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These aren’t your average tartlets. They are Russian Korzinki. The crust is crumbly, soft and cookie-like. The lemon curd is so smooth and flavorful and pairs beautifully with the lightly sweetened cream.
I took these to my sisters houses (sharing is my sneaky diet plan) and the tarlets were a hit across the board. P.S. You don’t need any special tartlet pans; a mini muffin/mini cupcake pan will do just fine!
The first korzinki recipe I posted was nearly 4 years ago and the recipe made 108 cookies. The cookies were well loved by my readers over the years. Quite a few of you have share shared on Instagram and Facebook that you’ve made them for baby showers and parties. I have received several questions about making a smaller batch.
I figured some of you would appreciate if I scaled down the recipe a bit (36 cookies is much more reasonable), and jazzed it up with a new and scrumptious filling. Make these cookies for your next party – they are fantastic!
Ingredients for Korzinki:
1 large egg, at room temperature
1/3 cup sugar
5 1/2 Tbsp unsalted butter, at room temperature, cut into pieces
1/8 tsp (a generous pinch) baking soda
1 Tbsp real mayonnaise
1 1/3 cups+ 1 Tbsp all-purpose flour *measured correctly
Ingredients for Perfect Lemon Curd:
3 large eggs
1/3 cup granulated sugar
1 tsp grated lemon zest (from 1 medium lemon)
1/2 scant cup (just under 1/2 cup) fresh lemon juice (from about 3-4 lemons)
6 Tbsp (3/4 stick) unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
Pinch of Salt
Ingredients for Korzinki Frosting:
1 cup heavy whipping cream, very cold
2 Tbsp confectioners (powdered) sugar
1/2 tsp real vanilla extract
Optional Garnish:
Raspberry, mint or basil leaves
You will need:
A mini muffin pan (I used three 12-count pans and baked them all at once; quick & easy!)
How to Make Lemon Curd:
(start with the lemon curd since it needs time to cool)
1. In a medium saucepan, whisk together until smooth: 3 large eggs, 1/3 cup sugar, pinch of salt and grated lemon zest (make sure you only get the zest and not the white pith).
2. Whisk in 1/2 scant cup strained lemon juice, then add 6 Tbsp (3/4 stick) of butter pieces. Place pot over medium heat and cook, whisking constantly until butter is melted and the mixture is thickened. Bring to a gentle simmer for a few seconds then strain the mixture through a fine mesh sieve into a medium bowl. Let cool to room temp, then cover and refrigerate to thicken fully. This recipe lasts up to a week when refrigerated.

How to Make the Tartlet Crusts (Korzinki):
Pre-heat the Oven to 350˚F.
1. In the bowl of your electrix mixer, whisk together 1 egg with 1/3 cup sugar until even consistency.
2. Using the paddle attachment, add 5 1/2 Tbsp softened butter and mix on medium/high speed until creamy (3-5 min)
3. Add baking soda and mayo and mix until well blended.
4. Add flour, 1/2 cup at a time and mix until well incorporated. It should be a soft cookie dough consistency when it’s done.
5. Use your hands to roll dough into gum-ball-sized circles of dough. If it doesn’t roll easily in your hands (i.e. if it’s really sticky) add more flour. I ended up with 36 balls of dough. Place dough into mini-muffin dishes. I used 3 (12-count) pans at a time. If your pans are non-stick, you don’t have to grease them.
6. Use your fingers to form a well in the dough. Make a deep well since the bottoms rise quite a bit while baking.
7. Bake at 350˚F for 10 minutes, or until edges are golden. Tip cookies onto a clean towel (mine popped right out with a gentle tap on the counter). Turn cookies right side up to cool to room temperature. They will cool faster on a wire rack.
How to Make Whipped Cream for Korzinki:
Tips on whipping cream: Freeze or refrigerate your mixing bowl and whisk attachment 10-15 minutes prior to beating cream. Keep cream refrigerated until ready to use. The colder it is, the better it whips. Also, make sure you are using HEAVY whipping cream. Also, watch the video tutorial for how to make whipped cream.
1. Beat 1 cup heavy whipping cream on high speed until soft peaks form then add 2 Tbsp powdered sugar and 1/2 tsp vanilla and continue to beat on high speed until stiff and spreadable (mine took about a minute). Don’t over-beat it or it will be buttery. Refrigerate cream until ready to use.
Assembly of Korzinki:
1. Spoon the lemon curd over each tartlet crust (about 1 – 1/2 tsp on each one) – you can be generous; you may even have a few tablespoons left over.
2. You can spoon on the whipping cream or pipe it on. I used my Wilton 1M open star tip. Garnish with fresh basil leaves, or raspberries if desired and serve! Refrigerate any tartlets that don’t get eaten
Credits: Tartlets, Cream & garnish from Natasha’s Kitchen. Lemon Curd from Joy of Cooking.
Tartlets with Lemon Curd and Whipped Cream (Korzinki)

Ingredients
Tartlet (korzinki) ingredients:
- 1 large egg, at room temperature
- 1/3 cup sugar
- 5 1/2 Tbsp unsalted butter, at room temperature, cut into pieces
- 1/8 tsp a generous pinch baking soda
- 1 Tbsp mayonnaise*
- 1 1/3 cups+ 1 Tbsp all-purpose flour
Lemon Curd Ingredients:
- 3 large eggs
- 1/3 cup granulated sugar
- 1 tsp Grated lemon zest, from 1 medium lemon
- 1/2 scant cup, just under 1/2 cup fresh lemon juice (from about 3-4 lemons)
- 6 Tbsp unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
- Pinch salt
Whipped Cream Ingredients
- 1 cup heavy whipping cream, very cold
- 2 Tbsp confectioners, powdered sugar
- 1/2 tsp real vanilla extract
Optional Garnish:
- Raspberry, mint or basil leaves
You will need:
- A mini muffin pan, I used three 12-count pans and baked them all at once
Instructions
How to Make Lemon Curd: (start with the lemon curd since it needs time to cool)
- In a medium saucepan, whisk together until smooth: 3 large eggs, 1/3 cup sugar, pinch of salt and grated lemon zest.
- Whisk in 1/2 cup strained lemon juice, then add 6 Tbsp of butter pieces. Place pot over medium heat and cook, whisking constantly until butter is melted and the mixture is thickened. Bring to a gentle simmer for a few seconds then strain the mixture through a fine mesh sieve into a medium bowl. Let cool to room temp, then cover and refrigerate to thicken fully. This recipe lasts up to a week when refrigerated.
How to Make the Tartlet Crusts (Korzinki): Pre-heat the Oven to 350 degrees F.
- In the bowl of your electrix mixer, whisk together 1 egg with 1/3 cup sugar until even consistency.
- Using the paddle attachment, add 5 1/2 Tbsp softened butter and mix on medium/high speed until creamy (3-5 min)
- Add 1/8 tsp of baking soda, 1 Tbsp of mayo and mix until well blended.
- Add flour, 1/2 cup at a time and mix until well incorporated. It should be a soft cookie dough consistency when it's done.
- Use your hands to roll dough into gum-ball-sized circles of dough. If it doesn't roll easily in your hands (i.e. if it's really sticky) add more flour. I ended up with 36 balls of dough. Place dough into mini-muffin dishes. I used 3 (12-count) pans at a time. If your pans are non-stick, you don't have to grease them.
- Use your fingers to form a well in the dough. Make a deep well since the bottoms rise quite a bit while baking.
- Bake at 350˚F for 10 minutes, or until edges are golden. Tip cookies onto a clean towel (mine popped right out with a gentle tap on the counter). Turn cookies right side up to cool to room temperature. They will cool faster on a wire rack.
How to Make Whipped Cream:
- Beat 1 cup heavy whipping cream on high speed until soft peaks form then add 2 Tbsp powdered sugar and 1/2 tsp vanilla and continue to beat on high speed until stiff and spreadable (mine took about a minute). Don’t over-beat it or it will be buttery.
- Refrigerate cream until ready to use.
Assembling your Tartlets:
- Spoon the lemon curd over each tartlet crust (about 1 - 1/2 tsp on each one) - you can be generous; you may even have a few Tbsp left over.
- You can spoon on the whipping cream or pipe it on. I used my Wilton 1M open start tip. Garnish with fresh basil leaves, or raspberries if desired and serve! Refrigerate any tartlets that don't get eaten.
Notes
Freeze or refrigerate your mixing bowl and whisk attachment 10-15 minutes prior to beating cream. Keep cream refrigerated until ready to use. The colder it is, the better it whips. Also, make sure you are using HEAVY whipping cream.
Are you craving one yet?
I haven’t tried the recipe as yet, but I am curious as to whether the tart recipe can be used to make cookies?
Hi Alaina, I think that will work too. If you try that, please share with us how it goes!
Question, how far can the shells be made in advance? I would like to know by Wednesday at the latest. Thank you!
Hi Katharine, yes you can make this ahead. I would recommend making every part of the recipe, pre-baking the cookies, pre-making the curd and then assembling the same day you are serving for maximum freshness and “prettiness” (<-- I don't think that's a word). You can make them 2-3 days in advance. I haven’t tried longer than that. :)
Thanks so much for the response! i am actually going to make the curd and the cookies tonight and on Saturday morning, make the whipped cream and assemble for a family get together.
I hope it becomes a hit!
I tried this recipe over the week-end and while I pressed the dough nicely and evenly against the walls of the mini-muffin pan, I ended up with what looked like mini-muffins rather than cookie-cups. In other words, the dough rose a lot. Any suggestions? I like the idea, as these could be used with different fillings
Hi Matthias, they do rise some but shouldn’t look like muffins. Make sure to add a thin layer of crust and push it down to mold to the cup which can help.
Hi, Natasha!
Thank you for sharing this wonderful recipe with us. I made these lemon tartlets and they were delicious! I plan on making them again for a party. I was asked to exclude the whipping cream so that the tartlets are able to sit at room temp on a decorated table for several hours. In order to still have the tartlets look decorative, I plan on applying the lemon curd onto the tartlets using a piping tip. Do you have any suggestions on how I could thicken the lemon curd so that it can maintain its decorative shape at room temp?
Hi Victoria, without testing that through, I’m not sure I can advise on that. I’m so glad you loved the tartlets!
Great recipe! I made it as a large pie for my boyfriend and I and it lasted only 2 days. We couldn’t stay away from it!
It sounds like you found a family favorite! Thank you so much for sharing that with me!
Hello Natasha, the recipes I have seen so far for lemon curd have just egg yolks. Can we use whole egg for the curd. Thank you for sharing such pretty stuff with us
Hi Rabya, I have not tried this with egg whites/ the entire egg to advise.
Hii natasha! Its the first time I am trying this and just made the lemon curd but i turned out a bit too tangy for my family’s taste. Is there any way i could correct this one?Or will i have to start over? PLEASE HELP!
Hi Joanna, I haven’t tried, but if the mixture was still warm, you could add a little sugar and stir until the granules are dissolved. Putting the lemon curd over a cookie cup as in the recipe will make it seem more balanced with the sweetness of the cookie.
Hi there, I’m just wondering, can I add 2 eggs or do I just have to add 3 eggs? Thank you
We recommend using 3 large eggs for this recipe.
Hi there!
Is it possible to make this as a large tart shell?
Hi Haley, is it much larger than the pan we use? I worry the tart will be too thin. If you experiment, let me know how you liked the recipe.
Hi, it is a 9” tart pan. Thanks for the reply
Hi Haley, I haven’t tested this in a tart pan. I used a mini-muffin pan to make these and it is linked above.
Hey, Natasha, Id love to try this but the thing is I’m not really a big fan of mayonnaise. Is it a necessary ingredient and can it be replaced with anything else or not?
Hi Sofia, The mayo helps the texture of the cookies. To be honest, I’ve always made them with the mayo per the original recipe. I don’t know how it would affect the recipe to leave it out. It would have to be an experiment. You might substitute with 1/2 Tbsp oil if you do leave it out.
I’d love to try these and am wondering if I can use a fluted 3” tartlet pan (it would make (6) 3” tartlets.
I haven’t tested that to advise Carrie. If you experiment please let me know how you like that.
can u post a video of how to make lemon bars?
without using too many eggs?
Thank you for that suggestion, Miranda! I will add it to my to-do list.
ok thank u just tell me when u make them!!
will the crust for this work for the lemon bars
Hi lana, I have not tested this for lemon bars to advise.
Can i use 2 eggs for the filling instead of 3
Hi Lana, that will work, just adjust the rest of the ingredients for the two eggs. I hope that helps
Do u have any suggestions on where to buy a 9 inch tart pan
Hi Lana, with so many stores being closed now, I would check Amazon. That is where we buy a lot of our cookware also.
Oh yea ok thank you!! Oh and also does can i use 2 eggs instead of 3 for the filling
I made it as a pie. Perfect amount of lemon curd and just enough dough. Turned out exactly like your picture except it was one 9 inch pie. Super!
That’s so great Liliya! Sounds like you found a new favorite.
Hello! I was wondering, I am making these for my grandma to take to her garden club meeting thisTuesday. I am making them on Monday and I was wondering will the whipped cream be ok to put on the tarts on Monday? Thanks so much!
Hi Anne, you could make them a day in advance and keep them refrigerated. The best way would be to make the tartlets, lemon curd and whipped cream the day before (refrigerate the lemon curd and whipped cream and put tartlets in a plastic bag once they’ve cooled down) and assemble them before your party. Keep refrigerated until ready to serve.
Thanks so much! I can’t wait to try them! I’ll let you know how they turn out!
Thank you again!
Review for the tartlet recipe only.
The dough cooked up beautifully. I agree with someone else who said it does puff quite a bit, but I didn’t use beans or anything to keep it down in the bottoms of the tins. Even with the puffing, there was still a cup to fill with curd.
I did have to add about 1/4 cup more flour to make it work and not be too sticky.
After pulling these out of the oven, I put a wire cookie rack on top of the mini muffin pan and flipped it over. After tapping the bottoms of the pan, the tartlet shells all fell out onto the rack–perfect! I actually popped them back in the oven, so the bottoms could get a little more brown, and I found that this strategy worked really well for me.
I’ll definitely be using this tartlet recipe again. Thanks!
Thank you so much for sharing that with me, Erin!
Question, can I use heavy cream instead of heavy whipping cream? I couldn’t find it as my grocery store
Hi Kellie, heavy cream and heavy whipping cream are the same thing. They have the same fat content, just do not use “whipping cream” which is a lighter version. It should say “heavy” to whip properly.
thanks so much! Just finished them and they turned out amazing!!!
I’m so happy to hear that! thank you for sharing! 🙂
What else can be used instead of lemon curd? Thanks
Hi Jessica! You could use a variety of your favorite jams inside of the cookies rather than lemon curd if you wanted to, to change these up a bit.