Toasted Coconut Shortbread Recipe (2024)

By Alison Roman

Toasted Coconut Shortbread Recipe (1)

Total Time
30 minutes, plus 90 minutes chilling
Rating
4(720)
Notes
Read community notes

These cookies have the taste and texture of one of those Danish holiday cookies that come in the little blue tins. The coconut in these cookies adds fat for an even more buttery treat with faintly nutty notes and no noticeable tropical flavor. Dipping each cookie into a pile of sanding sugar before baking gives the finished product a sweet and salty balance.

Featured in: Festive Cookies That Won’t Leave You Frazzled

  • or to save this recipe.

  • Subscriber benefit: give recipes to anyone

    As a subscriber, you have

    10 gift recipes to give each month. Anyone can view them - even nonsubscribers.

    Learn more.

    Subscribe

  • Print Options

    Include recipe photo

Advertisem*nt

Ingredients

Yield:About 24 cookies

  • 1cup plus 2 tablespoons/255 grams cold salted butter (2¼ sticks), cut into ½-inch pieces
  • ½cup/100 grams granulated sugar
  • ¼cup/55 grams light brown sugar
  • 1teaspoon vanilla extract
  • cups/255 grams all-purpose flour
  • ½cup/45 grams unsweetened shredded coconut, plus more for rolling
  • ¾teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1large egg, well beaten
  • Sanding sugar

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (24 servings)

157 calories; 10 grams fat; 7 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 2 grams monounsaturated fat; 0 grams polyunsaturated fat; 15 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 7 grams sugars; 2 grams protein; 73 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

Powered by

Toasted Coconut Shortbread Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Using an electric mixer and a medium bowl (or a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment), beat butter, granulated sugar, brown sugar and vanilla on medium-high speed until super light and fluffy, 3 to 5 minutes.

  2. Step

    2

    Using a spatula, scrape down sides of bowl. With mixer on low speed, slowly add flour, followed by ½ cup coconut and beat just to blend.

  3. Step

    3

    Divide dough in half, then place each half on a large piece of plastic wrap. Sprinkle each piece of dough with half of the cinnamon, then fold plastic over to cover dough and protect your hands from getting all sticky. Start to form into a log (this will give a subtle cinnamon swirl-like effect — if this idea stresses you out, you can also just add the cinnamon with the flour and coconut in step 2).

  4. Step

    4

    Using your hands (just like you’re playing with clay), form dough into a log shape; rolling it on the counter will help you smooth it out, but don’t worry about getting it totally perfect. Each half should form logs that are about 1½ to 2 inches in diameter. Chill until firm, at least 1½ hours.

  5. Step

    5

    Heat oven to 350 degrees. Line a rimmed baking sheet (two, if you’ve got ’em) with parchment paper. Brush outside of logs with egg wash. Roll logs in unsweetened coconut.

  6. Step

    6

    Slice each log into ¼-inch-thick rounds. Dip each round on one side into sanding sugar (no need to egg wash, the sugar should just stick). Arrange on prepared baking sheet, sugar-side up, about 1 inch apart (they won’t spread much). Bake cookies until edges are just beginning to brown, about 10 to 12 minutes. Let cool slightly before eating them all.

Tip

  • Cookie dough can be made 1 week ahead. Tightly wrap in plastic and chill, or freeze up to 1 month. Cookies can be baked 5 days ahead. Store in plastic wrap or an airtight container.

Ratings

4

out of 5

720

user ratings

Your rating

or to rate this recipe.

Have you cooked this?

or to mark this recipe as cooked.

Private Notes

Leave a Private Note on this recipe and see it here.

Cooking Notes

Oakley

In A. Roman's coconut shortbread recipe 1 3/4 c flour= 255 g. In M. Clark's cultured butter cookies, 2 c flour= 250 g. Could you please standardize?How did you like this recipe?

Susie D

Just noticed this note in the recipe for Alison's salted chocolate chunk shortbread cookies:If you have Alison's book, you might notice a 1/4 cup discrepancy in the volume measurement of flour. That's because NYT Cooking uses a different standard metric cup measurement. Alison uses 145 grams, we use 128 grams.Might this answer your question? I suspect that the volume measures are approximations and that using the weight would yield a better result.

Chris

I had the same problem with lacy and spreading cookies, even when I weighed the ingredients and chilled the dough. I noticed that Alison Roman's companion recipe for chocolate chunk shortbread calls for 2 1/2 c. flour(326 g), rather than the 1 3/4 c(255 g) flour called for in the coconut version. I remade the coconut shortbread with the flour and butter proportions a listed in the chocolate chunk version. It worked! I am convinced the flour amount for this recipe is incorrect.

RoLo

Susie D,Although weight measurements yield better results, it's confusing to know whether to weigh flour as 140g/cup as done here, 125g/cup as in MC's cultured butter recipe, or 130.4g (326g divided by 2.5) in Roman's salted chocolate chunk recipe as it displays in the NYT database. Coincidentally, both King Arthur & Gold Medal measure 1 cup of flour as 120g; obviously those are different sources, but it'd be good to have some consistency at least within NYT recipes....

Kathleen

These taste delicious, especially the slightly crunchy coconut. I added about a 1/4 tsp of ground cardamom with the flour, which I think was a great complement. However, the cookies were far too flat. They are almost lacy and too delicate. I think the flour ratio is off. My dough was kept very cold, and it did make exactly 24, so it wasn't that.

Bob

Made using the ingredient quantities in the recipe (by weight) and turned out fine. BUT there does seem to be some glitches in the recipe. (1) In Step 3, I there should be something about "rolling out the dough" to some size or thickness, so after sprinkling with cinnamon, you roll up into a log. I chose about 1/4" thick, 6x9" and that worked fine.(2) Rolls of about 1-1/4" to 1-1/2" are sufficient that went sliced 1/4" thick, you will end up with 1-1/2" to 2" cookies - they DO spread.

Leslie VS

OK I found the egg wash use, as I was rolling the dough into logs - suggestion: ingredients list should specify that the egg is for egg wash. I often use powdered egg whites to make a wash, it's economical, and you can thin it out as much or as little as you desire.

Julie

Something went wrong for me with this recipe. The cookies spread and turned out flat. I did not weigh the flour, so that may be the problem. On the bright side the flavor is wonderful so I have decided to throw them in the food processor and use as a cheesecake crust. Wish me luck.

Martha

If 3 people all measured 1 cup flour, each cup would way a completely different amount. We all scoop differently. Some whisk the flour first to aerate it; some inadvertently pack it down. Allison's 1 cup measurement will not weigh the same as Melissa's 1 cup measurement will not weigh the same as King Arthur's 1 cup measurement. Which is why we can all thank god for scales. Just follow the weight, which should be based on the recipe writer's method of measuring.

Chris

I made them exactly per the recipe.I ate them and drank champagne.I am a happy camper. This recipe belongs in the Cookie Hall of Fame. Thank you for sharing!

Flour Girl

Without a moist ingredient (milk, eggs ), granular salt will not melt and evenly distribute. Therefore, salted butter is the preferred fat.

Marsha

Am I missing something? Where are the instructions for toasting the coconut?

RC

I was worried about all the comments about the dough being crumbly, but all that needed to be done is to knead it by hand until the flour is incorporated into the butter/sugar mixture. They are absolutely delicious! Recipe is a keeper.

Lynn

Delicious and beautiful-the coconut, cinnamon swirls and sparkle, buttery, tender, lots of coconut flavor and crunch from the sugar. No problems with the dough. It was very easy to shape and swirl the cinnamon. Used open paper towel cardboard insert cut open to help keep a round shape. I was very careful to make sure the butter was properly softened before beating to super fluffy consistency with the sugars. Also always whisk the flour a bit to lighten it. Amazing and professional quality.

Stephanie

So, I made these and formed into 2 logs. the first log I baked after a couple of hours and the cookies spread like crazy and were lacy. I measured my flour by volume rather than weight. So, for the next roll, I brought back to room temperature and kneaded in some more flour, like 1/4, and some salt b.c. I forgot to add salt and didn't notice the salted butter part..... This roll baked up almost perfect. So, my advice is make sure you have enough flour in your dough - it should be fairly dry.

linda

These cookies are always a huge hit. It takes some fiddling to get the shape of the log just right. I find 1/4” slices make for a good, hefty cookie. However, in my oven to get a nice golden brown I have to up the temperature a little and let them bake for at least 15 mins. After you work out the kinks, these cookies will make you the hit of the cookie swap.

Hocks

Needs more flour

Hocks

Knead the dough to be sure all is well combined and firm

Julie

I used 285 grams of flour bc I was nervous after reading other comments. No spreading at all and wondering if those who had an issue didn’t blend the coconut *into* the batter? And I got 65 1/4 thick cookies from 2 logs. Wayyyyyy more than the 24 suggested. Not a bad thing! Very delicious cookies.

Tom

Excellent recipe! I made this as instructed by weight. That is essential. A recommendation for success is to make this dough the day before, let it firm up in the fridge. I did not have any problem with the dough cracking while cutting it into rounds. The dough did not run while it baked. My only change to this recipe was to increase the baking time to 14/15 minutes. My preference on shortbreads is to have a bit of a snap and crunch. The lower baking time results in a more tender mouth feel.

syd

I was reading the notes before making this. I’ve made the chocolate chunk shortbread version many times. I froze. The dough got approx 15 min once cut, and the shape held up well!

Elle

Listen to the commenter who said to use 326g instead of 255g. The cookies came out perfectly with that ratio.

Kate S.

Mine came out nicely, I think keeping the dough chilled is important for preventing spreading. I took both logs out of the fridge at the same time, but sliced the second one while the first batch was baking, and the second batch definitely spread more.

weigh the flour

So delicious, substituted cardamom for cinnamon and just mixed it in instead of attempting to roll up. Very little spread while baking , I think weighing the flour made a difference - using my usual airate and scoop method the flour amount would have been way off (normal scoop method 2 c = 240g)

Renee

Made these with some slight alterations based on the notes: added an extra 50 g of flour and a 1/4 of cardamom. My "swirl" came out nicely by flattening the dough, sprinkling it on and then rolling up, but even for pure visual experience I'd add a bit more cinnamon and it wouldn't overpower the flavor. I used JustEgg for the egg wash and should have added a bit of water to lighten it up but the coconut did stick well. Took an extra 10 min. with 32 cookies but coconut looked "toasted".

kirk

Wonderful cookie … great crunch, fabulous rich taste, fun to make. Will make again following the weights and instructions as written but will try other flavour combos e.g., orange zest plus cardamom, lemon. This could be the beginning of a beautiful friendship. Thanks

amy

Made exactly as written. Chilled overnight. Baked in the morning. Turned out perfectly. Gone by noon. Yummy.

Tracey

Wish I had read the comments before making! The flat, lacey cookie was not at all what I was looking for. They smell wonderful while baking and folks ate the crumbly mess but for me they were a fail. I will try other shortbread recipes and may attempt this one again, weighing the flour and potentially adding more as others have done.

Kathleen Warnaar

I placed a pinch of coconut under the cookie when arranging to bake. It made the cookie just a bit nicer.

lola

3/12/21. These were very successful. I made the following adjustments:– increased the flour to about 2 cups.– Before I did the refrigeration, once my 2 halves were in a log shape, I rolled them in a little bit of the coconut.– I sliced them to about 3/8 of an inch thick. It required slightly longer baking time – about 13 minutes. They really did not spread at all.– I rarely have salted butter on hand, so I used unsalted and added a little bit of salt in the mixing stage.– I did not eat all of them when they were cool!

Private notes are only visible to you.

Toasted Coconut Shortbread Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to good shortbread? ›

Tips To Make the Best Shortbread Cookies
  • Choose High Quality Butter. No matter what brand of butter you buy, if it's real butter, you can rest assured that it's the best. ...
  • Keep Ingredients Simple. ...
  • Add Flavor. ...
  • Don't Overwork. ...
  • Shape Dough. ...
  • Chill Before Baking. ...
  • Bake Until Golden. ...
  • Add Finishing Touches.

What are common mistakes when making shortbread? ›

The most common mistakes when making shortbread are over-working the dough, and incorporating too much flour. The less you work the dough, the more crumbly and melt-in-your-mouth your shortbread cookies will be.

How to know when shortbread is done? ›

A good way to check to see if the shortbread is baked is to see if they are set - they will be slightly firm around the outside, and may be just beginning to turn golden around the edges. You want to keep them nice and pale so make sure your oven is running at the temperature it says that it is.

Should shortbread be crunchy or soft? ›

Shortbread should always have a tender, melting texture, but be slightly crisp when you bite into it. It should not generally be damp or wet underneath. A classic shortbread recipe will also only have flour, butter and sugar as the ingredients (in a 3:2:1 ratio) and not egg, which could lead to excess moisture.

Should you chill shortbread dough before rolling? ›

Roll out the shortbread dough.

On a lightly floured surface, roll it out to a ½ cm (¼ inch) thick. Note: if the dough is too soft at this point then wrap it in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 10-15 minutes or longer until it firms up slightly and makes it easier to roll out.

Should butter be cold for shortbread? ›

Should butter be cold or room temperature for making shortbread? Always start with cold butter straight from the refrigerator. This will keep the dough from warming up, making it greasy and difficult to roll out.

Why do you put fork holes in shortbread? ›

The word "bread" comes from "biscuit bread" which was made from leftover bread dough that was sweetened and dried out in the oven to make biscuits. Why do you poke holes in shortbread? The holes allow the moisture to escape during baking and more even heat distribution. This helps dry out and crisp up the cookies.

What happens if you put too much butter in shortbread? ›

Here's why: Greasy mess: Extra butter means more fat, making the dough greasy and difficult to handle. Spreading like crazy: Cookies lose their shape, spreading thin and flat instead of staying nice and round. Uneven baking: The excess fat can burn easily on the edges while leaving the center undercooked.

What happens if you don't chill shortbread? ›

6 Ingredient Shortbread Dough

If it's too warm, the butter and sugar cannot properly cream and the cookies will taste dense. Many shortbread recipes call for cold butter worked into the dry ingredients and that gives you a wonderfully flaky cookie but if not mixed properly, the results can be inconsistent.

Why put egg in shortbread? ›

This unexpected addition will make buttery confections like shortbreads and shortcakes even more tender and flaky. “Biscuits should be crumbly, buttery and sweet,” reads a headnote for a cinnamon sugar-spiced shortbread recipe in the Ritz London Cookbook.

Why is my shortbread raw in the middle? ›

If the edges burn and the center is undone, it means the heat didn't have enough time to reach the relatively cool center before the edge was too hot. The temperature gradient depends on the amount of heat from your oven and the size of your cookie - and to some degree on the thermal properties of your cookie sheet.

Why is shortbread difficult to make? ›

Here are some potential reasons and solutions:
  • Ingredient Ratios:Butter: Shortbread relies heavily on butter for its flavor and texture. Make sure you are using the correct ratio of butter to flour. If there is too much flour or too little butter, the dough may be too dry. ...
  • Overmixing:Ove.
Mar 10, 2022

What texture should shortbread dough be? ›

The dough before cooking will be a creme-yellow colour, have a soft and smooth (slightly floury) kind of texture and as it bakes it will hold the colour. The longer it cooks the darker it will get, sort of caramelising the sugars contained in the dough.

What does undercooked shortbread look like? ›

The surface of the shortbread should be a toasty light brown when it is cooked. It should never appear raw or slightly opaque in the middle. If it is under-baked in the middle, it will probably stick in the pan when you go to unmold it.

Can you put undercooked shortbread back in the oven? ›

Originally Answered: Can you put undercooked shortbread back in the oven again after it has cooled? You can but stand the chance of burning it on the outside. Lower the temperature slightly and watch it to make sure it doesn't over do.

What is the difference between Scottish shortbread and regular shortbread? ›

Traditional Scottish shortbread is a simple recipe made with sugar, butter, flour, and salt. Other shortbread styles will include leavening agents like baking powder and baking soda, which makes them crisp instead of crumbly like traditional Scottish shortbread.

What's the difference between Irish shortbread and Scottish shortbread? ›

Irish Shortbread Is Distinct From Scottish Shortbread

Irish shortbread not only sometimes changes up the butter-to-sugar ratio (possibly going with 2/3 a cup of sugar to 1 cup of butter), but also adds cornstarch in place of some of the flour present in the traditional recipe.

How do you keep shortbread from falling apart? ›

Start with a teaspoon of fat and mix your dough well. If the dough is still falling apart, you can keep adding more in small increments. And at the end of the day, you can always add a little bit of water as well if your shortbread still hasn't formed a cohesive dough.

How to make shortbread more crumbly? ›

This technique, Potlicker Kitchen shares, comes from Hungarian culinary tradition. Instead of pressing the dough into a pan, Hungarian shortbread instead is formed by layering the shreds of frozen dough and spreading jam in between. The result is a shortbread with a more crumbly texture.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jamar Nader

Last Updated:

Views: 5899

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (55 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jamar Nader

Birthday: 1995-02-28

Address: Apt. 536 6162 Reichel Greens, Port Zackaryside, CT 22682-9804

Phone: +9958384818317

Job: IT Representative

Hobby: Scrapbooking, Hiking, Hunting, Kite flying, Blacksmithing, Video gaming, Foraging

Introduction: My name is Jamar Nader, I am a fine, shiny, colorful, bright, nice, perfect, curious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.