favorite: Bacon! The combo of crispy bacon bits and cinnamon gave a subtle, savory twist to my old, buttery favorite. It also makes a great holiday host gift for slightly more adventurous snackers who have seen and done every holiday cookie out there..

For those who like all their info in one place, you'll find I've built this Ible mostly from the classic shortbread recipe mentioned above, adding in the bacon and cinnamon steps needed to achieve this tasty derivation.

Step 1: You Will Need...

1 lb Unsalted Butter --Yes, a whole pound (one box). Let it sit out on the counter to soften, to make it easier to cream later.

1 Cup Sugar

1/2 tsp Salt

4 Cups Flour

Bacon --1-5 strips, depending on the size of your cookie batch. 2 bacon strips easily covers about 25 cookies.

Cinnamon ( a few pinches, to taste)

Tools:

Microwave Safe Plate or Frying Pan (choose your bacon method!)

Paper Towels --for draining excess bacon grease

2 large bowls

Measuring cup and spoons

Baking stone or baking sheet

Wooden Spoon

Pastry Blender --You can blend the ingredients with a traditional mixing spoon if you don't have this, but a pastry blender definitely makes it easier to distribute ingredients evenly.

Pastry Crimper --I highly recommend this one from Betty Crocker because you get a cutting edge and crimping edge on one tool.

Whisk --optional, but I think this is great for blending the dry ingredients with the least mess.

Fork

Spatula

Brown Paper --for cooling/ absorbing excess grease.

Step 2: Flour Mix

In one large bowl, measure 4 Cups flour.

*Remember: a cup of flour should be loose and leveled off, not packed tight.

Next, measure 1/2 teaspoon salt.

Add the salt to the bowl of flour. Use a whisk to sift the ingredients together.I like using a whisk instead of a mixing spoon because the granules can flow freely between the wires, helping with even distribution and reducing the risk of flinging flour out of the bowl.

Step 3: Creaming the Sugar

Unwrap a softened stick of butter and place it in your second mixing bowl.

I like to break up the butter into thick slices with a wooden spoon, to make it a little more manageable when creaming.

Repeat with the other 3 sticks of butter in the box for a total of 1 pound of butter.

Measure 1 Cup Sugar.

Add the sugar to your butter bowl and use the wooden spoon to mash and fold the sugar in. Work until you have a thick, chunky paste with sugar distributed evenly throughout.

Step 4: Combine It All

Next you'll combine all your ingredients into one bowl.

Add 1 cup flour to your butter bowl, then use a pastry blender to work it into the creamed sugar. If you've never used a pastry blender before, it is sort of like a potato masher. Just grip and press downward, letting the dough be worked through the blades. You may need to clear the blades with your mixing spoon once in a while as your dough gets thicker.

Continue to add flour to the butter bowl one cup at a time, blending between portions.

When you're finished, you should have a chunky dough that resembles cornmeal. Ingredients should be blended thoroughly and it will be moist, but not greasy.

Step 5: Knead

Use clean hands to knead the dough together, eliminating the chunky texture.

If working in small batches, as suggested, break off 1/3 - 1/2 of the dough to work with.

Wrap the rest of the dough in cling wrap and place in the fridge for up to a week.

Step 6: Rollin', Crimpin', and Forkin'

Lightly flour your baking sheet or baking stone.

Place the ball of dough you're working with on the sheet.

Roll out flat, until dough is about 1/4 inch thick, flouring your dough and rolling pin as needed to prevent sticking and tearing.

As you bring the dough to the edges of the sheet, you'll realize the circular form is going to leave you with some odd shaped end cookies. If you want to avoid these for presentation's sake, use the cutting head of the pastry crimper to skor away excess. This extra dough can be added back to your dough ball in the fridge for use in a later batch.

Next, use the crimping blade to run lines down the length of your dough.The distance between lines should be no less than 1 inch, as sections smaller than this are more prone to burn.

Now run the crimper perpendicular to your first set of lines, creating a grid. These are your final cookie sizes.

Lastly, use a regular table fork to poke 2-3 rows of holes in each cookie. These holes prevent dough bubbling and promote a more even bake.

Step 7: Cinnamon Bacon Bonus!

Prep several strips of bacon as you normally would, aiming for crispy and crumbly. This can be done via traditional pan fry method or in the microwave.

I chose to do the microwave to expedite cooking and minimize clean up.Be sure to use a microwave safe plate. Sandwiching your layers of bacon inside paper towels will absorb the grease that cooks out and minimize your clean up efforts at the end.

Once you have cripsy bacon that is comfortably cool to the touch, crumble it into small pieces.

Sprinkle bacon bits over your shortbread cookie dough. Keep the application light --this isn't meant to be a bacon crust!

For the final touch, use your fingers to sprinkle cinnamon over the cookies. For the most "oomph!" I suggest 4% cinnamon, which is stronger than your typical grocery store stuff. My mom found this tub at an Amish farmers market.

Step 8: Bake

The original recipe calls for the oven to be heated to 350 degrees, then reduced to 325 before the cookies are put in for 20-30 minutes.

It pays to know your oven! Ours is 50yrs old and tends to run about 25 degrees too hot. Since these cookies are thin, I dialed back a little from the original recipe to prevent burned edges. Adjust accordingly to your oven's tendencies and always set the timer for the minimum of 20 minutes. You can always leave them another 5-10, but you can't undo burning!

Watch for the edges to turn golden. You'll be able to smell when they're ready to come out!

If your crimped edges melded back together in the oven, a quick run of the crimper while your cookies are still hot will separate them easily.

Let cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before transferring to brown paper for another 10-15.

Step 9: MMMM, Bacon!

Enjoy this subtle but tasty variation on a classic. Makes a great "man" gift and is especially excellent while still warm.

Sound tasty? Send Cinnamon Bacon Shortbread a vote in the Heirloom Recipes contest! Post your batch in the comments below or come up with your own shortbread variant to share.

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