Last year at this time, our intrepid troupe of cookie bakers were baking The 12 Days of Cookies, attempting to bake 12 holiday cookies in 12 days. While I did eventually bake all 12 cookies, I don’t think I finished until January! This year, the group decided to take it a little easier and bake 4 cookies in 4 weeks, thereby saving what’s left of our sanity. This year, we’re baking our choice of any four of the nine cookies in the Smart Cookies: Favorite Holiday Cookies From Around the World collection from Saveur, and calling our series:
One of my favorite cookies to bake and eat, is biscotti. These crunchy twice-baked beauties are light and flavorful, packed with hazelnuts and almonds, and just perfect with a cup of coffee or tea. I also find them one of the first cookies to disappear from the cookie platter! So when I spotted this recipe in this year’s collection, it had to be the first one I baked.
First the recipe, directly from Saveur, followed, as always, by my notes.
Tozzetti (Roman-Style Biscotti)
Ingredients:
Butter, for greasing pan
3 1/2 cups flour, plus more for pan
1 tbsp. baking powder
2 cups whole blanched almonds, toasted
1 1/2 cups whole blanched hazelnuts, toasted
2 1/4 cups sugar
5 eggs
*1/4 cup anise-flavored liqueur, like
sambuca
*1 tbsp. crushed aniseed
1 tbsp. vanilla extract
Preparation:
Heat oven to 375° F. Grease and flour a 10″ x 15″ jelly roll pan; set aside.
In a large bowl, whisk together flour and baking powder; toss in nuts. In a bowl, whisk together sugar and eggs; whisk in sambuca*, aniseed*, and vanilla. Add flour mixture; fold. Pour into pan; bake until golden, 20 minutes. Let biscotti cool.
Reduce oven temperature to 325° F. Remove cooled biscotti slab from pan; cut crosswise into twenty 10″-long strips; cut each strip in half to form forty 5″-long strips. Transfer strips to parchment paper-lined baking sheets, spacing strips 1/2″ apart. Bake until golden brown, 20–25 minutes. Let cool.
Notes:
This recipe is very different from most biscotti recipes, in that it’s a loose batter poured into the pan, rather than a dough shaped into a loaf. That attracted me, initially, because it seemed that there would be at least one less step. The result is a more rustic-looking cookie. Compare to last year’s Bon Appetit Holiday Biscotti, a cookie I’ve been baking all year-long (without the white chocolate dip), I love it so much.
At the risk of repeating myself, I can’t stand anise or anything that even remotely tastes like black licorice. So it won’t come as a surprise that I omitted the sambuca and aniseed from this recipe. Instead, I substituted 1/4 cup of Grand Marnier and 1/2 Tbs. almond extract. I probably would have used Amaretto instead of the Grand Marnier, but my husband stashed it in the top cabinet over the refrigerator, and I didn’t feel like dragging out the tall step-stool to get it down (it’s the giant 1.75 liter bottle and damn heavy – we do everything big around here). Also, a bit of grated orange zest would not have been amiss.
And then I discovered that I don’t own a 10″ x 15″ jelly roll pan. My pans all seem to be 12″ x 17″. ->Sigh<- But you know what? Didn’t make one bit of difference. Except, of course, that I got more and bigger cookies! My yield was 45 6-inch biscotti (including the rejects) rather than the recipe’s 40 5-inch yield.
The verdict? This is without a doubt, a very tasty cookie. And since there’s no butter in the recipe (except for greasing the pan – and you can use cooking spray instead), it makes an excellent choice if you’re cutting calories or avoiding dairy for whatever reason. So it comes down to personal preference, and honestly, I’m going back to my old love.
Please be sure to visit my comrades in cookies to see what they chose to serve up!
Claire of
The Barefoot KitchenDi of
Di’s Kitchen NotebookJudy of
No Fear EntertainingKelly of
Sass & VeracityMichelle of
Big Black DogRJ of
Flamingo Musings (that’s me!)Sandy of
At the Baker’s BenchTiffany of
The Nesting ProjectCourtney of Coco Cooks
Michelle says
Good to hear, because the Biscotti is on my list to make too.Could you do me a favor? The link to BigBlackDog is to my old blog. If you could update it, I'd appreciate it. Thanks.
Rosy says
These turned out so much better than mine! Beautiful!
Di says
Ooh, I'm glad to see that you made these without the anise. I had crossed these off my list because I despise it, but if they're good without it, then I may make them after all.
Chow and Chatter says
lovely biscotti i made some recently so much fun 🙂
Chow and Chatter says
love biscotti these look great
A Thought For Food says
I'd have one of these right now with my cup of coffee if I could. They look crisp, flavorful… and not too sweet. Just how a biscotti should be.
Jamie says
My husband and my sons don't stop asking for biscotti. Weirdly enough it is the one cookie they all love so much! This is a great recipe and your biscotti look just fabulous! Yum! Now I may just make them…
Judy@nofearentertaining says
Love these my friend! I need to figure out how long they would take me to make in stages…hehehe!
SMITH BITES says
my Italian ancestors would turn in their graves if i didn't tell you that i adore biscotti – with an espresso of course! always make at least a batch or two for the holidays . . . why don't i the rest of the year???
Megan says
I LOVE biscotti and I'm with you, give me almond over anise anytime!!!
Claire says
Mmmm…now I want a nice biscotti and a cup of coffee…or maybe a little vin santo, if it weren't so early in the day.I loved last year's biscotti too…I may need to go back to that recipe.
Sandy Smith says
I love your substitutions! Yum!!! And so lovely.
kelly says
I am SO with you on anything licorice *shiver* and love your substitutions. These are on my list, too, and just may end up in somebody's stocking.