Rum Raisin Shortbread Cookies

My father used to eat, or rather devour, a rum raisin bread pudding that his mother made. When I came across this particular cookie, it spoke of his favorite flavors all folded together with a bit of butter. Who was I not to make it? I am not a hard sell when it comes to new recipes, and this one I adopted from the June 2007 Martha Stewart cookie of the month. The biggest difference? Mine has more rummy raisins and much larger pinches of orange zest. I am by no means a skimper.

So I made it. Actually, I made two ‘logs’ of cookies which for me is an inroads to another make-ahead treat. One log I sliced according to directions, and the other waited in the fridge a few days so I could slice and slide it onto a platter at just the right moment.

Even better? You can make a log to eat, and freeze one for later.

My beloved sister-in-law said she would drive across town for these. I assume she meant her town which is Vancouver B.C., Canada. If she were to drive to my oven door for these it would add another 3 1/2 hours to her trip. Though if she came, I would no doubt have these waiting for her…

Rum Raisin Cookies
1/2 cup dark rum
1 cup dried currants (or raisins)
2 sticks room temperature butter
3/4 cup confectioners sugar
2 T orange zest, finely grated
2 tsp vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups flour
3/4 cup shredded coconut, unsweetened
1 1/2 tsp coarse salt

Combine rum and currants, cover and let stand at room temperature overnight. Drain, reserving 2 T rum. Beat butter, sugar, zest with mixer until smooth, , salt. 2 minutes. Add vanilla and rum; beat to combine. On low speed add flour, coconut, salt. Stir in currants. Form dough into 2 logs, 1 1/2 inches in diameter. Wrap in parchment and refrigerate for 1 hour or up to 3 days. Or freeze for a few months. Heat oven to 325; slice dough into 1/4 inch rounds, line on baking sheet and bake 20 minutes or until just golden.

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Comments

Jen July 16, 2007 6:03 am

Those look amazing - there are all sorts of wonderful flavors in them! I love icebox cookies. It makes you feel like the perfect hostess when you can just whip out fabulous cookies at a moments notice. They’re a real ego boost for me :)

Easy Cookie Recipe July 16, 2007 9:27 am

Just the name of the cookie makes it sound delicious. The picture helps too. Some of th old fashion tastes come full circle and become the new fashion.

Jennifer July 16, 2007 16:33 pm

Ohhh man. Rum…cookies. YUM.

janelle July 17, 2007 8:23 am

Jen: I am all about ego boosts in the kitchen:).

Easy Cookie Recipe: thanks, I love interesting cookies and bygone flavors revived!

Jennifer: smiling here…

Rosa July 17, 2007 9:03 am

Great! They must be delicious and gorgeously flavored!

LG July 18, 2007 6:57 am

I was googling for blogs about tomatoes and came across yours. Thought you might be interested in hearing about a tasty tomato that Critical Miami blogged about earlier this week. Could make for good fodder for one of your upcoming posts (or recipes):

http://www.criticalmiami.com/2007/07/17/ugly-tomato

Kristen July 20, 2007 6:57 am

Aren’t those lovely?They look really good!

brilynn July 20, 2007 10:30 am

Whenever I put a log of dough in the freezer, I end up eating half of it before I ever get it into the oven… I like frozen dough.

annie July 20, 2007 11:15 am

I’m allergic to chocolate and nuts, so it’s always a treat to find a dessert (particularly cookies which I LOVE) that has neither. Thanks!

Ginger July 25, 2007 10:49 am

Anything with rum and coconut sounds good to me! Freezing dough in logs is a great trick that I use too. Lucky us, it is now tomato season. I have been reading your blog for a while now and tomatoes are one of my staples too. I just ran out of my canned tomatoes in time for the first tomatoes in the garden.

Patricia Scarpin August 1, 2007 11:08 am

Janelle, the cookies look so good! And slice and bake cookies are so easy. Great recipe!

Dana August 29, 2007 17:56 pm

Hi. Thank you for creating this blog. I want to ask you a question about this recipe. My cookies flattened. They did not hold their thickness at all. Also, the bottoms burned and the rest took a while to cook through. (I am a novice baker…I don’t even own an electric mixer). Would you have any advice for me?

janelle August 31, 2007 19:14 pm

Rosa: definitely a treat:)

LG: thanks for the link!

Kristen: thanks:). Shall I email one to you?

Brilynn: LOL, my sister made my mom chocolate cookie dough for her birthday. It was intended to be eaten as dough and never hit the oven. Isn’t that hilarious?

Annie: good! I hope you try them!

Ginger: thanks for commenting, it’s nice to know who is out there:). Still time for tomatoes!

Patricia: Yes, I really need to make them again soon…

Dana: Anyone? I am so not a pro; but if my flattened I would add extra flour…

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