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Shortbread is buttery finale to any picnic

One variation on the classic butter-rich recipe for shortbread is chocolate-cayenne with cocoa, espresso powder and cayenne pepper. Other variations include orange zest with chopped pistachios and butterscotch flavors.

Picnic desserts are simpler desserts.

Humidity keeps us from puffy meringues, and heat denies any flourless chocolate goo-fests or sweets best kept chilled until served. There are fewer frostings and drizzles and fuss.

Fruit often gets center stage, especially when foods need to withstand a certain amount of jostling until the blanket is spread.

Still, even fruit needs a cookie. But not the usual run of crinkle-doodle-snapper-chipper-roos that gets us through the school year.

Summer is for shortbread.

The recipe is simplicity itself: flour, sugar and butter in the right proportions. Which means, to be honest, butter, flour and sugar.

The “short” means that the amount of flour seems scant compared with most cookies. You want just enough to hold the mixture together.

Nor should the flour bring any muscle to the beach party. Shortbread calls for basic all-purpose, and even some of that is replaced with even finer rice flour for the most delicate texture possible. (Save the whole wheat for the burger buns.)

Shortbread dough is barely dough, as well. Small chunks of butter are beaten with the flour and sugar until the mixture looks like fine meal. Pinch it, and it will hold together, but you don't want to mix until it becomes a cohesive dough.

Press it into a pan with the back of a spoon or a flat-bottomed glass. Too much handling will soften the butter and make the shortbread more firm and less tender.

We're indebted to “Baking Illustrated,” from the editors of Cook's Illustrated magazine, for several tips that we found spot-on for success.

Among them: Cut a small round from the center of the pan of dough. This ensures that the shortbread bakes through before the outer edges become overbaked and dry. We used a 1½-inch cookie cutter, but you could also cut out a round with a sharp knife.

(This nugget, baked on a folded piece of aluminum foil for half the usual time, becomes the baker's treat.)

Shortbread is distinctive for scored lines meant to ease the final cutting into pieces. The Cook's Illustrated folks found that this is better done after 20 minutes of baking.

Remove the pan from the oven, then gently press lines into the now-softer dough, poking a few decorative holes with a skewer if desired, then continue baking.

Still, in later cutting the shortbread pieces into smaller servings, we found that each fantail could easily be halved with steady downward pressure of a large knife, without the benefit of any scoring lines. So, your call.

Also your call: Go with the classic butter-forward recipe, or try some of our variations. We added cocoa, espresso powder and cayenne pepper to a batch, orange zest and chopped pistachios to another and swapped in brown sugar for white sugar in yet another, topping that with a bit of coarse Hawaiian salt. Delish.

Final selling points: Tender shortbread is surprisingly transportable, and its texture actually improves with a day's “ripening,” making it an ideal make-ahead treat, keeping summer even simpler.

Makes 16 pieces.Note: Rice flour usually is in the supermarket baking aisle.1¾ cup all-purpose flourquarter-cup rice flour (or use cornstarch)two-thirds cup plus 1 teaspoon sugar, dividedquarter-teaspoon salt16 tablespoons (2 sticks) cold unsalted butterPreheat oven to 425 degrees. Move an oven rack to the middle position.Place a circle of parchment paper in a 9-inch tart pan with removable bottom, or in a round cake pan.In the bowl of an electric mixer, blend the flours, 2/3 cup sugar and salt. Cut the butter into half-inch cubes and add to the flour mixture. Mix at low speed for several minutes until the mixture resembles damp crumbs. Don’t overmix.Pour half the mixture into the prepared pan, smooth into an even layer, then firmly press with a juice glass or back of a spoon. Add the rest of the mixture and repeat, pressing firmly.If using a cake pan, place a baking sheet on top of the pan, then invert. Tap the bottom of the pan until the dough releases, then carefully lift off pan and remove parchment. If the dough cracks a bit, press back together. (If it crumbles a lot, repeat the process; for this reason, a tart pan is preferred.)With a 1½-inch cookie cutter or a sharp knife, cut a circle of dough from the center. Place this nugget on a folded piece of aluminum foil to bake for 20 minutes. Replace cookie cutter in the hole to hold its shape and help conduct heat. (Or use a small ball of crumpled aluminum foil.)Place pan in the oven and reduce heat to 300 degrees. Bake for 20 minutes.Remove pan (and tiny cookie) and, using the edge of a spatula, gently score the surface into 16 wedges. If desired, pierce a decorative pattern with a skewer.Return pan to oven (eat the cookie) and bake an additional 40 minutes.Sprinkle surface of hot shortbread with remaining 1 teaspoon of sugar, then cool on a wire rack for an hour. Remove from tart pan and cool thoroughly, about 2 more hours. Cut into wedges with a large knife along scored lines using steady downward pressure. Well-wrapped shortbread can be stored at room temperature for up to one week.<b>Variations</b>Chocolate-cayenne: Decrease all-purpose flour to 1½ cups, and substitute cocoa for the remaining quarter-cup. Add rice flour, sugar and salt, along with 1 teaspoon espresso powder and 1 teaspoon cayenne pepper. Proceed with the recipe, omitting sprinkle of sugar.Orange-pistachio: To the flour mixture, add the grated zest of 1 orange and a half-cup fine-chopped pistachios. Proceed with the recipe.Butterscotch: Substitute brown sugar for the white sugar. Proceed with the recipe. After pressing into the pan, sprinkle with about 1/2 teaspoon coarse salt. (We used pink Hawaiian.) Omit final sprinkle of sugar.Source: “Baking Illustrated”

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