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Valentines Day Rose Cookies

Rose Sugar Cookie Hearts

Kath February 9, 2020

To be honest with you, I am not really ‘into’ Valentines Day. Unfortunately it seems like an over commercialised day, but my distain for Valentines Day doesn’t extend to heart shaped cookies, rose flavoured anything or pink icing. These things can be enjoyed any day of the year, and shared with those you love regardless of what day it is. 

I had the original idea for these about a year ago when I was testing recipes for my Baking with Rose eBook. I had an idea for a heart shaped shortbread with rose icing. As it turns out, the shortbread looked great, but I found they took on the moisture of the icing and went a bit soft. I ended up creating my Rose Cardamom and Pistachio Shortbread (sans any icing), which I have to say I thoroughly enjoyed. 

View fullsize Baking with Rose eBook Test Recipe
Baking with Rose eBook Test Recipe
View fullsize Rose Cardamom & Pistachio Shortbread
Rose Cardamom & Pistachio Shortbread

Now a year later, I came back to the heart shaped cookie idea and knew that a sugar cookie was the only way to go. I added crystallised rose nibs (I buy mine here) and a few drops of natural rose extract, however you could definitely leave both of those out if you wanted. 

I used Gewürzhaus rose powder to colour and flavour the icing, however if you can’t get rose powder, just leave it out and add a little pink food colouring. You will still have the rose flavour from the rosewater, and they will still taste great (you may even need a little less rosewater than the recipe says if you aren’t using the rose powder). 

My Baking with Rose eBook is available here if you are interested in more rose recipes.

Gewurzhaus Rose Powder

Gewurzhaus Rose Powder

Valentines Heart Cookies

Rose Sugar Cookie Hearts

Ingredients: 

200g unsalted butter, softened

200g caster sugar

1/2 tsp vanilla bean paste

5 drops natural rose extract, optional

15g crystallised rose nibs (or very finely chopped crystallised rose petals)

1 egg, lightly beaten 

400g plain flour 

Ingredients for the Icing: 

230g icing sugar

2 tsp rose powder (I used this one from Gewürzhaus)

2.5-3 tbsp rosewater

Method: 

Line three large baking trays with baking paper.

Place the butter, sugar, vanilla and rose extract if using in the bowl of a stand mixer and cream using the paddle attachment, until just combined. Add the crystallised rose nibs and mix until combined.

Slowly add the beaten egg to the mixture and mix until well combined. 

Add the flour and mix on low until just combined and the mixture forms a dough. 

Bring the dough into ball, remove from the bowl and cover in plastic wrap. Refrigerate for at least 30-60 minutes. 

Lightly flour your work surface and tip the dough out onto it. Dust the top with a little more flour as well to prevent the dough sticking to your rolling pin. Using a rolling pin, roll the dough out until it is about 5 mm thick. 

Use a medium sized heart shaped cookie cutter (approx. 7-7.5cm in width at the widest part) to cut out the cookies, placing on the prepared trays. Bring the dough together and re-roll when necessary to ensure you use all the dough. Place the cookie filled trays into the fridge for another 30 minutes. 

Preheat oven to 170 degrees Celsius. 

Bake the cookies for about 15 minutes, or until they are lightly golden around the edges. Rotate trays in the oven about half way through to ensure they cook and colour evenly. 

Allow the cookies to cool on their trays. 

To make the icing, mix the icing sugar and rose powder in a medium bowl, then gradually add 2 tbsp of the rosewater to form a smooth thick icing. Add a little more rosewater if the icing is too paste like. The icing needs to be fairly thick so the icing won’t run off the cookies, but not so thick its difficult to spread. 

Using a small palette knife ice half of each heart shaped cookie, and place back on their trays and allow the icing to set for a few hours. I found I had a little icing leftover at the end, but to be honest I’d rather have a little too much than not enough! You could always ice some of the biscuits fully rather than just half if you really wanted to use it all up. 

Allow the icing to set before storing in an airtight container. Will keep for about a week.

Makes about 36 heart shaped cookies.

Rose Sugar Cookie Hearts

Reference: ‘Cookies’ by Peggy Porschen (Quadrille Publishing, 2014), p.8. 

Rose Sugar Cookie Hearts
In Biscuits/Cookies Tags Sugar Cookies, Biscuits, Rose Biscuits, Rose Powder, Crystallised Rose Petals, Valentines Day, Biscuits/Cookies
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Fortnum & Masons's Rose Biscuits with Homemade Crystallised Rose Petals

Fortnum & Masons's Rose Biscuits with Homemade Crystallised Rose Petals

Fortnum & Mason’s Rose Biscuits Revisited + How to Make Crystallised Rose Petals

Kath March 7, 2016

It has been about two years since I was last at Fortnum & Mason, and almost the same amount of time since I first attempted making these biscuits. In a previous post, which can be found here, I shared my version of Fortnum & Mason’s rose biscuits. And over the past couple of years, I have noticed it has consistently been a popular post on the blog - which I love, as I feel it means there are others out there who either like me have an obsession with using rose in baking, or, are just as in love with Fortnum & Mason’s biscuits as I am. 

The original recipe for Fortnum & Mason’s rose scented biscuits requires some crystallised (or sugared) rose petals, of which I have never been able to find in Australia. I still dream of the packets of crystallised rose and violet petals I saw in the shop G. Detou in Paris, and still kick myself for not buying them. Since I could never find any crystallised rose petals, and fresh edible rose petals still eluded me then, my version of Fortnum & Mason’s rose scented biscuits omitted the rose petals, but included a rose icing to enhance the flavour. While I have always been happy with my adaptation, I still kept the original recipe in mind, just in case I was ever able to make it properly. 

More recently, I posted a recipe for a cake which used edible flowers, including rose petals to decorate the cake. I mentioned in that post how exciting it finally was to find edible flowers, and the recipe in this post is another reason why. I was able to crystallise the rose petals myself, then add them to the biscuit mixture as per the original Fortnum & Mason recipe. I am so very glad I was finally able to make these biscuits. They taste exactly like the ones Fortnum & Mason sell packaged in the pretty pink cylindrical tins. 

How to Crystallise Rose Petals

If you wish to make the biscuit recipe below, I would suggest making the crystallised rose petals first, a few hours in advance to give them time to dry out before making the biscuits. I did not find the rose petals, once crystallised, had a very long shelf life, so I would not advise making them days in advance.

Ingredients: 

Fresh unsprayed rose petals, gently rinsed and dried

1 egg white

50g sugar (approx.) 

 

Method: 

Prepare two or three large baking trays by lining them with baking paper. 

Gently whisk the egg white with a fork until lightly frothy. 

Working slowly and doing each rose petal individually, use a small soft bristled (new or kitchen purpose) paint brush, and brush a small amount of the egg white over both sides of the rose petal. Ensure every part of the petal is covered in egg white. It is easiest to hold the rose petal at the narrower end, where it is a little white in colour. 

Then, gently toss the petal in some of the sugar, again ensuring the whole petal has been coated in the sugar. Dust of any excess sugar, and place on one of the prepared trays. 

Continue doing the same for each rose petal. Leave the sugared rose petals to dry on the prepared trays for at least a couple of hours.

In humid conditions the petals may take longer to crystallise, and they can be dried out in the oven at an extremely low temperature, about 20 degrees Celsius. I tried both methods of drying and found they dried better when left out for a couple of hours or so. 

Once the petals have dried they will be crunchy and ready to use in the recipe below or as a garnish for cakes and desserts. 

Homemade crystallised rose petals last a maximum of a couple of days after crystallising, when they are left out so they remain dry. I found keeping them in an airtight container wasn’t the best option for storing them. 

Homemade Crystallised Rose Petals

Homemade Crystallised Rose Petals

Some examples of recipes where crystallised rose petals would make a great garnish can be found in the links below: 

Raspberry & Rose Cupcakes

Pavlova

Rose Sponge Cake

Summer Celebration Cake

Raspberry & Almond Layer Cake

Rose Pound Cake

Rose & Pistachio Cake

Raspberry & Rose Celebration Cake

Fortnum & Mason’s Rose Scented Biscuits

Ingredients: 

100g unsalted butter, softened

50g golden caster sugar or caster sugar 

1 tbsp rosewater

100g plain flour

50g almond meal

15 g/10 medium/large (whole) crystallised rose petals, roughly chopped

 

Method: 

Preheat oven to 180 degrees Celsius, and line a baking tray with baking paper. 

In a large bowl, cream butter, sugar and rosewater until all combined. Sift in the flour, add the almond meal and crystallised rose petals and mix until combined. 

Using a teaspoon, take spoonfuls of the mixture and roll into balls and place on the baking trays. Flatten the balls a little so they form fat round discs. 

Cook for 15-20 minutes, or until slightly golden. If you are unsure if they are cooked, use a palette knife to gently lift a biscuit - if it is evenly golden on the base of the biscuit, it is cooked. Cool biscuits on the trays or on a wire rack. 

This recipe only makes about 20 biscuits, but after all the fuss of crystallising your own rose petals, I suggest doubling the quantities and making more! The cooked biscuits last about one week.

Reference: ‘Tea at Fortnum and Mason’ (Ebury Press, 2010), p.61.

For more recipes showcasing the best of rose, check out my eBook Baking with Rose by clicking the link below!

get your ebook!
In Travel, Biscuits/Cookies Tags Fortnum & Mason, Fortnum and Mason, Crystallised Rose Petals, Sugared Rose Petals, Rose Biscuits, Rose Petals, Edible Flowers, London, Biscuits, Cookies
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recipes

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