Lemon bars are one of the EASIEST desserts to make but they’re guaranteed to bring a smile to your face. I love the soft lemon filling paired with a crisp shortbread crust and the flavor is beyond delicious; so bright and zingy with all the lemon flavor from the juice and zest, they’re simply irresistible!

RECIPE: https://preppykitchen.com/lemon-bars/

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Hey, I’m John Canel and today on Preppy Kitchen, we’re making some zingy, delicious lemon bars. So, let’s get started. First off, set your oven to 350 and fully line a 9 by13in baking dish with parchment paper. Now, in a large bowl, we’re going to get those dry ingredients together. Our shortbread crust, we’ll need 3 cups or 360 g of allpurpose flour. Perfect. To the flour, we’re adding 3/4 of a cup or 90 g of powdered sugar and a/ teaspoon of salt for some contrast. Grab a whisk. Our scale is done. So, we’re going to mix this up. Lemon bars are a favorite. Zingy, full of flavor, and the textures are great, too. You get a really like luscious gooey top with that melt inyou mouth shortbread bottom. It’s delicious. Okay, that’s good. I’ve melted 3/4 of a cup plus 2 tablespoons or 200 g of unsalted butter. If you want a little kiss of flavor, you could add a dash or a teaspoon of vanilla and just mix that in. Totally optional, but I love it. Now, we’re going to pour the butter in and mix together with our spatula. This mixes up so easily, but if you wanted to, you could totally use a stand mixer with a paddle attachment. Lemon bars fall into the quick and easy category of recipes, and there’s really only one thing that can go wrong, and that is the floating crust. Sometimes you’ll get a crust that floats up during baking and the filling is on the bottom but the crust is on top. That will only happen if there are gaps in your crust. So I want to encourage you in this recipe to get a nice even coverage. There’s plenty of short crust to go around for a 9 by13in pan and really do a good job pressing it down. No gaps. Even if this baked upside down, it would still be delicious, but we don’t want that to happen. Just going to use my clean hand and work this together and get rid of any remaining bits of flour. I’m not kneading it. I’m just pressing it. My flour has disappeared. So, now we’re going to sprinkle this into our pan. Right now, I’m just breaking my shortbread into little crumbles so I can distribute it evenly into my pan. Sprinkle your shortbread into your baking dish. And I’m just giving this a head start by distributing it evenly to begin with. Work this into an even layer with your fingers. And by the way, if you like my videos, hit that subscribe button. There’s two new recipes every week. Now, use your clean, strong hands to press this into an even layer. The one thing you don’t want are any gaps or cracks because the lemon filling will go into those cracks during the baking and lift the crust up. So, give it a good press. I’m using a flat bottomed glass just to seal the deal and finish this off, but that’s kind of an optional step. Shortbread is a Scottish invention meant to evade taxes because there was a tax on biscuits, so they called it bread. And Kurds have been around forever. But this dessert, which combines a lemon curd and a shortbread crust, is really like from the 1950s in America. [Music] The first widely disseminated lemon bar recipe came from 1962 in the Chicago Tribune and it was submitted by Eleanor Michaelelsson. So Eleanor, thank you for doing that. You could also use an offset spatula just to get those corners and edges and give you the most beautiful shortbread crust anyone’s ever seen as it’ll be covered. My shortbread crust is ready to go into the oven 350 for 20 to 25 minutes or until it’s a light golden color. It’ll also smell delicious. In the meantime, we’ll start our lemon curd. Into the bowl of your food processor, we’re going to add 3 cups or 600 g of granulated sugar. To the sugar, we’re going to add 3 tablespoon of lemon zest. That’s the zest of about three lemons. For this step, if you don’t have a food processor and you’re using a big bowl, I would mince the lemon zest and then just work it into the sugar by hand. So, you’re going to rub it together until the sugar feels like wet sand. That’s a light yellow color and smells amazing. The idea is we’re going to get all these delicious lemon oils out of the lemon zest for maximum flavor. One. And of course, we’re going to juice these lemons as well, but zesting is always first, two, and three. I’m going to set that aside. And now it’s time to juice our lemons. You want to end up with one cup of lemon juice. And of course, for this recipe, you would always use fresh lemon juice, not from concentrate or anything like that. If you have any helpers in the kitchen, now is the time to call them. Okay. Get all that juice out. This is going to be the flavor that we need. So, it’s worth the effort. So close. Okay, perfect. One cup exactly. No seeds, please. Grab your food processor. You’re going to pulse this until the sugar is a nice light yellow color. It’s also breaking up those bits of lemon zest, so you’ll have a smoother curd. If you decided not to strain this, a beautiful light yellow color. It looks like it’s kind of a wet sand texture and it smells amazing. Our processor is done. We’re going to dump this into a big bowl. Now, to my lemon sugar, I’m going to add half a cup or 60 g of allpurpose flour. So, sprinkle that in. We’re going to whisk this in nicely. Flour is a thickening agent that’ll help our curd set nicely. Lovely. Time to pour your one cup of freshlysqueezed lemon juice in. And to this, we’ll add eight room temperature eggs. No shells. I’m going to crack these into a separate bowl just so I can be sure. If you’re very concerned about shells, you can crack your eggs into the bowl one at a time, transferring each one before cracking the next. And eight final check for shells. Perfect. And we’ll add that into our sugar mixture. Give this a good mix just to get it all well combined. [Music] This is so much easier and nicer than making like a traditional lemon curd where you’re cooking it on the stove. Oh my gosh, it’s beyond easy. You definitely want to make the crust and the filling at the same time. So, this should be done while the crust is in the oven because you’re going to pour this in to the hot crust. This will give your filling a jump start in baking and just make everything work out nicely. By the way, this lovely color you see that everyone identifies with lemon curd. Does not come from the lemons. It comes from the yolk of the eggs you use. Nicely mixed. My crust has about 5 minutes. I’m going to clean up and be ready for the next step. Fresh out of the oven. This is very hot, so be careful. Give your filling one final stir since it’s probably been sitting for a few minutes. and pour right into your hot crust. Get all of it out. My lemon bars are ready to go into the oven 350 for about 25 minutes, turning halfway through. You’ll know they’re done because the center will only have a very slight jiggle. They’ll continue to set as they cool. In you go. When your lemon bars come out of the oven, let them cool for about an hour and then pop them into the fridge to chill for at least 2 hours. Then we can finish them off and give them a cut. The lemon curd is sticky, so gently pull up on the edges to release. There we go. My parchment did its job, so let’s get rid of all of it. Grab some powdered sugar in a sifter, and we’re going to top it up. That’s the signature look we all know and love. Perfect. I have a damp paper towel here because it will help if your knife is dampened to get nice clean cuts. Your lemon bars can be as big or as small as you’d like. I suggest 15 would be a nice number. Wipe your knife off in between each cut. Your lemon bars will last a week in an airtight container in the fridge, or you can freeze them for up to 3 months. Just cut them, freeze them on a baking sheet, and then once frozen, pop them into a container. These got a perfect bake. They’re not overdone. They’re not underdone. They’re juicy. And you can just tell it’s going to be delicious. Two little helpers have been asking, “Are these lemon bars done yet?” And they finally are. So, would you like a little taste? Yeah. All right, let’s have a bite. How’s it taste? Good. High praise. The shortbread crust is so nice and melt in your mouth. The lemon curd is zingy, full of flavor, and so juicy. and together it might just be the perfect treat.

42 Comments

  1. 1:10 ‘If you want a little kiss of flavour…’. How good is John. He makes even the most mundane task sound like an inspirational journey.

  2. I have a great recipe already but might try yours for fun for thanksgiving. My sister's girlfriend is GF and I'll try it with a gf flour

  3. Thanks for that little kiss of flavor, same back to you ❤, bought and love your cookbooks. Please write a Christmas cookbook with pictures of your trip to New York with your family a year ago or so.

  4. Omggg I LOOOVE lemon bars!!!! No idea they required soooo much sugar and eggs 🤯 they'd be fun to try sometime!!!!

  5. Hey John. I bought an attachment that works off the hub of my KitchenAid stand mixer and it's for juicing citrus fruit. Wasn't much money and it works so easy to get every bit of that juice from the halves. Got it on Amazon. Can't remember what I paid for it, but it wasn't expensive. The juicing knob rotates by the hub power. I make orange cookies and have to juice the oranges and it is so slick to get the job done. Just info.

  6. Oh I’m so excited!! This is the only one of your recipes I didn’t master, excited to try again!! Everyone loves these

  7. Love Lemons and loved your recipe – thanks for sharing and thank you two boys for making an appearance. Greetings from S/W Cornwall. Uk.❤

  8. Always need a lemon recipes so I can use my lemons from my tree. Thank you 😊 Recipe idea: German apple pie

  9. I prefer a flaky crust so I use cold butter and cut it in. I'm going to try this next time to compare. Either way you can't go wrong.

  10. Your boys are so adorable.❤❤ Your sons are lucky to have a father who is such a wonderful cook.
    Thank you for sharing the recipe.

  11. Oh no. This is my favorite dessert and now that I know how to make it I'm not going to have any self control 🥲 love the added history! Great video as always 👏

  12. If you want to boost the lemon flavor, add a little bit of cream of tartar. It makes the bars a touch more acidic which your brain will interpret as more lemony.

  13. Mine turned out sooo good! Btww have a silly little question: my bf is OBSESSED with anything lemon-flavored, do you have any recommendations on what I should try baking next?

  14. The last time I made lemon bars I had a floating crust.. which would have been FINE, but I had parchment paper under the crust.. so my levels went from filling at the bottom, parchment paper, then crust on top. Totally inedible. I was heartbroken