How To Make Biscotti

<p>Shannon W.</p> "A simply beautiful Christmas cookie!"

Shannon W.

"A simply beautiful Christmas cookie!"

These crunchy Italian cookies are easy to make, but require a bit of special handling. Biscotti are baked twice: once as a log, and again as individual slices.

Before Baking

  • Line your baking sheets with parchment paper.

  • Mix your dough, adding "extras" of your choice: toasted nuts, chocolate, or dried fruit. Common flavors are anise, orange, almond, and hazelnut.

  • The dough will be sticky; wetting your hands before forming the loaves will help you shape them without having to add more flour.

  • Form biscotti loaves as big or small as you like—create dainty little tea cookies or jumbo dunking-sized coffee companions.

<p>Eunice Ee (Eunique Physio)</p>

Eunice Ee (Eunique Physio)

Slicing Made Simple

After the first bake, the biscotti loaves should be firm and very lightly browned, but not hard.

  • Loaves are ready to cut when you can touch them without burning yourself. It's easier to cut them while they're still warm.

  • Use a long serrated knife—especially if you have nuts or dried fruit in your biscotti. A bread knife will allow you to slice neatly through the loaves without using too much pressure.

  • Slice on the diagonal for long biscotti or straight across for shorter ones.

<p>this_baker at Adobe Stock Photos</p>

this_baker at Adobe Stock Photos

The Crunch

Time for bake number two: the point of this second baking is to dry out the biscotti without browning them too much, so a low oven temperature and a slow baking time are key.

  • Arrange the cookies on their bottom edges on the baking sheet for better air circulation.

  • For softer cookies, simply bake them for a little less time than the recipe specifies. For biscotti that can stand up to dunking, bake until they are as crunchy as you like.

<p>ecwoodroof</p>

ecwoodroof

Beautify Your Biscotti

Once the cookies have cooled, you can decorate them: try drizzling them with one or several kinds of melted chocolate, or dip them in chocolate then roll them in chopped nuts.

<p>sylvia</p>

sylvia

Pictured: Biscotti

Ready to bake? Let's get started!

Here are a few of our top-rated biscotti recipes.

1) Cranberry-Pistachio Biscotti

"This is the cookie recipe I make a couple times a month. It is so easy, perfect as written or adaptable to other nuts." – LaurSavvy

<p>Rob Tanner</p>

Rob Tanner

View Recipe

2) Chef John's Almond Biscotti

"I have been making this recipe for the last few years and [it's] became a Christmas staple in my home. Easy and delicious." – gm5t2x7vjr

<p>Chef John</p>

Chef John

View Recipe

3) Anise-Walnut Biscotti

"This recipe was given to me by my Grandmother Nancy (Saccuzzo). She was a great little Italian Nana. Enjoy with your favorite red wine or coffee." – Michele Flannery

<p>Amy Marlin</p>

Amy Marlin

View Recipe

4) Chocolate Cherry Biscotti

"These are one of my favorites. I make them every holiday season. They are great for mailing and keep for weeks!" – Jennifer Wall

<p>Holiday Baker</p>

Holiday Baker

View Recipe

5) Brownie Biscotti

"I have made this many, many times, and love having these around the house to have with coffee." – Rob Squizzero

<p>PIXXYDUST</p>

PIXXYDUST

View Recipe

More Cookies To Try

Read the original article on All Recipes.