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A delicious lemon curd filling on a buttery shortbread crust, these creamy lemon bars have the perfect combination of sweetness and tartness.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
This recipe originally came from a childhood friend’s mother in Wisconsin over 50 years ago. It is the recipe my mother always made and it is the one I always make. I have made this recipe hundred’s of times. Through the years I have tried an endless number of recipes and this one still comes out on top.
You have to have just the right texture for a perfect bar, not too gooey, not too dry. It must also has to have the right amount of lemon, not too sweet and not to tart. This one has the perfect amount of lemon flavor.
Ingredients
- Lemons
- Butter, salted
- Flour
- Sugar, powdered and granulated sugar
- Eggs
- Baking Powder
How to Make Lemon Bars
Shortbread Crust
- Mix together butter, 1 cup of flour and 1/4 cup of powdered sugar using a fork, pastry blender or a food processor. This will make a dry crumbly mixture. A food processor will give you a more delicate crumb.
- Press dough into the bottom of an 8 x8 baking pan. Line pan with parchment paper for easy removal. Press down the shortbread crust with your hand or the bottom of a glass or measuring cup.
- Bake at 350 degrees F for 15 minutes, until lightly golden brown around the edges.
Filling
- Mix together sugar, 2 Tbsp flour and baking powder in a stand mixer with a paddle attachment or use an electric mixer.
- Add in eggs, juice of one lemon (about 2 Tbsp.) and the zest from the lemon and whisk together.
- Pour the lemon filling over baked warm crust and bake for an additional 20-25 minutes at 350 degrees F or until edges are golden brown and mixture is set.
Lemon Glaze
- Mix together 3/4 cup powdered sugar with 2 Tbsp lemon juice or enough to make glaze soft enough to drizzle over lemon bars while they are still warm.
- Cool and cut. They are best eaten within 24 hours if not refrigerated.
Tip from Leigh Anne
- Lemon bars may seem slightly underdone when you remove them from the oven but they will set up as they cool and as they chill.
- You can also blend the crust together in a food processor for a more delicate crumb.
- Be sure and compress down the shortbread crust in the pan using your. hand or the bottom of a glass or measuring cup.
- Glaze the bars while they are still warm. Instead of glaze, you can sprinkle them with powdered sugar when they are cooled if you prefer or you can glaze and sprinkle!
- Allow them to cool completely before cutting. You will get a cleaner slice. To speed the cooling process I will sometimes put them in the refrigerator.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I double this recipe?
Absolutely! They are so delicious you are going to want to double it! Use a 9×13 inch pan if you are doubling it. Bake time should be the same.
How do you zest a lemon
Two of my favorite tools when working with lemons are this lemon juicer and a microplaner for zesting. When zesting a lemon only remove the outer lemon layer, not the inner white layer which is bitter.
How to store lemon bars?
Lemon bars are best eaten fresh within 24 hours but they do freeze really well. I have been known to eat them frozen straight out of the freezer. Be sure to let the bars cool completely before freezing. You can freeze them whole by removing them from the pan and wrapping the entire amount in plastic wrap and then a layer of foil. You can freeze individual bars by wrapping them each in plastic wrap and foil. They will keep in the freezer for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the fridge and then dust with powdered sugar before serving.
How to cut lemon bars?
My favorite way to cut any kind of bar cookie is with a plastic disposable knife. You get a nice clean cut. Lemon bars can be a little gooey in the middle and the plastic knife works great.
I also have a small batch lemon bar recipe! They are the perfect amount for 2-4 people.
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Lemon Bar Recipe
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup butter cold
- 1 cup flour
- 1/4 cup powdered sugar
- 1 cup sugar
- 2 Tbsp flour
- 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 2 eggs beaten
- 1 lemon zest and juice (about 2 Tbsp juice)
Lemon Glaze
- 2 Tbsp lemon juice or enough to get proper consistency for drizzling
- 3/4 cup powdered sugar
Instructions
- Cut together butter, 1 cup flour and 1/4 cup powdered sugar and press into 8 x 8 pan.
- Bake for 15 minutes at 350 degrees.
- Mix together sugar, 2 Tbsp flour and baking powder
- Add in eggs, juice of one lemon (about 2 Tbsp.) and the zest from the lemon.
- Pour this mixture over baked crust and bake for 20-25 minutes at 350 degrees or until edges are golden brown and mixture is set.
Glaze
- Mix together 3/4 cup powdered sugar with 2 Tbsp lemon juice or enough to make glaze soft enough to drizzle over lemon bars while they are still warm.
- Cool and cut.
Andrea says
I just made these and WOW! They are absolutely delicious! A few years ago I had a lemon bar at a church function and it was so sour and bitter I couldn’t even eat it. I pretty much swore them off after that but after coming across this recipe today on pinterest I decided to give them a try. I am SO glad I did! I dusted mine with powdered sugar but will try the glaze next time.
Leigh Anne says
Andrea – I am so glad you tried the recipe. It is one of my all time favorites!! The best lemon bars ever!!
Kris says
OMG! I made these for a family bbq. They went like wildfire. Nothing left but crumbs! I doubled the recipe and put it in a 13×9 dish. Also I added crushed pecans to the crust and lemon zest to the glaze. It added that extra zing of lemon. Amazing, definitely a keeper!
Leigh Anne says
Kris, Love hearing this! They truly are the best and I’m glad agree! I bet the addition of the pecans and lemon zest was amazing, will have to give it a try. Thanks for sharing.
Shambray says
I would love to use this as part of a roundup I am putting together. I would use a small picture as part of a collage and then a link to this post. Please let me know if this is something you would like me to do. Thanks a million!
Leigh Anne says
Shambray, That would be fine. Thanks.
Tiffany says
Hi Leigh Anne, Is there a substitute for the egg that would still let the delicious flavor come through? Thanks!
Leigh Anne says
Tiffany, Sorry but I have no idea. I have never worked with egg substitutes before. If you work with them often I would just try what you normally use. Let me know what you end up using.
Amy says
These look amazing! I would love to take a batch to Easter dinner, but I will not have time the day of to make them. Do you suppose they would hold up being made the day before?
Leigh Anne says
Amy, They will definitely hold up. You may want to keep them in the refrigerator overnight.