Long Lost Favourite: The Coffee Scroll. (2024)

Did you grow up with a family favourite bikkie*? I'm sure we all have at leastone of these favourites.

I grew up with a mother that made everything from scratch, including biscuits and cookies.Those packets of biscuits at the supermarket were a rare treat...making them that much more enticing!

As I was grew up and spent moretime at friends' homes and then afterflying the nest, I became something of a bikkie aficionado. Arnotts were the reliable favourites - from theButternut Snaps to the Monte Carlos, to the Lemon Crisps, to the Kingston Creams. And the Tim Tam. But there were also lesser known goodies to be discovered...particularly the perfect morsel that is "The Coffee Scroll".

The coffee scroll was a crisp, round flat biscuitembossed witha scroll pattern, that contained cinnamon, allspice/cloves and maybe nutmeg,as well astiny black currants. Each biscuit had a dollop of hard pink icing in the centre top.


In fact, it was only after we were engagedthat I discovered my husband also had an appreciation for this lovely bikkie. Legend has it that Arnotts once made these, but my memories are that they were made by Lanes or Nabisco. Whenever the husband and I would set off on a road trip, I would make sure that we had packed at leasta couplepackets of these pink-topped, scrolly delights! Weeven ate them up and down the east coast of Australia on our honeymoon in 1998.

Whilst I hadby that time(back in the Nabisco Coffee Scroll era)expressed my inevitable genetic tendencies to make everything from scratch,I was more than happy to buy them off the shelf and delight in their spicy, crunchy, currant-ygoodness from time to time.

You can imagine how unhappy I was when I found the 'Big Two' had stopped stocking them. For a while I could find them at the questionable discount stores (what I call the $2 shops), no doubt imported from Asia.

Then, just like that, they were a thing of the past.

Instead of lamenting the loss of this classic, I set about creating the same taste sensation from scratch. And because Iknow that there are other people who miss this bikkie, I am now sharing my tried and true recipe so that you too can recreate this perfect coffee accompaniment.

Read on!

*"Bikkie" is a typically Australian contraction of the word "biscuit", which is the thing that Americans may call a "cookie". They are usually crisper and smaller than a typical American-style cookie.

RECIPE: Coffee Scrolls, Reincarnated

Long Lost Favourite: The Coffee Scroll. (1)


Makes around 48 completed biscuits

Ingredients:
3 cups plain/all purpose or cakeflour, sifted
1teaspoon baking powder
1 cupunsalted butter, softenedto room temperature
1 cup brown sugar
1 large free-range egg (at room temperature)
1/4 cup small dried black currants^
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2-3tspground cinnamon
1 tsp allspice or 1/2 tsp cloves
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/2 tsp salt (omit salt if using salted butter)
Egg wash: 1 free-range egg whisked into 1/4 cup milk
375grams (13.5oz) white chocolate
Red/pink oil-based powdered food colouring (optional, available at cake decorating stores)

(^note: it is tempting to add more than 1/4 cup of currants. I know. Trust me, you will cause your bikkies to break apart as the currants expand in the oven, so keep it to a maximum of 1/4 cup. If you must,eat a handful of currants as you're waiting for the bikkies to bake).

Special equipment:
Egg whisk - spiral style (while not great for whisking eggs, this tool remains in my tool drawer only for making these biscuits)
Silicon (non-stick) baking paper - use each sheet more than once with successive trays going into the oven.
2 1/4" (57mm) or thereaboutscutter

Long Lost Favourite: The Coffee Scroll. (2)


Method:
Step 1:
Using a mixer,beat (with paddle) thebutter, brown sugar, vanilla and spices until light and fluffy. Use a hand whisk or wooden spoonif you do not own a mixer.

Step 2:
Mix in egg on low speed.

Step 3:
Add in flour and baking powder, mix on low until blended. Scrape down bowl, mix again.

Step 4:
Add currants,fold or knead in. Dough will be soft. Let rest for 30 minutes in fridge, covered in cling film in a flattened round shape.

Step 5:
Preheat oven to 160 deg C/320 deg F.
Roll out around 1/3 of the dough between two sheets of baking paper until around 4-5mm thick.

Step 6:
Cut out 2 1/4" (57mm)rounds, place on silicon-papered biscuit/cookie baking sheets. Each unbaked biscuit should weigh about 20 grams maximum (0.7 oz)

Press spiral egg whisk into top to emboss your spiral.

Long Lost Favourite: The Coffee Scroll. (3)

Dip the flat spiral end into flour before pressing into the top of each cookie.

Don't worry about the "e" shape in the middle of the bikkie; it will be covered up later.


Step 7:Continue rolling out dough and cutting rounds, and embossing scrolls.


Optional: glaze top of biscuit with egg wash. (NB: I did not glaze this batch).


Step 8:
Bake at 160 deg C (320 deg F) for approximately 15 minutes until golden brown. Let sit on trays a few minutes before cooling on racks completely. These biscuits should be crunchy when cooled.


The Icing
Clearly theiconic part of the biscuit, but alsoan essential part of the Coffee Scroll experiencewhen eaten all together. It took me a while to work out the best way to replicate this hard pink icing, and this is what I came up with.

Method:
Step 1:
Melt your chocolate.

Microwave method: Place your 375g ofwhite chocolate (chopped orbuttons) into a large pyrex bowl or microwave-safe jug. Heat at 100% for 30 seconds, stir. Repeat until chocolate completely melted and smooth.

Double boiler method: Place white chocolate into a pyrex bowl, a metal bowl or the top saucepan of a double boiler. Place over a saucepancontaining 1cm of simmering water, ensuring complete seal around edges of your top bowl/pan. Don't let bottom of your bowl/pan touch the water. Do NOT let steam condense and run into chocolate; it will seize. Stir occasionally until melted.

Long Lost Favourite: The Coffee Scroll. (4)


Step 2:
Add in a smidge of red or pink oil-based powdered food colouring. Truly, just about 1/8 teaspoon.Mix thoroughly. If you only have water- or alcohol-based liquid or gelfood colouring, leave it out.

Step 3:
Using a teaspoon or disposable piping bag, place a blob of pink-tinted white chocolate in the centre of each bikkie. Do not go to the edges. Actually, to be authentic you don't even have to put as much as I have shown in the photo below (what can I say? I like chocolate).

Long Lost Favourite: The Coffee Scroll. (5)


Step 4:
Allow to cool completely until icing has set hard.

Enjoy with your favourite hot bevvie beverage!


Do you have a long lost favourite? Have you ever tried recreating it from scratch?

Please feel free to comment, or ask any questions aboutmy Coffee Scroll recipe!

Long Lost Favourite: The Coffee Scroll. (2024)

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