Portuguese Biscotti
Submitted by crlarson
Portuguese biscotti, lemon-scented ring-shaped butter cookies with a crisp, slightly crumbly texture. A Portuguese-American tradition that differs from Italian biscotti with lemon and a single bake.
YIELD
16 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
40 minREADY
4 hrsThese aren’t Italian biscotti despite the name. Portuguese biscotti are a family of regional Portuguese-American baked goods that differ from their Italian cousins in one key way: they’re shaped into rings rather than logs, and they bake just once instead of twice.
Lemon is the flavor that defines them. A whole tablespoon of lemon zest plus a quarter cup of juice sings through these cookies, giving them a bright citrus flavor that most American butter cookies don’t have. Skip the lemon here at your peril; it’s what makes them Portuguese.
The long mandatory chill (3 hours minimum, up to 2 days) isn’t optional. The dough is soft and sticky when first mixed; only cold dough is firm enough to roll into 10-inch ropes without tearing.
Overlapping the rope ends to form rings is the traditional Portuguese shape. The overlap seals during baking and creates a small thick spot that contrasts with the thinner ring body, so each cookie has variation in crunch.
The low oven temperature (300°F / 150°C) is the secret to the biscotti’s characteristic texture. Hot ovens brown the exterior before the interior dries, leaving a chewy-doughy center. The low, slow bake dries the whole cookie through into a proper crisp-crumble texture.
A light dusting of sugar on top before baking gives the rings a subtle sparkle and a sweet-crackly finish.
Chef Tips
- Use real butter, not margarine. The flavor shows through in a cookie this simple; substitutes taste flat.
- If the ropes crack when forming rings, the dough is too cold. Let it warm on the counter for 5 minutes before continuing.
- Bake one tray at a time for even browning. Two trays in the oven at once means uneven temperatures and spotty color.
- Cool completely on racks before storing. Warm cookies trap steam in the container and go soft fast.
Variations
- Substitute orange zest and orange juice for lemon for a different citrus profile.
- Add 1 teaspoon vanilla extract or ½ teaspoon almond extract to the batter for additional flavor depth.
- Dip half of each cooled cookie in melted dark chocolate for a modern twist.
Ingredients
Directions
In large bowl of an electric mixer, beat 1 cup of the sugar and butter until well blended.
Add lemon peel and juice; mix to blend.
Beat in eggs, 1 at a time, until smooth.
Gradually stir in 3 cups of the flour, mixing well, cover and chill until dough is firm enough to handle easily, at least 3 hours or as long as 2 days.
For easier handling, chill the dough before you form the ring-shaped cookies.
Divide dough in half.
Cover and chill 1 portion. Divide other half into 8 equal pieces.
With floured fingers, roll each piece on a lightly floured board to make a 10-inch rope.
Overlap ends of each rope slightly to form a ring.
Place rings about 1 inch apart on a greased 14×17 inch baking sheet.
Sprinkle light with sugar.
Bake in a 300℉ (150℃). oven until golden, 35 to 40 minutes. Remove cookies from pans and let cool completely on racks.
Repeat with remaining dough..
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