Recipes>Biscuit Recipes
The Biscuiteers’ Easy Vanilla Button Biscuits
Makes 24-30
Want to bake like the Bicuiteers? Try out their cute button biscuit recipe. This is a great bake to practise your icing skills.
Discover more delicious Afternoon Tea recipes
Delicate treats for an elegant afternoon spread
Introduction
This is the Biscuiteers’ easy vanilla biscuit recipe, used to make their popular biscuits in the Biscuiteers bakery every day. If you can’t find vanilla bean paste, then you can use vanilla extract.
Tags
Ingredients
| 350g | plain flour |
|---|---|
| 100g | self-raising flour |
| 125g | granulated sugar |
| 125g | salted butter softened, diced |
| 125g | golden syrup |
| 1 tsp | vanilla bean paste |
| 1 | large egg lightly beaten |
| Flood icing: | |
| 4 | egg whites |
| 900g | icing sugar |
| A little bit of water | |
| A food colour paste of your choice (we’ve used red) | |
| A squeezy bottle or plastic icing bag |
Method
To Make the Biscuits:
Sift the flours together into a mixing bowl, add the sugar and mix well.
Add the butter. Using just the tips of your fingers, rub the ingredients together until the mixture resembles fine breadcrumbs.
When all the butter is evenly mixed in, make a well in the centre and add the syrup and the egg.
Mix well, drawing in any of the flour left at the side of the bowl, and stop as soon as a ball has formed. Cut out a circle shape for your buttons.
Bake in the oven for 15-25 minutes depending on the size of your biscuits at 170°C, or until golden brown.
To Ice Your Button Biscuits:
Whilst your biscuits are cooling, it’s time make up your icing.
Combine all the ingredients in a mixing bowl, starting with the liquids first.
Add the dry ingredients and whisk or beat for about 5 minutes if using an electric beater or whisk, or for longer if using a wooden spoon. Whisk slowly to start with to avoid clouds of icing sugar covering you and your kitchen!
Continue whisking until the ingredients form a thick, smooth paste that is bright white in colour and has the consistency of toothpaste. Your line icing should be the consistency of toothpaste and your flood icing a little runnier– you just need to add a bit of water slowly to the basic recipe to get the right consistency. Add in the food colour paste you want, we’ve used red.
Using your red line icing, outline the shape of the circular biscuit.
Then using your flood icing, slowly flood the frame of your biscuit. Don’t add too much as it will spill out of the sides of the biscuit.
Put the biscuits in the oven on a baking tray, set the oven to the lowest temperature it can go (usually around 50°C) for 40 minutes.
To finish use the white line icing to create a smaller circle (see above) and then use red icing for the buttonhole details.
Find more How to ice guides on the Biscuiteers’ blog or see their beautiful Beatrix Potter biscuit collection here: http://www.biscuiteers.com/shop/biscuits/beatrix-potter-biscuits
Reviews
Have you tried this recipe? Let us know how it went by leaving a comment below.
Cancel reply
Your review
Name *
Our team will respond to any queries as soon as we can - this may take longer over weekends. You do not need to resubmit your comment.
Please note: Moderation is enabled and may delay your comment being posted. There is no need to resubmit your comment. By posting a comment you are agreeing to the website Terms of Use .
Be the first to leave a review
Ingredients
Method
More Afternoon Tea Recipes
View all
Nigella Lawson’s Banana Bread
by Nigella Lawson from How To Be A Domestic Goddess
Nigella Lawson’s Brownies
by Nigella Lawson from How To Be A Domestic Goddess
More Biscuit Recipes
View all
Spiced Almond Biscuits – Spekulatius
by Anja Dunk from Advent
Philip Khoury’s Macadamia Shortbread
by Philip Khoury from Beyond Baking
More Family Friendly Recipes
View all
The Batch Lady’s Roast Turkey
by The Batch Lady from The Batch Lady Saves Christmas
Cinnamon Stars – Zimtsterne
by Anja Dunk from Advent
Get our latest recipes, features, book news and ebook deals straight to your inbox every week