Spring Florals and Edible Flower Biscuits

There has been so much chat on my social media feeds about last week’s mini heatwave.

We Brits are obsessed with the weather aren’t we? It’s either too wet, hot, cold, too snowy or windy. We don’t ever seem to agree on what’s the perfect temperature.

I think — a bit like queuing — it’s just something that we like talking about; something that’s built into our cultural DNA.

I think, however, we all agree that it’s been a very, very long and drawn out winter. It felt never-ending at times.

I even began (seriously) to think that The Gulf Stream was irreparably broken.

Our garden has been really slow to acknowledge the arrival of spring too.

The borders have lacked their usual early spring colour and it’s really only over the last few days that the blossom has exploded into life and the tulips are beginning to show off their vibrant petals.

That said, I managed to get some spring florals in my life by other means!

I met a lovely lady called Zöe, over on Instagram last year, who’s set up a little business selling little pots of floral goodness.

And best of all, her flowers are edible!

Zöe was kind enough to send me a jar of her first blooms of the year — the perfect antidote to the miserable weather we’d been having — literally a little taste of spring in a jar.

Edible flowers from Delicately Edible plus Spring Florals Tableware from Laura Ashley
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Edible flowers from Delicately Edible plus Spring Florals Tableware from Laura Ashley
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Beautiful edible flowers in a Kilner Jar — from Delicately Edible
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Edible flowers from Delicately Edible plus Spring Florals melamine tableware from Laura Ashley
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.

I decided to make some simple edible flower shortbread biscuits — super easy — but with the addition of their beautiful toppings, they looked a million dollars.

It’s a really easy recipe. The shortbread is very quick to make and the decorations are even quicker!

How to Make Edible Flower Biscuits

You will need:

For the biscuits —
125g butter
55g caster sugar
180g plain flour

To decorate —
icing Sugar
cold water
edible flowers
caster sugar

Method:

Heat your oven to 190C/375F/Gas 5.

Beat the butter and the sugar together, then stir in the flour to create a smooth paste.

Roll into a ball, then cover and leave in the fridge to cool for 20 minutes.

Next, gently roll out the ball of chilled dough on a floured work-surface, until around 1cm thick.

Cut into rounds and place onto a baking tray.

Bake in the oven for 15-20 minutes (or until the biscuits are a pale golden-brown colour).

Set aside to cool on a wire rack.

Kilner jar full of sugar
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Shortbread cookie dough, waiting to be turned into edible flower biscuits
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Shortbread cookie dough, waiting to be turned into edible flower biscuits
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Shortbread cookie dough, cut into rounds, waiting to be turned into edible flower biscuits
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Shortbread cookies, waiting to be iced and turned into edible flower biscuits
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.

To Decorate

I decided not to use egg white to crystallise my edible flowers.

As my twins have an egg allergy, I’m always trying to come up with egg free solutions for things — like our favourite egg-free pancakes and egg-free royal icing — so I decided to try and create the same kind of effect with just sugar and water.

I made a really simple frosting using icing sugar and a little water, and painted it onto each biscuit.

(I’ve not put quantities for this — it really was as simple as mixing a couple of tea-spoons of icing sugar in a little water. Just experiment until you get a consistency that you’re happy with.)

Then, after carefully washing each flower, I pressed the petals into the icing, soaking each one with the sugary liquid, then sprinkling caster sugar onto the top of each one to finish off.

Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Edible flower biscuits
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.

Herbal Remedies

It was lovely decorating the shortbread cookies with edible flowers (and quite a therapeutic pastime); pulling the stems off, then carefully pressing them into the icing. Such a lovely thing to do on an afternoon when rain stops play.

Gently pulling away each petal reminded me of the rhyme we’d say when we were children;

He loves me, he loves me not…

I can say that my boys definitely love me; especially when there is a sweet treat involved.

I had quite an audience.

But despite the two pairs of hungry eyes watching my every move, I put the finished pressed flower cookies well out of the reach of tiny hands, until the icing had hardened and the biscuits were ready.

Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Edible flower biscuits on cooling rack
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Making simple edible flower biscuits. These pressed flower cookies are so simple and easy to make — and look a million dollars!
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Edible flower biscuits on a wire rack
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Recipe for edible flower biscuits
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.

Floral Fancies

These little edible flower biscuits are the perfect addition to a spring tea-party.

For all their simplicity to make, they look pretty fancy! They’re a real showstopper and make a lovely centrepiece when you want to impress; especially when you pair them with pretty tableware like the Spring Florals range from Laura Ashley.

Or — equally — as in our case (we had no-one to impress), they’re a lovely way to while away an afternoon; both in the making and the eating.

You’d think the texture of the flowers would be a bit odd (in my mind I imaged eating lettuce with shortbread) but they literally melt in the mouth.

{I wonder if they constitute one of your five-a-day?}

Nutritional content aside, they certainly brightened up a grey Easter.

Despite the grey, moody skies overhead, the boys and I had a carpet picnic, surrounded by spring blooms.

Edible flower biscuits drying on a cooling rack
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Edible flower biscuits on a floral melamine plate
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Edible flower biscuits presented on a floral melamine plate by Laura Ashley
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Edible flower biscuits on a floral melamine plate
My edible flower biscuits in all their glory! What was left of them anyway!!
Photo Credit: The Listed Home.
Easy Shortbread Biscuit Recipe

Easy Shortbread Biscuit Recipe (Just Three Ingredients)

Yield: 12
Prep Time: 30 minutes
Cook Time: 20 minutes
Additional Time: 30 minutes
Total Time: 1 hour 20 minutes

These delicious biscuits are so simple to make, they're delicious when served plain — but look so beautiful decorated with edible spring flowers.

Ingredients

  • 55g caster sugar
  • 125g butter
  • 180g plain flour

Instructions

    1. Heat your oven to 190C/375F/Gas 5. Beat the sugar and butter together, until light and fluffy, then stir in the flour to create a smooth paste.

    3. Roll into a ball, cover then leave in the fridge to cool. 20 minutes is usually long enough. Then, roll out the ball of chilled dough on a floured work surface. The rolled dough needs to be around 1cm thick.

    4. Cut your biscuit shapes from the dough and place them onto a baking tray, then bake for 15-20 minutes in the preheated oven (or until the biscuits are a pale golden-brown colour).

    7. Pop them on a wire rack to cool.

    Easy Shortbread Biscuit Recipe

    8. If you want to elevate this easy shortbread biscuit recipe to something really special, you can decorate them with edible flowers. Whilst the shortbread is cooling, mix a couple of teaspoons of icing sugar in a little water, and experiment until you get a consistency that you're happy with. Wash each flower, then press the petals into the icing, soaking each one with the sugary liquid, then sprinkling caster sugar onto the top of each one to finish off.

    Repeat the process until you've decorated all the shortbread biscuits with edible flowers, then leave to dry.

Nutrition Information
Yield 12 Serving Size 1
Amount Per Serving Calories 192Total Fat 9gSaturated Fat 5gTrans Fat 0gUnsaturated Fat 3gCholesterol 22mgSodium 72mgCarbohydrates 27gFiber 0gSugar 15gProtein 2g

Calculations was calculated by Nutritionix and is approximate.

Many thanks to the lovely team at Laura Ashley for sending the gorgeous Spring Florals tableware for the purposes of styling this post — good luck in your new role Cat! And thanks too to Zöe at Delicately Edible for the beautiful flowers. If you’d like to make some edible flower biscuits for yourself, head over to her site to snap up a jar of floral goodness of your own.

Caro Davies editor of The Listed Home
Website | + posts

Caro Davies is a former art-director turned writer and content-creator, and editor behind UK lifestyle blog The Listed Home. She writes about home-related topics, from interiors and DIY to food and craft. The Listed Home has been featured in various publications, including Ideal Home, Grazia, and Homes & Antiques magazines.

Home | The Listed Home Blog | Spring Florals and Edible Flower Biscuits

29 thoughts on “Spring Florals and Edible Flower Biscuits”

  1. I saw your Instagram posts on this. They are beautiful! I must check out what flowers in my garden are edible. I assume the flowers on sage and rosemary are.

    Reply
  2. These are so beautiful and look such fun to make!
    I’ve been meaning to make edible flower biscuits, I’ll definitley have to give it a go!
    Debs

    Reply
    • Thanks lovely lady!! I had such fun making them — I’m a bit obsessed with edible florals now! Am thinking of all kinds of ways I can add them to the things we eat!! ;) Hope you’re well xxxx

      Reply
    • They were SO delicious!! I didn’t have high hopes for the texture of the flowers, together with the shortbread, but they were SO lovely!!! They literally melted in the mouth — no weird ‘lettuce-like’ texture at all :)

      Reply

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

The Listed Home featured publications
Skip to Recipe