Fox's Viennese Milk Chocolate Dipped Fingers, 105g

£9.9
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Fox's Viennese Milk Chocolate Dipped Fingers, 105g

Fox's Viennese Milk Chocolate Dipped Fingers, 105g

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

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Description

Sweetness is a must in all the best biscuits but icing sugar is used in this recipe, as opposed to the usual caster sugar you get in biscuits. This helps the Viennese fingers have that familiar melt-in-the-mouth texture. Flour - Plain white flour or white spelt flour is fine. For an additional nutty texture try using Spelt Wholemeal flour.

This is just an overview of the ingredients I used with possible alternatives and why I may have used them. See the recipe card below for a complete list of ingredients and quantities. Chocolate - For a rich dark taste use dark chocolate with 79% cocoa solids. Milk chocolate is fine. Purely optional, and not as common if you are using this recipe for Viennese Whirls, but something we think completes Viennese fingers nicely. Use a good quality chocolate of your choice. I use dark chocolate to omit the diary but milk chocolate is perhaps more common. Chocolate dipped Viennese fingers are a staple in many biscuit tins. So too are these Melting Moments (Butter Biscuits) and these Hazelnut Melting Moments. Jump to: Unlike other shortbread recipes or recipes that use shortcrust pastry, there is no need to chill this dough before baking, in can go straight in the oven as soon as they fingers have been piped.

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When I think of an afternoon tea party, I think of sunny afternoons filled with joy and delicious bites that are washed down with some nice cups of tea. I have lots of finger food recipes for a fabulous party: Afternoon Tea Party Menu Ideas which are so good. The second wake-up call is when you bake biscuits in the oven only to find the dough has spread horribly leaving you just as deflated as your delicate Viennese fingers. If this happens to you, subsequent batches will leave your nerves shot. This recipe makes 10-12 biscuits – the perfect amount for a little practice. Place the butter and icing sugar into a bowl and using an electric whisk beat until fully combined. Beat in the vanilla extract. Sieve together the flour, cornflour and baking powder, then mix in the sieved ingredients in 2-3 batches and continue to beat, until thoroughly mixed. The consistency should be smooth but not extremely stiff (only add milk if you think the dough needs loosening for piping).

With the Coronation of King Charles III fast approaching and the nicer weather hopefully on its way, afternoon tea parties are becoming more and more popular after all the comfort food that soothed our souls during the long Winter.Chocolate-Dipped Viennese Fingers made with only a few ingredients, a delicious sweet treat recipe that is very popular in the UK. The biscuits are so soft, almost melting in the mouth, with a delicate crumbly texture and a hint of vanilla. They make the perfect addition to any afternoon tea or garden party menu, and they go down well with the whole family. Preheat the oven to 190C fan before baking. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper (for a piping guide, use a pen to draw 7cm lines on the reverse of the paper).

Preheat the oven to 170 deg fan assisted. Grease and line a large baking tray with baking parchment. And these Viennese Fingers or Viennese Shortbread Biscuits are the perfect addition here. They are incredibly delicious, elegant and decadent, and you won't believe how easily you can make them at home. Some things look deceptively easy to make. Viennese fingers, the short buttery melt-in-the-mouth biscuits, fall into this category. They were invented and popularised in Britain, but inspired by Austrian pastries. They are the type of dainty biscuit that reminds you that baking is a scientific craft and can go very wrong if you play fast and loose with a few basic rules. Do keep an eye on the biscuits after 10 minutes, different ovens work in different ways, and something even a minute can make the different between a well-baked biscuit and a burnt one.These buttery Viennese Fingers dipped in dark chocolate are surprisingly easy to make. There's no need for messy piping bags or nozzles. Roll the dough out into little fingers and make decorative markings with a fork before baking, dip them in melted dark chocolate when cooled. Use a piping bag fitted with a large star nozzle to pipe out fingers of 5-6 cm in length onto a baking tray that is lined with parchment paper. The first wake-up call comes when you commence piping and find the dough is too stiff and doesn’t flow easily. Gently massaging the dough in the piping bag will soften it and also remove air bubbles that might create a vacuum. Another tip is to warm a steel piping nozzle before fitting it in the bag.



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