’tis the season for enriched bleached flour, refined white sugars, and other desserts!
Why not try making sugar cookies with whole wheat?
’tis the season for enriched bleached flour, refined white sugars, and other desserts!
Why not try making sugar cookies with whole wheat?
Moving towards summer, there are those, like me, who may start doing more baking as school ends and schedules free up. Something you probably have baked the most (I have) are COOKIES. They come in many shapes and forms, but largely conform to the same principles; Butter with the sugar, then the dry ingredients, the extra crunch, then baking.
As something you may have done many times routinely, what are some ways you can change up the process and result in cookies with more flavor, and possibly a more desirable texture?
There you have it! Feel free to comment with techniques of your own, and please check out my other recipes, including Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookies, and Soft Snickerdoodles, and follow my blog to stay updated via email!
Most of us have probably observed the phenomenon of an egg white, once whipped, taking a fluffier, whiter, and more structured form, which is taken advantage of in many types of baking, from souffles to angel cakes, to waffles.
Confusing as to the precise language of the term “meringue,” Encyclopedia Britannica describes Meringue as a “mixture of stiffly beaten egg whites and sugar that is used in…desserts” [emphasis added], while many seem to use it to refer to the specific Meringue Cookie, the recipe we will be studying in this post, which is the meringue mixture basically piped into a cookie shape and baked to harden.
This is the most straight-forward dessert, regarding its simple and obvious use of egg whites, in my opinion, so that is why I will be using this form of meringue to explain the science in a basic manner. You will have probably used meringue or seen it used to top Lemon Meringue Pie. Whipped fluffy, then spread over the top, the meringue mix solidifies in the baking process in some sense, but keeps its soft and airy characteristics.
Enjoy!
SCIENCE OF:
Flourless Chocolate Cookies are an awesome way to go gluten-free on cookies, without sacrificing the rich chocolate flavor and chewiness. They have an egg white base with powdered sugar instead of regular granulated sugar, and bake flatter, but taste delicious.
They are also very easy to make, and require that you only mix all the ingredients together in one bowl before baking!
Recipe below.
It’s More Than Just a Gift Card Pt. 2
Michael Metzler Jr.
.
With this card you can buy
Fireworks for the fourth of july,
TVs, games, and even a fly,
The one thing is, it can’t make you die.
.
But you can buy locks, dogs, and keys!
Cats, and worms, and sometimes fleas!
Ribbons, stuffing, ships and flags!
Hi-hats, teacups, big blue bags!
.
Drums and cymbals, and lo, the flu!
Socks and sleeves, and shirts for you!
Red and green and white and blue!
There is no thing this card can’t do.
.
So if you see this lying around
On a window sill, or, dare I say, the ground,
Do not hesitate, not for one minute,
For not a thousand bucks could win it.
.
It is a priceless piece of plastic,
Not anything on earth could buy it.
So do not drop, eat or discard.
I tell you true:
It is more than a gift card.
Peanut Butter Cookies are amazingly simple to make, and require no special ingredients other than the peanut butter. The result it a perfectly chewy cookie with a rich peanut butter flavor.
Try these for yourself. (recipe makes approximately 36 cookies)
I realize this is my first post in a while, since I’ve been rather recently busy.
This summer I went to an AWESOME summer camp in the mountains. Generally, the food for every meal was amazing. This particular recipe I made, these “Chewy Chocolate Cookies with White Chocolate Chips,” were inspired by the cookies that were served one evening at that summer camp. My goal was to get them nice and chewy, and rich and chocolaty–very much like the ones at camp, and I think they turned out amazing.
The second time I made them, (and by suggestion of one of my friends), we added crushed Heath Bars to the mix and it tasted PERFECT. So feel free to do that as well, but it is purely optional.
So try them out; if you love chocolate, you’ll love these cookies!
These Fruit-filled Thumbprint Cookies are quick & easy to make, and don’t require very many ingredients. The cookies are simplistic, consisting only of flour, butter, sugar, and vanilla. But put them together with fruit jam, and you add a whole other level of taste.
Serve with tea or enjoy anytime!
These almond butter chocolate chip cookie treats are a great & easy way to snack.
The almond butter adds protein and fiber while the coconut oil adds healthy-ness and moistness. These cookies are just as easy to throw together as any other cookie, but are healthier in some ways…not to mention extremely delicious. Enjoy!
This is a quick & easy recipe for the classic soft snickerdoodle cookie. Serve as dessert with ice cream, or devour it simply as a snack.
Delicious balls of nostalgia rolled in a coating of excellence; serve with a cup of cheer and enjoy.
These are really cool little sugar cookies that you can give as Christmas gifts to friends and family.
Ingredients:
(makes 6 dozen mini cookies)
12 tablespoons butter, softened
⅓ cup sugar
¼ tsp. salt
1 large egg
½ tsp. vanilla
1/4 teaspoon almond extract
1 ¾ all purpose flour
¼ whole wheat flour
DIRECTIONS:
Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
In a large mixing bowl, whip butter with salt and sugar until creamy.
Add vanilla, egg, almond extract and mix until combined.
Add flours (whole wheat & all purpose) and stir until combined.
Option no. 1: You can roll out the dough and cut out the cookies with cookie cutters.
Or Option no. 2: You can do it the ‘Spritz’ way and use a cookie press (I used OXO cookie press) and press cookies. Place/Press cookies onto ungreased baking sheet or silicone mat on baking sheet.
Add sprinkles if you want to make it look pretty.
Bake for about 8 minutes, or until just beginning to brown.
Cool before serving. Makes 6 dozen small spritz cookies.
These Molasses Cookies are perfect out of the oven–crispy, chewy, and full of flavor. Perfect the Holidays. Use this for Molasses Cookie Ice Cream Sandwiches, in my instructables post: Molasses Cookie Ice Cream Sandwiches Have fun baking!
Ingredients
(makes roughly 2 1/2 dozen)
1/2 cup salted butter, melted
1/2 cup coconut oil, melted
1 pkg. instant coffee granules
1 cup sugar
1 egg
½ cup molasses
2 tsp. cinnamon
¾ tsp. salt
1 ½ tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. ground cloves
1 tsp. ground ginger
3 cups flour
DIRECTIONS:
Preheat Oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.
In stand mixer, whip butter and sugar together until creamy. Add egg until incorporated. Then add the Molasses.
In a separate bowl, mix together dry ingredients: cinnamon, baking soda, cloves, ginger, salt, and flour.
Pour dry ingredients into wet ingredients in the stand mixer. Mix until smooth.
Pour some white sugar into a shallow bowl. Form dough into 1 inch balls, and roll in sugar until coated.
Place sugar-coated balls on ungreased baking sheet, and bake in preheated oven (350 degrees F) for 10 minutes. Let cool on stove top for a few minutes before serving.
These cookies are healthy for being cookies, and make a great snack anytime of the day. They are quick and easy to make.
INGREDIENTS:
½ cup butter, softened
1/4 cup Coconut Oil, softened
1/2 cup Sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 t. molasses
2 t. Vanilla
1 egg
1 cup flour
1 t. baking soda
1/2 t. salt
1 t. cinnamon
1/8 t. nutmeg
3 1/2 cups quick oats
1 cup chocolate chips
DIRECTIONS:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
In a stand mixer, beat first 5 ingredients until creamy and smooth.
Then add egg, and mix until well combined.
In a medium bowl, sift together the flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, and nutmeg.
Add the flour mixture to the butter mixture, and stir until well combined.
Add the oats. Stir until combined.
Add and stir in chocolate chips.
Place shaped cookies on ungreased baking sheets, approximately 1 inch of space in between cookie balls.
Bake for 11-12 minutes, or until golden. Cool on wire rack before serving.