Cantuccini alle mandorle

Mmmm, yummicini
“Cantu, Cantuccini,
Cantu, Cantuccini,
DON’T call us biscotti,
They are all biscotti,
But we are,
Cantuccini,
And we are yummy,
Yummi, Yummicini.”
Mmmmm, we love you Yummicini.
Now picture if you will, deli and cafe owners all over Europe and the US rubbing their hands with glee, and calling out in unison:
“Thank you cantucinni, you look so artisinal and hard to make, and you smell and taste so good. Now we can charge people whatever we like knowing that they have to have you, and that they will not realise your simplicity and make you at home. We can put one of you on a little plate next to coffee and double our prices.”
Well, I am sorry deli and cafe owners of the world but I know how easy it is to bake cantuccini, and mine taste better than those in most of your coffee shops, and I am going to share my secrets with the world!
Cantucci, Cantuccini, or Biscotti?
Biscotti is a blanket term which either covers all biscuits, or all twice baked biscuits, depending on who you ask. Since cantucinni are baked twice, they are biscotti whatever definition you choose, but so are other cookies.
The only difference between cantucci and cantuccini is the size of the biscuits. A cantuccini should be a mouthful, anythiing bigger is a cantucci.
Notes on ingredients
You will find recipes for cantuccini that contain additional ingredients like saffron and fennel seeds. There is no real reason not to add them, but I love these in just their simplest form.
The only thing I add that may not be strictly traditional is a little bit of vanilla sugar. I throw in a couple of teaspoons, removing an equal amount of the normal sugar from the recipe.
The key ingredient is obviously the almonds, and the only important thing is that they should still be in their skins. Any that have very broken or missing skin discard before you start.
Let’s bake!
Ingredients
- 400g white flour
- 250g white sugar
- 3 eggs
- 3 yolks
- 200g whole almonds (with skins)
- 10g baking powder
- Vanilla sugar (optional)
- Pinch of salt
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Put the oven on to heat up at 200°C.
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Put all of the ingredients except for the almonds into a bowl and mix them together well.
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When everything is well mixed add the almonds and give them another quick mix. Don’t be too vigorous or you will separate the skin from the almonds (which you really don’t want to do).
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Form it into a doughy ball and scrape it out on to a lightly floured worksurface.
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Divide the dough into four equalish parts and roll each one into a sausage shape slightly shorter than the tray you are going to bake them on.
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Put the sausages onto a lined baking tray, taking care not to put them too close to each other or to the edges of the tray (they will expand more than you think they will), and press down on each one gently with the palm of your hand to flatten them slightly.
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Brush the tops with egg yolk and bake them for 20-25 minutes, until they are a golden brown.
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Take them out and leave them to cool for about ten minutes. While they are cooling, reduce the oven temperature to 150°C.
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Cut your logs on a slight diagonal into slices about 1cm thick.
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Transfer your cantuccini back to the baking tray with a cut side facing upwards, and bake them again until they look well toasted.
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Leave them to cool down and enjoy. With a glass of Vin Santo if you are being traditional, or with anything at all if you aren’t.
Bake once …
… and bake twice.
If you keep them in an airtight container then these cantuccini will easily keep for three weeks, if not longer. I’ve never really tested it, because they never last anywhere even vaguely close to that long.


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August 15th, 2010 at 1:53 pm
You’re so rght. Home made is best and they’re so simple
They’re pretty impressive. Well done you.
August 18th, 2010 at 11:19 pm
I just made these for the first time — easy and tasty! I can’t wait to have them with my coffee for the next week or so (well, hopefully they last that long).
December 20th, 2010 at 10:02 am
It seems that everyone is so used to referring to these double backed treats as biscotti but they really go by Cantuccini as all cookies are biscotti in Italian. So was the whole process surprisingly simply theyre prepared in an instant and as soon as your guests friends realize that the Cantuccini are not store bought but home baked ONLY FOR THEM well and some for me too they start to feel even more special.