Galettes Bretonnes | French Butter Biscuits
Galettes Bretonnes are sweet and salty golden butter biscuits from Brittany, France. They are easily made with salted butter, sugar, egg yolk, vanilla and flour and are a delight to eat anytime. You may bake with love and gift your loved ones during this holiday season! :-)
Guess what! But First Chai turned 6 today! Also, my mummy is with me! :-)
Happy 6th Birthday But First Chai! I should say this blog received its momentum only starting 2019 and Alhamdulillah, it is getting better since then. Thank you from my heart to each of you who trust my recipes, read and share my blog since my Life in Yanbu days! I am here because of you - I know sounds cliché but that's the truth, right?
You should know that I currently have a total of 288 posts of which 234 are recipes, which obviously makes it a food blog that showcases my family favourites. For last year's blog birthday, I had shared my all-time favourite ripe plantains recipe and the year before that I had shared F's favourite Shami Kebabs! Check my HBD tag for all the previous blog anniversary posts. So for today's occasion of "sticking with this space for six long years", I am sharing my love for Galettes Bretonnes - no, not the savoury stuffed crepes that google will throw when you search but the popular French Salted Butter Sablés from Brittany.
The first time I saw Galettes Bretonnes was on Linda's Instagram page in late October 2020. Unlike my million other must-try "saves" and "Pins", I had my eye on this one and wanted to bake a batch immediately. Linda was super kind to share the salted butter biscuits recipe with measurements via dm. I did not even have a cookie-cutter when I attempted them for the first time. I quickly googled to find out more about the biscuits or is this cookie?
I made a batch in my "baking-biscuits-challenged" kitchen and almost hated myself for not sticking to the recipe. I was a mess, the kitchen counter was a mess, but the biscuits made it to the oven perfectly shaped. That was half a battle won! For the next 15 minutes, I was doing the dishes while getting heady with vanilla aroma permeating my home. The perfectly shaped biscuits are baked into shining golden goodies! If well thought through, this is super easy to make but make sure to use the best quality ingredients for the real taste!
First batch where I used a tumbler to cut the cookies |
These salted biscuits are so easily addictive that you just cannot stop with one. We devoured the entire batch in the next few days. I then placed an order on amazon for the scalloped cookie cutter to make another pretty batch of Galettes Bretonnes for my brother and family. We planned to travel to Sharjah over the weekend of November 19th to meet his newborn baby boy and also to bring my mummy to Abu Dhabi!
Obstacles and Solutions from the first attempt
- I used my hand whisk to whisk the softened butter and sugar - but it just kept getting trapped inside the whisk and tested my patience to edge. So wiped clean the whisk and then used my handheld electric whisk for the work.
- I tried to roll the chilled dough on a floured surface and used a tumbler to cut out the cookie shapes. It was hard to pick and transfer without losing its shape. I had to collect it all into a dough again and put it back to chill again. I then, Googled "how to roll cookie dough" and found Sally's method of rolling and then chilling. Genius.
- I didn't have silicone sheets nor wanted to spend my baking paper! So used my wooden plank and baking paper or zip lock bag on top to roll the dough.
Ingredients for Galettes Bretonnes Biscuits
- Butter: Traditionally beurre salé (salted butter, with sea salt flakes) is used to make these biscuits. You may be lucky to find them in supermarkets like Carrefour or Spinneys but I had Sel de Mer (coarse sea salt) with me, so crushed some in a mortar and used it.
- Sugar: I have used fine-grain white granulated sugar. You may use vanilla sugar if you have that and if you don't have vanilla bean.
- Vanilla extract: I have used the paste of one vanilla bean. Try not to use too much vanilla extract liquid as it alters the dough consistency. If you used vanilla sugar, then a dash of extract would be more than enough. If you don't have access to pure vanilla extract or vanilla paste or bean, then use the artificial essence as the last resort.
- Salt: If you can't find beurre salé or fleur de sel or sel de mer, then skip and use regular salted butter with a pinch of salt.
- Egg yolk: Use a large egg's yolk. You need 2 for this recipe. One for the dough and one for coating.
- Flour: You need plain flour aka maida or all-purpose flour.
How to make Galettes Bretonnes or salted butter biscuits of Brittany!
- Prepare the biscuit dough and chill for 15 minutes
- Roll the dough and chill for 15 minutes (repeat with remaining dough)
- Cut out the biscuits in the desired shape (repeat with remaining dough)
- Coat each cookie with egg yolk and chill for a few minutes and repeat one more time (15 mins)
- Draw lines with a fork on each biscuit and bake the batch for 15 minutes
Do keep the plastic or paper on it |
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Second and third batch with fluted cookie cutter |
Galettes Bretonnes Recipe | Breton Biscuits | French Butter Biscuits Recipe
INGREDIENTS
- 90gms salted or unsalted butter softened to room temperature
- 60gms fine granulated sugar (approx 1/4 cup)
- 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract or pulp one vanilla bean
- 2gms of sel de mer, crushed (skip if using salted butter)
- 1 large egg's yolk
- 150gms all-purpose flour (approx 1 cup)
- 1 large egg's yolk for brushing
INSTRUCTIONS
- Add the softened butter, sugar, vanilla and salt to a large bowl and use an electric whisk to cream the mixture. Add the egg yolk and whisk again until combined.
- Stir in the flour until no dry flour is visible and resembles a crumbly texture. Use your fingers and bring them together to form a soft dough. Do not over knead.
- Flatten to a disc shape and cling wrap the dough. Refrigerate for at least 20 minutes.
- Lightly dust the wooden plank with some flour, place the dough and keep a baking paper or ziplock bag over the dough.
- Start to roll the dough evenly to a thickness of 1/4 inch. Refrigerate the rolled out dough for 15 minutes along with the plank. You may roll between two silicone sheets and refrigerate the whole thing.
- Take out the chilled rolled out dough and remove the baking paper or ziplock-bag off the dough.
- Use a cookie cutter and cut as many as you can. Remove the cut-out biscuits carefully using an offset spatula or butter knife to slide underneath and transfer them to a lined baking tray. (watch the video)
- Bring together the remaining left out dough and roll again, chill again, cut into shapes again. Repeat until all of the dough is used. You may have to keep the cutout cookie/biscuits refrigerated until you have a batch ready to bake.
- Brush the top of each biscuit with whisked egg yolk and let it dry for a few minutes before coating a second time.
- Chill until the yolk coat is dried or for about 10 to 15 minutes meanwhile preheat the oven to 180℃
- Use a fork to draw a line pattern over each cookie.
- Place the tray of biscuits in the middle rack of the preheated oven and bake for 12 to 15 minutes or until golden. If your oven has hot spots, rotate the baking sheet halfway through bake time.
- Remove from the oven and let it cool in the tray itself. Store in an airtight tin container and serve Galettes Bretonnes with tea or coffee.
Oh these are just perfect! I have eaten many in my day and these are perfect! I will have to try these.
ReplyDeletePs I love the teapot!
ReplyDeleteThank you! This one is from Home Center. Are you who I think you are?
DeleteYes! I will send you an email :)
DeleteI tried to bake these cookies and they turned out very delicious. I super loved the crumbly and buttery and not so sweet flavor of these cookies. I’ve double the recipe and it was perfect. Very easy to make as well. I will definitely bake it again. Thank you for the recipe^^
ReplyDeleteI am doing a happy dance. Thank you, Ann!
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