Speculoos - the spiced biscuits from our Eurovison, these are belgian biscuits
The recipe is exactly what is written on this blog post
Ingredients
140g butter at room temperature
80g caster sugar
120g dark brown sugar
4g four spices
270g plain flour
3g baking soda
2g salt
1 egg
1-2 tbsp water
In
the bowl of your Kitchen Aid, work the butter with the paddle until
creamy and airy, add both sugars and keep on working the dough until
well combined. Mix together the flour, spices, salt and baking soda and
add them to the mix. When the dough is homogeneous, add the egg and
eventually a little water.
Unlike cookie dough, the
Speculoos dough will be very soft and hard to get together. With a
serving spoon, drop it on a piece of cling film and fold it in then put
it in the freezer for 2 hours.
Once the dough is firm,
preheat your oven to 150° C (300°F) then line the dough on parchment
paper or silicon mat into a square or rectangular shape 2mm thick.
If
you have trouble lining your dough, cover it with a piece of cling film
at least the size of your baking tray. This way, the dough won’t stick
to your rolling pin, you’ll just have to remove it delicately once the
dough is properly lined.
Bake it for 20 minutes.
When
you take it out of the oven, the dough is still soft when you press it
with your finger. It’s normal and it will be very helpful as it will
allow you to cut the biscuits.
Use a sharp long knife and start cutting the biscuits.
You
can also use star, heart, animals cutters if you want to have more fun.
In that case, keep all the leftovers in an airtight box. You can use
them to replace Digestive biscuits in your Cheesecake base!
Let them cool down and enjoy them the way you like them!
A couple of notes.
The recipe calls for four spices which is a french spice mix called quatre epices.
I made this up myself using white pepper, cinnamon, nutmeg, ground
ginger, allspice and cloves in a ratio of about 4:2:2:2:2:1. First time I
didn't believe the recipe when it said I needed the 4g of spice the
first time I made them but I would say you need that if not slightly
more.
The dough is quite tricky to handle and seemed to
break a lot when rolling out. I cut it into pieces before baking rather
that marking and breaking after the fact as suggested in the blog post
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