The Me. The cookbook addict missed a book signing at Omnivore Books. Literally, took my eye off the book and completely missed Natasha Pickowicz’s More Than Cake book signing event.
In my effort to curtail my cookbook acquisitions, I have limited my cookbook buying to books by POC authors. There are exceptions of course, anything by Dorie Greenspan and if you own a restaurant in the middle of nowhere, Maine, and pub a new book, iykyk 😉, I’m all in.
Here is my weak defense. Pickowicz, at first glance, is not an Asian last name, so the fact that she is part Chinese escaped me. The title, More Than Cake also threw me off. I’m not a big cake person, more of a cookies and pies gal. As soon as I saw the word Cake…I tuned out, the MORE THAN got by me.
When I realized she was Asian and that her book contained WAY more than just cake, her book landed on my radar. Then I found out she organizes amazing BAKE Sales for Planned Parenthood and Brigid Alliance and has raised thousands of dollars (lots of thousands), so I ordered a copy immediately. It now has a spot on my cookbook shelf.

Holiday Traditions
Thanksgiving is in the books (no pun intended) which means a couple of things in our house. Patrick Stewart’s version of A Christmas Carol kicks off 24-7 holiday music in our house. I am stoked. Second, time to plan those holiday cookie boxes! I pulled out More Than Cake and found a recipe for Nubby Granola Shortbread. Shortbread, y’all know I LOVE shortbread, time for a test run.
Make these crispy, buttery bites in a food processor. A little pulse magic and the dough is done. How easy is that? The rice flour makes them lighter and crunchier than traditional shortbread, perfect with a cuppa coffee or tea. I made a batch of Jule’s Granola which worked perfectly in these cookies. Flecks of dried fruit from the granola added a bit of color and sweetness to the shortbread, an unanticipated bonus.
PLUS, fill cute canning jars with the remaining granola to give away, 2 gifts in one. This cookie is definitely going in the holiday cookie box.
Tips
- Use your favorite granola, store-bought or homemade. You don’t have to make your own. I love making granola, so NBD.
- Using a food processor makes quick work of the dough. It starts with chilled butter (yay, no waiting for butter to soften).

- Rice flour is the key to a fine-textured, crumbly, melt-in-your-mouth cookie. Look for Bob’s Red Mill Rice Flour in larger supermarkets, Whole Foods, and online.
- Press the dough into your baking pan. Which means, if you hate rolling out dough, this is perfect.
- You can cut the recipe in half and bake it in an 8×8 pan.

- The tricky part of this recipe is the baking time. Rice flour produces a drier cookie than AP flour, try not to overbake these cookies. After removing the pan from the oven, lightly score the dough and allow to cool. Once cooled, cut through the score marks. Sprinkle with flaky salt and dust generously with powdered sugar to finish cookies.

A buttery, crunchy, gluten-free shortbread cookie that keeps and travels well. This is a keeper.
Nubby Granola Shortbread
Ingredients
- 2 cups your favorite granola
- 3/4 cup walnut pieces pecans or almonds would work but lack that characteristic tannic edge of walnuts
- 2 cups white rice flour
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 8 ounces unsalted butter (2 sticks) cut into 1/2-inch cubes, well chilled
Finish
- flaky sea salt
- powdered sugar for dusting
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 F. Fit a sheet of parchment paper into a quarter-sheet pan (9 by 13 inches). Lightly mist the parchment with cooking spray.
- In a food processor, combine the granola, nut pieces, white rice flour, granulated sugar, and kosher salt, and pulse until the mixture is pebbly and fine.
- Add the butter and pulse another 8 to 10 times, until the mixture feels like damp, coarse breadcrumbs. The butter should almost disappear into the dry ingredients but not be taken so far that the dough is clumping and gathering around the blade.
- Scatter the dough evenly in the prepared sheet pan. Use your knuckles to lightly press the crumb into an even layer. It should be about 1/2 inch thick. Do not apply too much pressure, as this would make the shortbread dense and gummy.
- Bake until the edges of the shortbread are lightly browned, and the center feels soft but cooked through, 35 to 40 minutes (see tip).
- Remove the pan from the oven and sprinkle the surface with flaky sea salt. While the shortbread is still hot, use a small knife to score it into 24 squares.
- Let cool completely, then cut the cookies, still in the pan, along the scored lines and dust with powdered sugar.

I made this with my raw homemade nutty coconut granola and it turned out great! I just added a little more sugar (mostly coconut and some white). Thank you and yum!
You’re quite welcome!