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Home Cookies

Irene’s Cretan biscuits (Greek almond cookies)

By:Nagi
Published:4 Oct '24Updated:7 Oct '24
76 Comments
Recipe v Video v Dozer v

These traditional Greek Cretan biscuits are here courtesy of Irene, the very Greek mother of my very Greek hairdresser. Does it surprise anybody that I spend most of the time at the salon discussing food with everybody and anybody? 😂

Irene's Greek Cretan Biscuits

Meet Irene, beloved local Greek grandmother and baker

If you love buttery shortbread biscuits and almond cookies, you will adore today’s Greek Cretan Biscuits. But first, I want you to meet Irene!

Irene Diane Angela-Deange Hair - Greek Cretan Biscuits
Irene with her famous Cretan Cookies and her daughters, Angela (left) and Diane (right) at the family hair salon Deange Hair.

My hairdresser Deange Hair is run by two Greek sisters, Angela and Diane, in a small shop attached to their parents’ house. On any given day, the salon buzzes with customers getting their hair done as they nibble homemade cookies while young children dart around the shop. Irene, the family matriarch, holds court with clients as she interjects with “advice” for her daughters as they work with delicious aromas wafting in from her kitchen.

You might even catch her doing a weekly audit of her biscuit sales to ensure her daughters aren’t shortchanging her. “Make sure this money goes to your mum!” I sternly remind Angela and Diane every time I buy some. 😂

Irene Diane Angela-Deange Hair - Greek Cretan Biscuits
Irene with her stash of homemade cookies sold at my hair salon, Deange Hair in Tennyson Point.
Irene Diane Angela-Deange Hair - Greek Cretan Biscuits
Showing Irene photos of my cookies! Left to right: Angela, me, Irene (the star!) and Diane.

It’s a wonderfully familiar scene that provides much amusement to regulars.

Of all the homemade cookies I’ve tried (and I’m pretty sure I’ve tried them all!), the Greek Cretan biscuits have been my favourite. Thank you Irene for sharing your recipe!

Irene Diane Angela-Deange Hair - Greek Cretan Biscuits
Left to right: Angela, Irene, me and Diane!
Irene Diane Angela-Deange Hair - Greek Cretan Biscuits

About Irene’s Cretan Biscuits

  • What – Traditional Greek cookies from the island of Crete.

  • Taste – Like almond flavoured shortbread cookies. Beautifully buttery with a soft crumble.

  • Look – Shaped like a mound (nice and hefty to bite into!) and decorated with almond flakes which add extra almond flavour as well as texture.

  • Difficulty – Straightforward. Rolling the cookies is what takes the longest, but you can do this at a leisurely pace while chatting on the phone to your best friend!

  • How much I love them – A lot! High sentimental attachment because of the recipe source.

  • Make for office morning tea, book club, school bake sale and just because.

Irene's Greek Cretan Biscuits

Ingredients in Irene’s Cretan Biscuits

Here’s what you need to make Irene’s Cretan Biscuits.

biscuit dough

  • Blanched almonds – These are skinless almonds that have been blanched (did the name give it away?? 😂) meaning they have been briefly boiled in water so the skin comes off easily. These almonds are softer and have a more subtle almond flavour than regular roasted almonds. They are also chosen for aesthetic reasons when you don’t want the dark brown almond skin in foods, like in these Cretan Cookies.

    Can you use regular almonds with skins? Yep, you sure can and the flavour will be similar. But prepare yourself for little dark brown bits inside your cookies!

  • Butter – Gives these cookies the divine buttery flavour reminiscent of shortbread cookies. I prefer to use unsalted then add my own amount of salt. But if you only have salted that’s fine, just skip the salt in the recipe.

  • Flour – Just plain / all-purpose flour. Note: Irene’s original recipe called for self raising flour. See FAQ for what and why I deviated from her original recipe!

  • Baking powder – This is what makes the cookies rise into those wonderful little mounds! ⚠️ Don’t substitute with baking soda (bi-carbonate soda), the cookies will taste metallic. Also, if your baking powder has been lying dormant for months in your pantry, check it’s still alive before starting the recipe (instructions here, it’s dead easy).

  • Egg – Use a “large egg” which is sold in cartons labelled as “large eggs”. They are ~50g/2 oz each in shells. Eggs in a carton are not all the same weight because those darn hens, they’re so selfish, how dare they not lay eggs exactly the same weight every time! The point of providing a size guide is so you don’t use a gigantic ostrich egg or tiny quail egg….the recipe will not work! 🙂

    Got jumbo eggs? Crack, whisk, measure out 45g / 2 1/2 tbsp. (More information here).

    Make sure your egg is at room temperature, not fridge cold. else you will struggle to get it mixed into the butter properly.

  • Vanilla extract – For flavour. Vanilla extract trumps vanilla essence (imitation). I wouldn’t use pricey vanilla beans in a recipe like this!

Decorating

  • Egg white – Used to brush the top of the biscuits to make the almond flakes stick. Use the yolk plus leftover egg whites for your morning scrambled eggs or omelette!

  • Almond flakes – For decorating the surface. Not critical, but a nice to have for both extra almond flavour plus visual. I would plough ahead with this recipe if I was out!

Irene's Greek Cretan Biscuits

How to make Irene’s Cretan Cookies

This is a straightforward cookie recipe. However, this section has a fair amount of descriptions so even novice bakers can have confidence making this recipe. For pro bakers, head straight to the abbreviated directions on the recipe card below!

1. crushed ALMOND BITs

  1. Roast almonds – Pop the almonds in the oven for 7 minutes to toast them lightly. This will intensity the almond flavour but won’t make the almonds too brown (we want them to stay white so it’s invisible in the cookies).

    Roasting is not an essential step because the cookies are lovely as is. But it does bring out the almond flavour. It’s especially good to do this if you are using almonds a little on the old side. 🙂

  2. Bash or blitz – Use a food processor or a ziplock bag and rolling pin to bash the almonds into little crumbs. We’re not going for finely ground almonds here. If we were, the recipe would use almond meal instead! I describe the pieces as “coarse sand plus some larger bits” because whichever method you use, it’s hard to get the almonds all uniform in size. And that’s what we want, because it’s actually really nice to have little bits of almonds in the cookies!


2. BISCUIT MIXTURE

  1. Whisk the flour, baking powder and salt together then put them aside.

  2. Cream the butter and sugar until it’s light and fluffy, like soft spreadable butter. It takes about 1 1/2 minutes on medium high.

    Tool – I prefer to use a handheld beater because you can move it around the bowl so you don’t really need to scrape the sides down. If you want to use a stand mixer, use the paddle attachment and scrape down the sides of the bowl at least twice.

  1. Egg and vanilla – Then beat the egg and vanilla into the butter mixture. It might look a little curdled but don’t worry, it will come together once we add the flour.

    ⚠️ Important to ensure the egg is at room temperature as it will incorporate into the butter mixture more easily. Fridge cold egg will not mix in properly.

  2. Flour mixture in 3 lots – Beat in the flour mixture in 3 lots. By this, I mean add 1/3 of the flour and beat on medium speed until the flour is just about mixed in ie some specks of white is fine, about 5 seconds with the beater. Start on low then increase the speed to medium (if you start on high there will be a flour storm!). Then repeat this twice more until all the flour is used up.

  1. Crushed almonds – Then lastly, add the bashed almonds and beat until the flour is fully mixed in.

  2. Finished dough – This is what it looks like. Shaggy but soft, rollable into a smooth ball.


3. MAKING THE COOKIES

Use whatever method you find easiest to roll 30 x 2 tablespoon balls (30 ml). The steps below depict the method I find to be the fastest to make even size cookies.

  1. Trays – You will need 2 large baking trays. Lightly grease with butter or spray with oil then cover with baking paper (parchment paper).

  2. Scoop first – Use a #40 (2 tbsp) cookie scoop to scoop and dollop the cookie dough into mounds on baking trays. You should just about get 30 cookies if you fill the scoop without air bubbles and “smear” it up the side of the bowl to level the surface.

  1. Roll and flatten – Working one cookie at a time, I roll the dough into a smooth ball then slightly flatten to about 2 cm / 0.8″ thick.

    Then place the cookies 4 cm / 1.6″ apart on the trays. I do 15, being 3 rows of 5 cookies on each tray They don’t expand outwards that much but we want sufficient heat circulating around each cookie so they cook properly.

  2. Almond topping – Brush the top with the egg white them place a pinch of almond flakes on top (no need to press in, egg glues them on).

  1. Bake both trays together for 20 minutes or until the cookies in the middle are light golden and the ones of the edge of the tray are slightly more golden.

  2. Cool 5 minutes on the tray then transfer onto a rack to cool for at least a further 10 minutes before attacking! (Hot cookies = fragile / mouth burns. Either situation is not ideal). While typically eaten at room temperature once cooled, they really are extra special when warm and fresh out of the oven.

Irene's Greek Cretan Biscuits

Irene's Greek Cretan Biscuits

Matters of storage – and the most important thing

Once fully cool, store in an airtight container in the pantry, not the fridge. They stay fresh for 5 days and still very, very good at 7 days, making them excellent for…..oh, I don’t know. Selling at the counter of your hair salon? 😂

While shelf life information is useful, I know what you’re all waiting for – Irene’s review of my Cretan Biscuits! Very happy to report that she gave them a big thumbs up. 👍🏻 PHEW!!! – Nagi x

Greek Cretan Biscuits FAQ

Yes, a teeny tiny bit! Mainly for consistency of outcome purposes, which is me sharing this recipe with my recipe writer hat on.

  • Irene’s original recipe used self raising flour (which has baking powder built in) plus a touch of baking powder. I typically prefer to use flour plus baking powder because the rising power of self raising flour can vary depending on the freshness. Old self raising flour = loss of baking powder rising ability = flat cookies and cakes = 😤

    I just find baking powder + regular flour to be a more reliable combination for consistency of outcome.

  • I also reduce the bake time slightly from 25 minutes to 20 minutes which gives the cookies a paler golden colour (but still fully cooked through) so they are more similar to lovely buttery shortbread cookies.

  • And lastly, I roasted the blanched almonds briefly to see if it improved the almond flavour and it does. So I added this into my recipe. Not a critical step but especially useful if your almonds are a little on the old side.

30, around 6cm / 2.4″ wide and 2cm / 0.8″ thick.

I have not tried. But keep an eye out on the comments section as readers often try my baking recipes with gluten free flour and report back with their results plus tips!

Cup sizes differ slightly between the US (1 cup = 226ml) and the rest of the world (250 ml). While the difference is not enough to make a difference in most recipes, for some baking recipes it can mean the difference between success and failure. 

I made this recipe using US cups, Australian cups and the weights I’ve provided and there was no difference in the end result. So the difference in cup sizes does not matter for this recipe!

Astute bakers may also notice that the ingredients lists “2 sticks butter” which is a US measurement for butter. This equates to 226g (being 113g per stick) which is less than the 250g listed. This is deliberate, to account for the US cups being slightly smaller.


Watch how to make it

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Irene's Greek Cretan Biscuits

Greek Cretan Biscuits (almond cookies)

Author: Nagi
4.58 from 14 votes
Servings30 cookies
Tap or hover to scale
Print
Recipe video above. A recipe for traditional Greek almond cookies, given to me by Irene, the proudly Greek mother of my Greek hairdresser! Tastes like almond shortbread cookies. Love the mound-like shape, feels substantial biting into it.
See FAQ about difference in measures between countries, no need to tweak this recipe, works as written.

Ingredients

  • 2/3 cup (100g) blanched almonds (Note 1)
  • 2 1/2 cups plain flour (all-purpose flour)
  • 4 tsp baking powder
  • One pinch cooking salt / kosher salt
  • 250g/ 2 sticks unsalted butter , softened (Note 2)
  • 3/4 cups white sugar (or caster sugar)
  • 1 large egg , at room temperature (~50g / 2oz in shell)
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract

Almond decoration:

  • 1 egg white , lightly whisked (use leftover for breakfast scrambled eggs!)
  • 1/4 cup almond flakes
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

ABBREVIATED RECIPE:

  • Toast almonds 7 min at 180°C/350°F (160°C fan), cool bash or blitz. Cream butter and sugar, beat in egg and vanilla. Add dry ingredients in 3 lots, then beat in almond. Roll 30 x 2 tbsp balls (#40 scoop). Slightly flatten, brush with egg white, top with flakes. Bake 20 min until light golden.

FULL RECIPE:

  • Preheat the oven to 180°C/350°F (160°C fan-forced). Lightly grease (or spray with oil) 2 large trays and line with baking paper (parchment paper).

Almond bits:

  • Roasting (optional, Note 1) – Roast the almonds for 7 minutes on a small tray, shaking once halfway. Cool almonds on the tray.
  • Bash/blitz the almonds using a food food processor or ziplock bag with a rolling pin until they resemble coarse sand with some small lumps (little almonds bits in the cookies are nice). (Note 3)

Cookie dough:

  • Dry ingredients – Whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt in a medium bowl. Set aside.
  • Cream butter and sugar – In a separate bowl, beat the butter and sugar using a handheld beater until it is soft and fluffy, scraping down the sides as needed, ~1 1/2 minutes on medium high. (Note 2 stand mixer) Add the egg and vanilla, then beat until mixed in. (Note 4)
  • Add the flour mixture in 3 lots, beating in between until the flour is mostly mixed in (some visible white flour is ok). Start the beater on low and increase to medium, about 7 sec each go.
  • Add the crushed almonds then beat on medium until you can no longer see flour.
  • Form cookies – Roll 30 x 2 tablespoon balls (#40 cookie scoop) then slightly flatten to about 2 cm / 0.8" thick. (Note 5 for my method). Place the cookies 4 cm / 1.6" apart on the trays. Brush the top with egg white them place a pinch of almond flakes on top (no need to press in, egg glues them on).
  • Bake both trays together for 20 minutes or until the cookies in the middle are light golden and the ones of the edge of the tray are slightly more golden.
  • Cool 5 minutes on the tray then transfer onto a rack to fully cool. Attack!

Recipe Notes:

1. Blanched almonds are the skinless almonds sold in packets labelled “blanched almonds” (I know, shocking! 😉 ) Almonds with skins on works but you’ll get little brown bits in the cookies. Roasting intensifies the almond flavour but it’s not recipe critical.
Using almond meal instead – It’s finer and more absorbent so I’d use less, around 75g,  say 1/2 cup. It won’t be quite the same though as you won’t get little almond bits in the cookies, but I’m sure it will still be tasty.
2. If using a stand mixer, use the paddle attachment and scrape down sides as needed. For this recipe, I find a handheld beater easier because you can move it around so probably don’t need to scrape down the sides.
3. Almond bashing – We’re not aiming for fine almond meal / almond flour here, we want lots of tiny little bits!
4. If the mixture looks a little split when you add the egg that’s ok, it will come together when you add the flour.
5. My cookie forming method: scoop and dollop all the dough onto trays, then roll and flatten. I find this the fastest way to make even sized cookies. (I also do this with meatballs!)
Store cookies in an airtight container for 5 days (once fully cool). Do not refrigerate. 
Nutrition per cookie.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 144cal (7%)Carbohydrates: 14g (5%)Protein: 2g (4%)Fat: 9g (14%)Saturated Fat: 5g (31%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 3gTrans Fat: 0.3gCholesterol: 23mg (8%)Sodium: 5mgPotassium: 97mg (3%)Fiber: 1g (4%)Sugar: 5g (6%)Vitamin A: 216IU (4%)Calcium: 37mg (4%)Iron: 1mg (6%)
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76 Comments

  1. Ling says

    November 9, 2024 at 11:02 pm

    5 stars
    Have tried this recipe as is a few times now and always a hit.

    Gluten free – have tried subbing the plain flour with GF flour from the bulk food store (Maize Starch, Rice Flour, Tapioca Starch, Rice Bran, Thickener (Guar Gum)) and turned out well too. More crumbly mouthfeel.

    Reply
  2. Jenny stokes says

    November 9, 2024 at 6:39 am

    Made these the other day and will definitely be making again. I made them a bit smaller so ended up with 45 so have gifted some to friends. Thought I might make some to go in my Xmas parcels but will drizzle chocolate over. Lovely taste and not too sweet.

    Reply
  3. Gigi says

    October 17, 2024 at 5:16 pm

    5 stars
    I added more vanilla and only baked for 17 mins in my oven. They turned out perfectly. Light, crumbly and delicious. Will definitely make these again!

    Reply
  4. Christine says

    October 15, 2024 at 12:55 pm

    P. S. Still browsing the book. It’s perfect Nagi. Love the pics of Dozer also.
    Congratulations.

    Reply
  5. Christine says

    October 15, 2024 at 12:28 pm

    YAY! 🎉 Just picked up Recipetin Eats Tonight 📖.
    Thank you Nagi. Looks great. Having a browse now. 💕

    Reply
  6. Licia says

    October 15, 2024 at 12:53 am

    5 stars
    They look delicious will definitely try and cook them .been in hospital but will be better soon and will advice of results thankyou.

    Reply
  7. Mirta N Vignali says

    October 14, 2024 at 4:08 pm

    I love the taste, how light they are, perfect thank you.

    Reply
  8. Susan says

    October 14, 2024 at 2:48 pm

    Made a batch of these beauties yesterday afternoon, and took them to work to share with my colleagues. Came home with only ONE left! They’re delightful – thank you Irene, and of course Nagi xxx

    Reply
  9. Caroline Conlan says

    October 13, 2024 at 10:13 pm

    5 stars
    As ever, fantastic instructions.
    Easy to follow.
    Turned out great. Delicious 😋

    Reply
  10. Reygie says

    October 11, 2024 at 4:26 pm

    5 stars
    Ive made this twice since it came out, lol. But due to allergies made them without almond. Still very delicious! Dont have a stand mixer so had to mix sugar and butter with hand mixer then incorporated the dry ingredients by hand. Very easy to make! Thanks for this! Trying tonight with peanut butter, wish me luck!

    Reply
  11. Lucy says

    October 11, 2024 at 10:01 am

    1 star
    Too thick, too dry.
    Sadly not a hit with the family.

    Reply
  12. Jan Ishii Korn says

    October 10, 2024 at 8:52 am

    LOVE your blogs and cookbooks – can’t wait for the next one – preordered it! LOVE Dozer’s raincoat and want to get for my labs – the don’t ship to US – do you have any influence there????

    Reply
  13. Anna says

    October 8, 2024 at 10:50 am

    5 stars
    You should have used Cretan music in the background!

    Reply
  14. Ceal says

    October 7, 2024 at 8:16 pm

    Out of curiosity, if I wanted to try this with SR flour, how much baking powder is “a touch”? Haha

    Reply
  15. Su says

    October 7, 2024 at 5:07 pm

    Out of curiosity, do you need a food license to sell cookies at a hair salon?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      October 7, 2024 at 8:01 pm

      I figure it’s like a bake sale you’d see out the front of someone’s house 🙂 N x

      Reply
  16. Geraldine Garrett says

    October 7, 2024 at 1:12 am

    5 stars
    Cooked these today….just delicious 😋 and my hubby says they’re his new favourite! Thank you for sharing this recipe. I love your website and your positive energy and of course, Dozer 😘

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      October 7, 2024 at 8:14 pm

      Wow high praise! Irene will be thrilled 🙂 N x

      Reply
  17. Judy says

    October 6, 2024 at 6:05 am

    Irene’s Cretan biscuits (Greek almond cookies)

    Thanks for the recipe! I am trying to be gluten free so curious if I can substitute flour for others. Any recommendations?

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      October 7, 2024 at 8:14 pm

      Hi Judy! Unfortunately I haven’t tried it with GF 🙁 N x

      Reply
  18. Nancy says

    October 5, 2024 at 10:51 pm

    These cookies are fantastic. The almonds add a chewy texture to shortbread cookie that is addictive.
    My entire family devoured them all.
    Thanks for sharing

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      October 7, 2024 at 8:13 pm

      I’m so happy to hear you enjoyed it Nancy! Thank you for letting me know – N x

      Reply
  19. Donna says

    October 5, 2024 at 7:53 pm

    5 stars
    Made these this morning. Used almonds with the skin on and thought they added a bit of interest to an otherwise pale biscuit. The biscuits are delicious! Tried one a couple of hours after baking and they were quite crisp. This evening (with a cup of tea) they have softened a bit more but still great to eat! Buttery with a delicate taste of almond. Great recipe Nagi! Thanks for sharing Irene!

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      October 7, 2024 at 8:13 pm

      Ooh! I’m so happy you enjoyed it Donna, thanks so much for taking the time to come back and share your feedback! N x

      Reply
  20. Carole says

    October 5, 2024 at 7:29 pm

    I made these today, love the texture of them but wondering about the amount of baking powder, I found the taste a little zingy. I did use slightly rounded tsps, as I was always taught baking powder you rounded, baking soda you flattened.

    Reply
    • Nagi says

      October 7, 2024 at 8:13 pm

      Hi Carole! I know exactly what you mean because I had that problem myself. Definitely need level teaspoons! Heaping them is too much. I actually kept dialling the baking powder back because of this problem. N x

      Reply
      • Nikki says

        October 28, 2024 at 7:56 pm

        4 stars
        I loved these but found the baking powder taste a bit too much. Any suggestions on how to counter this? Reducing it would flatten it out too much/ make it dense?

        Reply
      • Carole Dew says

        October 8, 2024 at 7:06 am

        Brilliant thanks for that, really appreciate you taking the time to reply. I’ll try them again and use level or less. Have a great week. 🙂

        Reply
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