Light and crunchy pecan praline biscotti dipped in a white chocolate praline coating and sprinkled with a caramel praline crunch, this pecan praline biscotti might just change your opinion of biscotti for good!
No more rock hard biscotti! This praline biscotti is thinly sliced and perfectly baked for a delicately crispy crunch you’ll adore with coffee or simply on its own.
Biscotti has always been a cookie favorite of mine, especially around this time of year.
It’s just so darn shippable that, when you regularly send out a dozen cookie boxes to friends and relatives like I do, it’s hard not to love it’s durability. Not many cookies can arrive half way across the country and little worse for wear.
Plus, the fact that they were literally meant to be dipped in coffee means they are totally acceptable breakfast fare.
Cookies for breakfast? What’s not to love?
This recipe is a hybrid of my orange and dark chocolate biscotti and ATK’s almond biscotti recipe from The Perfect Cookie. I added caramelized pecans and a bit of pecan praline flavoring, plus a dip of praline-infused white chocolate and sprinkled with crunchy praline crumbs for even more crunch. I know I’m usually on team chewy, but there’s no denying these cookies are delightfully crunchy and downright delicious.
The secret to the perfect texture is air: rather than creaming the butter with the sugar like most cookie recipes, here you start by beating air into the eggs. Then you add the sugar, melted butter, and dry ingredients.
Comparing identical batches with and without this special first step, the biscotti with the beaten eggs were noticeably lighter with a more delicate crunch that won’t threaten your dental work.
I don’t like rock-hard biscotti like the Italians do, so, to ensure a more toothsome crunch, I decreased the baking time a bit from ATK’s recipe.
If you, on the other hand, enjoy your biscotti dipped and softened with your morning coffee, you can increase the second bake time up to 35 minutes in total (I took mine out after about 20). The longer you bake them the harder they will become (obviously) but a longer bake also increases the shelf life and strength of the cookies (so if you’ll be shipping them across the country you might want that).
Biscotti literally means twice baked, and that’s the secret to their tell-tale crunch.
First you form logs of dough, which spreads and bakes into surprisingly ugly looking mounds. You may think you messed something up, that they spread too much, but that’s good: it’ll give you thin and delicately tapered spears of biscotti.
After cooling for about 30 minutes, use a serrated knife (try out a few different knives if you want to see which one cuts the best) to cut the biscotti on the bias into 1/2-inch thick slices. Try not to cut them too thick (get out the ruler if you have to) as thicker slices will be less delicately crunchy and harder to crunch with your teeth.
After slicing, arrange the pieces cut-sides-down on a baking sheet and pop them back in the oven. Here’s where you can control the crunchiness to your personal tastes: give them 20 minutes for a lightly crunchy biscotti, or up to 35 for a firmer, more traditional Italian crunch perfect for dipping in your morning coffee.
Pack 5 or 6 biscotti in a clear gift bag, tie with decorative twine and add a cute gift tag (keep scrolling to download these free printables for yourself!)
Then place the whole bag in a decorative or handmade mug for an adorable, edible holiday gift that would be perfect for friends, teachers, or as a hostess gift (I mean, honestly, how many bottles of wine does one person really need? Mix it up a bit!)
The great thing about biscotti is they last for weeks. Not that they’ll actually last that long because they’re so gosh darn delicious, but still, you don’t have to worry about your soft and chewy cookies getting hard or drying out between the time you make them and the time you gift them.
I dipped my biscotti in tempered white chocolate flavored with a hint of praline flavoring (be sure you use a candy flavoring or flavoring oil, not extract, otherwise your chocolate may seize up on you). The hint of caramel and nutty goodness really brings out the best flavors of these cookies. You could also dip them in caramel candy coating (nice because you don’t have to worry about tempering) or I also think caramelized white chocolate would be simply divine.
As a final touch, I used the crunchy caramelized crumbs leftover from when I pulsed by pecan praline in a food processor as a crunchy topping sprinkled on the white chocolate before it completely set. Since I didn’t want to waste these tasty bits, but didn’t want that much caramelized sugar mixed in to the dough itself, this seemed like a perfect way to use it.
For a perfect last-minute homemade holiday gift, bag up a few pieces of this biscotti, tie it with ribbon or twine, and attach one of these festive tags. Voila, perfect gift!
To use, print the PDF file onto white cardstock. Cut out shapes using scissors or an Xacto knife. Use a 1/8-inch hole punch to make a hole over the marking. Tie onto gift bags with decorative twine or ribbon.