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Sicilian pistachio cookies

Updated: Thu, 2 March, 2023

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Sicilian pistachio cookies are like macarons made with pistachio nuts instead of almonds. Utterly delightful.

sicilian pistachio cookies cuisinefiend.com

Mystery recipe

The upside: this recipe is so easy I could remember it well enough to replicate, having seen it only once.

The downside: no idea WHERE I saw it so can’t reference the source. If you recognise the recipe and want to claim the ownership, authorship and patents pending, be my guest.

These biscuits are no doubt Sicilian; those southernmost Italians practically live on pistachios, almonds and chestnuts. Various Sicilian dolci use no other flour but ground nuts of one type or another.

I somehow don’t think they are all trying to be gluten free (gluten free pizza: just IMAGINE); it’s as incidental here as in arancini.

sicilian pistachio macarons cuisinefiend.com

Sicily, home of the best pistachios

Sicilians are the proud producers of the tastiest, organically grown greenies.

They are nowhere near the largest exporter of the nuts but the ones farmed in the Sicilian province of Catania are DOP labelled and protected by the police during harvest time – it’s not a joke.

For us, living well north of Palermo, pistachios are expensive. Therefore I don’t imagine you or I should be making these cookies every week, but as an occasional treat they are outstanding.

pistachios cuisinefiend.com

How to make the Sicilian cookies

This is an Italian take on macaron biscuits, with pistachios replacing almonds.

The principle is the same if you’re familiar with macarons. Equal amounts of pistachios and sugar are blitzed together, then worked into a paste with egg white and lemon juice.

blitzing pistachios cuisinefiend.com

The small addition of plain flour is there to stop the biscuits from spreading too much during baking but if you want to keep them gluten free, replace it with an appropriate mix.

So far, so pretty: they are fun to make, a bit like rolling balls of pesto, and they look adorable raw.

They should be coated in icing sugar before baking and, optionally, decorated with a whole pistachio kernel pressed into the middle of each one.

shaping pistachio cookies cuisinefiend.com

Baking the Sicilian macarons

They don’t look quite as pretty when baked. They spread quite obscenely, the decorative pistachio atop each cookie turns ugly brown colour, and the icing sugar coating tends to evaporate somewhat.

I won’t blame you if you feel disappointed when pulling a tray of the cookies out of the oven after about ten minutes of baking.

Don’t lose heart though, because looks don’t matter – taste does, it’s proven again.

They are about the second best thing you can do with egg whites, nuts and sugar. They rank high up, close to madeleines, financières, said macarons, tuiles and croquants.

Just make sure you let them cool down completely before as much as touching them, or else they might disintegrate. They’ll set as they cool, and then can be transferred to an airtight jar.

italian pistachio biscuits cuisinefiend.com

More pistachio recipes

Cherry and pistachio tart inspired by Ottolenghi’s recipe. The base is shortcrust, the filling is pistachio frangipane made with pistachio paste which saves the bother of grinding pistachios – and the outcome is pure baking ecstasy.

Pistachio lemon shortbread bars. NY Times recipe for nutty shortcrust base and tangy lemon curd topping filled with more pistachios.

Lime yoghurt pistachio cake with lime and rosewater syrup drizzled all over it: I swear there isn't a better cake made with yoghurt. Or lime. Or pistachios.

More Italian biscuit recipes

Gingerbread biscotti spiced with Christmas flavour, crunchy and dunkable, with mixed nuts and cinnamon sugar coating. Honey and spice and a festive spirit twice cooked!

Italian ricotta cookies, soft and tender lemon biscuits made with ricotta cheese and butter. These Italian lemon ricotta biscuits, or biscotti alla ricotta, are just like Nonna’s.

Ricciarelli, almond shaped and almond flavoured biscuits from Siena, traditionally made and gifted for Christmas. An authentic recipe for these delightful marzipan sweets.

sicilian pistachio biscuits cuisinefiend.com



Sicilian pistachio cookies

Servings: makes 12 cookiesTime: 40 minutes

INGREDIENTS

  • 150g (1 cup) raw pistachio kernels
  • 150g (23 cup) caster sugar
  • 12 tbsp. plain flour
  • zest grated from 1 lemon
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice
  • 1 egg white
  • icing sugar, for coating


METHOD

1. Place the pistachios in a blender or food processor with the flour and 2 tbsp of the sugar. Blitz to fine powder.

2. Add the remaining sugar and process to mix. Pour the mix into a large bowl, add the lemon zest, juice and the egg white, and mix it well with a spoon to a smooth paste. Chill for about 15 minutes.

3. Preheat the oven to 200C/400F/gas 6. Line a large baking sheet with parchment.

4. Shape the chilled mix with wet hands into balls roughly the size of a golf ball. Dip each in the icing sugar to coat thoroughly and place on the prepared sheet. Leave plenty of space between the cookies as they spread a lot.

5. Bake for 10 minutes; leave them on the sheet to cool, otherwise they’ll disintegrate at the touch. Lift them with a palette knife when cold. Keep in an airtight container.

Originally published: Mon, 14 January, 2019


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Hello! I'm Anna Gaze, the Cuisine Fiend. Welcome to my recipe collection.

I have lots of recipes for you to choose from: healthy or indulgent, easy or more challenging, quick or involved - but always tasty.


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