Chewy Lemon Cookies
Updated April 24, 2024

- Total Time
- 1 hour
- Prep Time
- 10 minutes
- Cook Time
- 50 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 4teaspoons finely chopped fresh rosemary
- Juice of ½ lemon (about 1½ tablespoons), plus zest of 4 lemons
- 1½ cups/180 grams all-purpose flour
- ½cup/90 grams cornmeal, preferably medium-grind for polenta
- 1teaspoon baking soda
- 1teaspoon kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal) or ½ teaspoon fine salt
- ½teaspoon cream of tartar
- 1cup/227 grams unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 1½cups/300 grams granulated sugar, plus ¼ cup/50 grams for coating
- 1large egg
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 350 degrees with a rack in the center. Line 2 or 3 sheet pans with parchment paper. The cookies are baked in 3 batches because they spread dramatically, but the first sheet pan can be reused after it’s cooled if you don’t have a second or third.
- Step 2
Place the rosemary in your smallest bowl and squeeze over the lemon juice to prevent the rosemary from browning.
- Step 3
In a small bowl, combine the flour, cornmeal, baking soda, salt and cream of tartar.
- Step 4
In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle, beat the butter on medium speed until it’s creamy, about 1 minute. (You can also do this by hand in a bowl with a wooden spoon.) Add 1½ cups/300 grams sugar and beat on medium speed until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes.
- Step 5
Add the egg, lemon zest and rosemary mixture and combine on low speed. Add the flour and mix on low speed until just combined. If the dough is very soft, refrigerate it for 15 minutes to firm up.
- Step 6
Divide the dough into 12 even pieces, form into balls, then roll each one in the remaining ¼ cup/50 grams sugar. Space 3 or 4 cookies an equal distance apart on each sheet pan.
- Step 7
Bake each pan 1 at a time on the center rack. When the dough has spread and puffed in the center, after 8 minutes, lift one side of the sheet pan up about 4 inches and drop it so it bangs against the oven rack, then rotate the pan and lift and drop again. You will see the dough ripple as it falls. Continue to bake until the edges are golden brown but the centers remain pale and fudgy, 6 to 8 minutes longer.
- Step 8
Remove the pan from the oven and let the cookies cool for 5 to 10 minutes before transferring them to a wire rack to finish cooling. Store cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 days.
Private Notes
Comments
My son generously called these cookies “interesting.” The recipe is now deleted and I will not make them again. Maybe it was my execution, but the polenta feels like sand, the cookies are greasy, and the rosemary is slightly off-putting. I’m not a fan.
You don't need to weigh these to get 12 even cookies. Cut the dough into thirds and then cut each of those 3 into quarters. Fractions aren't that tough.
Cardamom could be a good substitute if you're not a fan of Rosemary.
I mean, they are good. They're just kinda sandy on day 2. I loved the thin and crispy nature of the cookie and the mid-bake flop that made it all happen. The cookies are fragrant and lemony. They are a little greasy because of the way the butter cooks out of them and you definitely get some of that cornmeal "grit" when taking a bite. I feel like they would be good as an interesting element with a panna cotta or ice cream or some other contrasting texture.
Just made these ; delicious but careful with this recipe zest of one large lemon is enough for lemony taste . 1/2 teaspoon chopped rosemary for a faint lingering taste otherwise much too strong. The batter spread like crazy so after the first batch I cut all the balls into 32 small balls and they come out perfect round and great for small sweet snack.
Zesting four lemons seems like wasting lemons. I would get the dried peel from Penzey”s and rehydrate. I use there fried orange peel for other things.
