Stop and smell the rosemary… then bake with it! 🌿These buttery Parmesan-Rosemary Shortbread cookies paired with a refreshing Rosemary-Lemonade Fizz are a simple, garden-inspired treat—perfect for spring entertaining, brunch, or tea on the porch.

If you have rosemary growing nearby, you know how irresistible it is to brush your hand along it as you pass. Rosemary typically blooms in the spring, showcasing shades of light blue, purple, pink, or white. These edible blooms attract pollinators like bees, butterflies, and hummingbirds.
The flowers are most abundant in full sun and well-drained soil. The pretty blooms and fresh, piney fragrance is what inspired today’s recipes. . .a savory twist on shortbread and a refreshing citrusy drink that tastes like spring in every bite and sip.

These buttery Parmesan-Rosemary Shortbread Cookies are crisp, tender, and full of flavor, while a sparkling Rosemary Lemonade Fizz (cocktail or mocktail) adds a light, refreshing pairing. Together, they’re perfect for brunch, tea time, or a relaxing afternoon on the porch.

🧈 Parmesan-Rosemary Shortbread Cookies
These savory shortbread cookies are rich and buttery, with a touch of sweetness and the perfect balance of fresh rosemary and Parmesan cheese. Perfect to enjoy with a glass of white wine or lemonade! Best of all, you can make the dough ahead of time, put it in the fridge or freezer!

Ingredients:
- 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
- 1/2 cup finely grated Parmesan cheese
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 cup confectioners’ sugar
- 2 teaspoons fresh rosemary, finely minced
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon water if needed

Instructions:
- Put the flour, sugar, rosemary, salt, and Parmesan into the bowl of a food processor and pulse until combined.
- Add the butter and pulse just until a soft dough forms; the dough should hold together when squeezed with your hands. If not, add the water and pulse until combined.
- Spread a large sheet of plastic wrap on a work surface and transfer the dough onto it. Using the plastic wrap as a guide, form the dough into a loose log along 1 edge of the long side of the sheet. Roll the dough log, twisting the plastic gathered at the ends in opposite directions until the log is tight and compact, about 2 1/2 inches in diameter.
- Chill in the refrigerator until firm, about 1 hour.
- Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.
- Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper or silicone baking mats. Slice the dough log into 1/3-inch thick slices and arrange on the lined sheets, about 1-inch apart. Bake until the edges are just beginning to brown, 12 to 14 minutes.
- Cool the shortbread on the pan for 5 minutes then transfer to wire racks to cool completely.
- Store the shortbread in an airtight container at room temperature until ready to serve.

Tips:
- Use fresh rosemary for the best flavor
- Chill dough well for clean slices
- For extra flavor, sprinkle a little Parmesan on top before baking
- If your rosemary is blooming, garnish with fresh blooms to serve.

🍋 Rosemary Lemonade Fizz
Light, citrusy, and infused with fresh herbs, this sparkling drink is perfect for spring and summer gatherings. Serve with a splash of gin or vodka for cocktail or enjoy without alcohol as a refreshing mocktail.
Ingredients:
- 1 cup fresh lemon juice (about 4–6 lemons)
- 1/2 cup sugar (or to taste)
- 1 cup water
- 2 (8-inch) sprigs fresh rosemary
- 2 cups sparkling water or club soda
- Ice
- Lemon slices and rosemary sprigs for garnish
Instructions:
- Bring lemon juice, sugar, and rosemary to a boil in a small saucepan, stirring until sugar has dissolved, then reduce heat and simmer 2 minutes.
- Cool completely, about 1 hour. Discard rosemary sprigs.
- Fill 8 (8-ounces) glasses halfway with ice. Divide syrup (about 2 tablespoons each) among glasses and add vodka or gin (1 tablespoon each). Top off with club soda or sparking water/seltzer.
- Garnish with lemon slices and rosemary sprigs
Tips:
- Adjust sweetness to taste
- For entertaining, make the rosemary syrup ahead of time
- Add a splash of vodka or gin for an adult version
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
🧈 Can you bake shortbread from frozen?
Yes! Shortbread dough bakes beautifully straight from the freezer. In fact, baking from frozen helps the cookies hold their shape and creates clean, crisp edges.
❄️ How do you bake shortbread from frozen dough?
Preheat your oven to 350°F. Remove the dough log from the freezer and let it sit for 3–5 minutes, just long enough to slice. Cut into 1/3-inch rounds, place on a parchment-lined baking sheet, adding a couple additional minutes to baking time or until the edges are lightly golden.
⏱️ Do you need to thaw shortbread dough before baking?
No, there’s no need to fully thaw the dough. Baking from frozen actually improves the texture and prevents spreading. Just let it soften slightly so it’s easier to slice.
🔪 Why is my frozen shortbread dough hard to slice?
If your dough is too firm, let it sit at room temperature for a few minutes. Use a sharp knife and gently press straight down. If it cracks, simply press the dough back together before baking.
📦 Can you freeze shortbread dough ahead of time?
Yes! Shortbread dough freezes well for up to 2–3 months. Shape into logs, wrap tightly, and store in a freezer-safe bag for easy slice-and-bake cookies anytime.
✨ Can you freeze already sliced shortbread?
Absolutely. Slice the dough first, freeze the rounds on a baking sheet, then transfer to a freezer bag. Bake straight from frozen—just add a couple of extra minutes to the baking time.
🌿 Does freezing affect the flavor of rosemary Parmesan shortbread?
Not at all! The rosemary and Parmesan flavors hold up beautifully, making this a perfect make-ahead recipe for entertaining.

Parmesan-Rosemary Shortbread
Equipment
- food processor
Ingredients
- 2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 cup confectioners’ sugar
- 2 teaspoons finely chopped fresh rosemary leaves
- 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1/2 cup finely grated Parmesan
- 1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature (2 sticks)
- 1 teaspoon water if needed
Instructions
- Put the flour, sugar, rosemary, salt, and Parmesan into the bowl of a food processor and pulse until combined.
- Add the butter and pulse just until a soft dough forms; the dough should hold together when squeezed with your hands. If not, add the water and pulse until combined.
- Spread a large sheet of plastic wrap on a work surface and transfer the dough onto it.
- Using the plastic wrap as a guide, form the dough into a loose log along 1 edge of the long side of the sheet. Roll the dough log, twisting the plastic gathered at the ends in opposite directions until the log is tight and compact, about 2 1/2 inches in diameter.
- Chill in the refrigerator until firm, about 1 hour.
- Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper or silicone baking mats.
- Slice the dough log into 1/3-inch thick slices and arrange on the lined sheets, about 1-inch apart.
- Bake until the edges are just beginning to brown, 12 to 14 minutes.
- Cool the shortbread on the pan for 5 minutes then transfer to wire racks to cool completely.
- Store the shortbread in an airtight container at room temperature until ready to serve.
Notes
Baking Shortbread from Frozen
- Shortbread dough can be baked straight from frozen—no need to thaw. Baking from frozen actually improves the texture and prevents spreading. Just let it soften slightly so it’s easier to slice.
- Let frozen dough sit at room temperature for 3–5 minutes, just enough to slice.
- Slice into 1/3-inch rounds using a sharp knife.
- Bake at 350°F, adding 2–3 extra minutes to the baking time.
- Baking from frozen helps cookies keep their shape and creates clean edges.
- If dough cracks while slicing, gently press it back together.
- Optional: sprinkle extra Parmesan on top before baking for added flavor and a golden finish.

Rosemary Lemonade Fizz Cocktail or Mocktail
Ingredients
- 1 cup fresh lemon juice
- 1 cup sugar
- 2 8-inch rosemary sprigs
- 1/2 cup vodka omit for mocktail
- Chilled club soda or seltzer
- Garnish with rosemary sprigs
Instructions
- Bring lemon juice, sugar, and rosemary to a boil in a small saucepan, stirring until sugar has dissolved, then reduce heat and simmer 2 minutes.
- Cool completely, about 1 hour. Discard rosemary sprigs.
- Fill 8 (8-ounces) glasses halfway with ice.
- Divide syrup (about 2 tablespoons each) among glasses and add vodka (1 tablespoon each).
- Top off with club soda or seltzer.
You can find another recipe with rosemary and Rosemary Lemon Bars -> HERE.
Hope you take time to
Stop and Smell the Rosemary :)
Thank you for your visit, sharing with:
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Add me to the “love it” list! I’ve had quite a few plants (they’re not too fond of Philly winters) and for the first time one bloomed this spring. Pretty little flowers! My new favorite soup is heavily flavored with rosemary and I’m always looking for more things to make with it. Both the cookies and fizz sound great-enjoy:@)
Oh rosemary, it reminds me of my childhood when I lived with my grandparents and we’d go take a few branches and make wardrobe perfume together :) It was right next to the sage plant, another plant I love so much. Thank you for the memories! And what amazing photos you have here, as well as a great recipe :) Thanks for sharing!
I love rosemary! I have several plants surrounding the entry to our front garden. These recipes look delish! Thanks so much for sharing them with us. Lovely post!
Where do I begin…I think I will start with saying that the photos of the rosemary are magnificent…I love the photo of the Vodka Rosemary Lemonade Fizz with the shortbread adorned with the sprigs of rosemary…I am smitten by all of your spectacular photographs…you are truly an artist!
Wonderful recipes for me to try….Your vast collection of photography belong in an art show!!!
I just planted my rosemary – we can’t winter over here so I have never seen one bloom, but your blossoms are gorgeous! You are such an artist – you must spend hours on each post!!!! Everything is beautiful. The shortbread sounds wonderful and of course pictured with the blossoms, it is just incredible! Oh, I just glanced up at the comment above me and she said the exact same thing – “you are truly an artist!” How funny that we would choose the same words. Each photograph is outstanding!
Your photographs make me a little weak at the knees. They are absolutely stunning and your rosemary and parmesan shortbread look really delicious. I think rosemary is one of those fantastic ingredients that can transport to a completely different place and I love it
I smell rosemary all over the house now, and it’s just from looking at your photos. Wait, it’s not photos, it’s a photo art. Yes. I would have my lemonade with vodka, please. I am sure it taste great without too, but today being Friday calls for a splash of vodka. This shortbread cookie recipe goes in my collection of shortbread cookies. Have a great weekend Mary!
Rosemary and lavender are two plants I never pass by without pinching off a little piece and then breathing in its wonderful fragrance. The rosemary flavored cookies are divine, but mine never looked so beautiful. Once again I have to tell you, you are amazing each and every week.
It sure looks delicious. I just wanted to comment on all your lovely posts. You really have a flair for blogging. Your posts are always so much fun. They are interesting, beautiful, creative and just plain fantastic. Your pictures are always fabulous. I really enjoy them all.
Thank you! I love a savory shortbread – with a long drink in summer and with dry sherry in the winter. This one looks handy to have in the fridge, ready for baking.
Mary, your images are awesome. Such styling! We’ve lots of rosemary here, but not blooming. Makes me wonder why. I’ll give this shortbread a try. It looks perfect to have on hand for a summer afternoon or evening. The lemonade would be my choice. All looks delicious! ~ Sarah
I am such a big fan of rosemary, I had it in my wedding bouquet :-) The shortbread recipe looks like a keeper. You may also want to check out Giada’s rosemary-strawberry-lemon scones. They are not too dense, not too chewy, and the three flavors are breakfast GOLD!! Rosemary doesn’t love MN winters, but every spring, I am out there replanting it. Thanks for this post, it really perked me up :-)
Mary….As usual your photos are stunning. And I’d love to have that lemonade and those delicious rounds of rosemary goodness. Yum! All so beautiful and lovely. The perfect afternoon. Can I come live in your garden. Its like heaven on earth.
Nann
Rosemary never looked so good! Your shortbread looks wonderful, and simple enough that I could even make them. We have an herb garden every year, and I am so spoiled, I could never go back to buying them in a store. So, yes, I will stop and smell the rosemary!
I am joining the group to say your photos are fabulous! The shortbread cookie recipe looks wonderful and the vodka fizz absolutely refreshing.
Perfect for a warm summer afternoon and gardening break. I’m saving these recipes. Thank you, Mary.
Such a deliciously fragrant post!!! I love rosemary and have three bushes…Sure wish mine would bloom so prolific! Both the cookies and the lemonade (with or without the vodka) sound like winners…
Great post, Mary!
Mary, such a wonderful post and as always your photo’s bring such joy.This afternoons Autumn sunrays would certainly be extra nice with your homemade rosemary shortbreads and rosemary lemonade fizz…out on the porch. Just Magical and inspirational! x
How special the Rosemary must make these cookies and lemonade. They are both very pretty to look at. I have a large Rosemary bush that began as a window sill gift from a friend several years ago.
So nice stopping by to say hi!
Kindly, Lorraine
Mary, this is a delicious recipe and I can’t wait to try it. I love Rosemary and this is just my cup of tea, or lemonade in this post. Your photos are beautiful. Jim worked in the yard this morning and he had to cut the rosemary shrubs way back. They had taken over the path to the back. The fragrance was beautiful. I love when I water them early in the morning or even just brush them as I walk past and they gift me their fragrance. Thanks for the recipe, I know I’ll love it.
That sounds like quite a refreshing drink.
– The Tablescaper
HI mary! I love the SMELL of rosemary but don’t care for the taste of it OR cilantro:) However, I want to try the cookies since you mentioned they are good with white wine, I am a white wine girl!!! The lemonade sounds GOOOOD too. XO, pinky
Lovely photos, Mary, as always! The cookies sound wonderful. I have a rosemary bush out back just waiting for something like this.
What a great recipe. I love rosemary, tghe smell is gorgeous and so is the taste. I use it a lot on potatoes too.
Have a nice Sunday
Yum! Love both recipes and your photos are wonderful!
I’m so glad to have found you at “Seasonal Sunday’s” party. The rosemary is beautiful and the recipes sound delish. Thanks for sharing all of your lovely photos as well. ~Lori
I love Rosemary and have large bushes of it all around my deck. Like you, I love to brush it and release that signature fragrance. Your cookie recipe looks tasty and I am certainly going to try it! dianne
Mary! I just l-o-v-e rosemary. We have it growing all around and I’ve been known to just push it a bit to release that wonderful aroma. Your recipes sound soooo good. I haven’t ventured much outside on top of bread and seasoning for chicken and pork. Your photography is so beautiful. Thank you for a lovely spot to spend a few minutes this Sunday afternoon.
SWOON! This was food for my eyes! So beautiful! I love rosemary. It smells so fragrant doesn’t it? I am not much of a baker, but I love to make cookies and I will make these for sure!
Thanks for joining ON THE MENU MONDAY with this gorgeous post.
How beautiful and delicious! I’ve never seen a rosemary plant bloom and they are such pretty flowers. I can’t wait to have some in my herb pots this summer and would love to try this savory cookies!
From a wet and windy corner of southern England thank you for sharing such a lovely recipe and photos!
I love rosemary and occasionally am able to over winter it, and am quite chuffed when I do! Thanks for the reminder by way of this lovely post, that I need to buy a plant for the patio.
Hi Mary,
As usual, this post is a feast for the senses. Your photography is sooo good — just love these pictures. The food looks very tasty; I’m so ready for our kitchen to be finished, as I have a list of new recipes to try, along with the old favorites.
My MIL makes a delicious fizzy lemonade seasoned with fresh herbs; we all LOVE it in the summertime. Yours looks delicious, too!
Thanks for visiting my blog, Mary. It’s always nice to hear from you. Hope you have a great week! :)
Hugs,
Denise
I adore rosemary and while the shortbread looks delicious and easy, I’m really interested in the fizz!!!! :D :D
I have to grow new rosemary plants each summer but it is a favourite herb to use. Your shortbread recipe looks good, I must try it.
Thanks for sharing the recipes, they sound and look so yummy. Have a great week)
The recipes look delicious! What a nice treat, I’d love both the lemonade and the shortbread. Your pictures are so awesome I could just imagine how great they taste and smell.
Fantastic photos and mosaics. Rosemary is one of my favourites spices, both fresh and dried. It doesn’t survive our winters here, but never mind we can buy it every spring……
The mere thought of rosemary has me wishing for a sunny day so that I can pick some up for the herb garden. It does not overwinter here and I’ve had only limited success with it as a houseplant. Wonder if I can get my hubby to switch from aftershave to rosemary… The shortbread and beverage look and sound delicious. Actually, they look gorgeous!
I love this post, the photos and the mosaics. Beautiful!
Oh yes, Rosemary is right up there with Lavender, as far as special garden fragrances and the taste always enhances beautifully. I adore shortbreads and so I will have to save this recipe for a future day. I hope you had a marvelous Mother’s Day, have a sweet week~
This my absolute favorite, all the things I love, photographed to perfection~
Yum! They look delicious! I love the cookies layered with the rosemary stems and blossoms. I appreciate you sharing with Home and Garden Thursday,
Kathy
Yummo! I have a HUGE rosemary plant. I will have to try this out. I also have a great recipe for Earl Gray short bread. You would love that too!
Thank you for adding this to FCF! :)
~Liz
Delicious looking! The drink, rosemary stem and shortbread cookie on the napkin look so perfect!
Thanks for posting the recipe. The shortbread truly sounds divine!