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Main › Drink & Food › Oven Cooked Food
 

The Origin of Shortbread

 

Author: Ann Zuccardy

The name "shortbread" comes from shortening, the primary ingredient in this dessert that was once reserved for Christmas but is now enjoyed on any and every occasion. Like many traditional desserts, shortbread has been with us for centuries. Ancient records trace this simply prepared, yet rich and satisfying sweet cookie as far back as Medeival and Elizabethan Times.

In all likelihood, an early version of shortbread was first prepared by the lower class European dairy farmers of ancient times, who made butter a part of their daily consumption long before the noblemen would deem it acceptable fare. In those times, shortbread had yet to earn its name and was actually made with oat flour instead of wheat flour as it is today.

Some say that Queen Elizabeth was the first to popularize the partaking of shortbread and other sweet morsels with afternoon tea. As the story goes, the Queen had a yen for tea and a light dessert one day, ordering her servants to prepare a tray that she could enjoy alone in her private sitting room. Queen Elizabeth took such a liking to this ritual that she soon began inviting guests to indulge along with her, and "afternoon tea and cookies" went on to become an English tradition.

While Queen Liz may have immortalized the tea-and-cookies ritual, Scotland took credit for the shortbread recipe, hence the label "Traditional Scottish Shortbread" that's used by so many modern-day shortbread companies. The famous shortbread recipe traveled along with the many Anglo Europeans who migrated to the States... and went on to become a New England favorite.

Next time you feel like raising a tea cup to your European heritage, why not do it with a bit of authentic shortbread from the Vermont Shortbread Company.

Copyright 2006 Vermont Shortbread Company. All rights reserved. This article provided by Wordfeeder.com Copywriting and Marketing Services.

Author Bio:

Ann Zuccardy

Simmer two decades of professional writing experience with a dash of creative, independent spirit, blend together with love and imagination and bake slowly. That's what Ann Zuccardy did when she launched Vermont Shortbread Company back in 1996.

Ann altered a traditional Scottish shortbread recipe to produce a slightly moister version of this age-old favorite. The result: one-of-a-kind, melt-in-your-mouth Vermont Shortbread that hints of old-world authenticity even as it pleases the American soft-cookie-loving palate.

Surrender to the ecstacy that is Vermont Shortbread... crumbles of cookie goodness bursting with creamery butter that will more than satisfy your yen for "a little something" with your afternoon tea.

When Ann's not in her bakery inventing new shortbread flavors, she bakes with words. Ann enjoys a long and successful career as a freelance writer covering a buffet of topics from high tech software documentation to copywriting and food writing.

You can also reach this article by using: baked squash dishes, side dishes for baked ham, baked egg dishes, fast food baked potato
 
 
 

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