monte carlos with cherry jam and salted vanilla icing
27 Apr 2026
There are many recipes online for Monte Carlo biscuits (and almost none for Orange slice) but I thought I'd try Natalie Paull's version, which I found in Delicious magazine, because I just love Natalie's recipes.
I made a small batch of sour cherry jam, the salted vanilla icing and the biscuit dough the day before I made the biscuits. This was probably a good idea because the biscuit dough was very soft, too soft to roll into a log. Rather than freezing the dough, as Natalie suggested, I rested it in the fridge for a few hours and when it was firm, I rolled it into a round log. I was also a bit heavy handed when cutting the biscuits so from my half batch I made 9 biscuits.
My jam was on the runny side, so instead of dolloping spoonfuls of jam onto one of the biscuits, I piped a border of the vanilla icing around the edge of one biscuit and spooned the jam into the centre, then sandwiched the 2 halves together.
Here's the recipe for you which will make between 18 and 20 filled biscuits. For all my recipes I use a 250ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon, unsalted butter and 60g eggs. My oven is a conventional gas oven so if your oven is fan forced, you may need to reduce the oven temperature by 20°C.
Monte Carlos' with cherry jam and salted vanilla icing
Ingredients
110g cold unsalted butter, chopped
120g raw caster sugar
1 tbs runny honey
1 large egg, at room temperature
1 tsp vanilla bean paste
230g self-raising flour
2/3-cup (50g) shredded coconut
1/2 cup (160g) thick cherry jam (or raspberry)
Ingredients
110g cold unsalted butter, chopped
120g raw caster sugar
1 tbs runny honey
1 large egg, at room temperature
1 tsp vanilla bean paste
230g self-raising flour
2/3-cup (50g) shredded coconut
1/2 cup (160g) thick cherry jam (or raspberry)
Salted vanilla icing
1 2/3 cups (200g) icing sugar mixture
80g unsalted butter, at room temperature
1 tbs milk
1 tsp vanilla bean paste
Method
Heat a small saucepan over high heat until hot, add butter and melt, swirling pan occasionally, for a few minutes, until foaming and nut brown. Transfer to a large bowl and cool slightly. Whisk in sugar, honey, egg and vanilla until smooth. Using a plastic spatula, mix in flour, coconut and 1/4 tsp fine salt until combined. Divide mixture in half. Roll each half in a sheet of baking paper to form two 20cm logs, twisting paper ends to seal and tighten logs. Freeze for 30 minutes, or until firm but still sliceable (see notes).
Preheat oven to 160°C/140°C fan-forced. Grease 2 large baking trays and line with baking paper. Cut 1 cm slices from dough, and then place on prepared trays about an inch apart as the biscuits don't spread much. Gently scratch the top of the biscuit with a fork then bake for 25 minutes on the centre rack or until evenly brown and crisp to touch. Cool on tray for 5 minutes then lift onto a cooling rack to cool to room temperature.
For the icing, place all ingredients and a large pinch of salt flakes in a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Beat on medium-high speed, scraping down side of bowl occasionally, until fluffy.
To assemble, spread half the cooled biscuits with 1 tsp measures of jam, and spread remaining cooled biscuits with 1 heaped tsp measures of icing. Sandwich the jam and icing topped biscuits together, pressing firmly to secure.
Recipe Notes
These are best eaten on the day they’re assembled, but can be stored in a container in the fridge for up to 1 day. The uncooked dough can be kept chilled in an airtight container for up to 1 week, or frozen for up to 3 months.
These biscuits looked way prettier than the Monte Carlos of old and tasted way better. Maybe if they'd tasted like these homemade ones, I might have been tempted away from the orange slice.
See you all again next week with some more baking from my kitchen.
Bye for now,
Jillian



















































