Many many thanks to [livejournal.com profile] evilbeard for leaving this comment and giving me my new favorite cookie!

I made these as Crispy Salted Oatmeal Raisin Cookies. I didn't have any toffee or butterscotch chips so I used 1 cup raisins instead. My first dozen was perfect. The cookies oozed into each other but they were thin and crispy and B scarfed down 3 of them right out of the oven. Second dozen must've been a little thicker since it did not flatten down as thin as the first batch. That might be because the dough was colder for the second dozen since I had put the dough in the fridge while the first dozen baked. Also note that if you forget to press down on each ball in step 3, the cookies don't get as thin or crispy. Still tastes good but it changes the texture. I like the thin and crispy version so much that I must remember to flatten the cookies slightly! So first batch was in oven for 14 minutes (rotated after 6 minutes) and second batch was in oven an additional 4 minutes (rotated after 7 minutes). We loved these so much that when I wanted to make a food gift, I turned to these cookies.


a bunch of the snacks laid out on a tray


I love being helpful. So here's a little tip. If you're going to spend any part of the day typing "Can chocolate go bad and make you sick?" then do so BEFORE you've eaten the chocolate you're nervous about. I'm still not sure if that was the culprit but I went to bed last night with a gurgling, complaining stomach. The answers I found online were all over the place. Some answers said chocolate was plenty shelf-stable and might get discolored when it de-emulsified but that would just make it lose some of its flavor, not make you sick. Other answers said to toss it out if there were any white spots visible (I think that was white mold). Still others said creepy crawling things sometimes set up shop in chocolate.

I'm not much of a chocolate snob but from now on, when a recipe calls for good chocolate, I'm going to interpret that to mean "use chocolate that hasn't gone bad" or at least "use chocolate that you still remember buying."

I'm going to be sad if it wasn't the chocolate that had gone bad since I'm throwing out the rest of the batch.
These tasted and looked delicious before I became suspicious of them.

What should I call these? I started out intending to make chocolate-covered graham crackers and then had leftover chocolate so I tried making chocolate-covered pretzels. But then I needed a place to set them down. And then I tried eating them all together. Sweet chocolate mixed with the salty pretzels and the crunch of the graham cracker and pretzels was a perfect treat. I'm definitely going to make these again some time.

I set up a makeshift double-boiler and dumped in half a bag of chocolate chips. After awhile, I added half a stick of butter since it seemed to be taking forever to melt. Once all was melted, I spooned the chocolate over the crackers and then pressed a pretzel into the chocolate. Set aside on a tray covered with a sheet of wax paper.

But use good chocolate! You never want to have to tell your loved ones, "Sorry I poisoned you."


close-up of one Pretzels, Graham Crackers, and Chocolate Snack
I spotted this recipe in an issue of Eating Well magazine at the library and just had to try it. Want to know how easy this recipe is? I was able to go to the gym for a short workout, come home and whip up 2 dozen of these cookies, and make it out the door in time to meet friends for brunch. And they still tasted fabulous. They came out of the oven soft and chewy. By the next day, they were pretty hard and crispy. (no worries, I just dunked them in my tea)

Whenever I have ripe bananas, I almost always make Banana Chocolate Nut Muffins (from [livejournal.com profile] mellybrelly!) but when this batch of bananas were ripening, I had made a bunch of muffins recently so I wanted to make something different. Saw this recipe for banana cookies and decided to give it a try. Simple and pretty good. But I have to admit, my heart was more into the muffins than the cookies. Luckily my roommate liked them and ate a bunch of them.

fitfool: (smile)
These caught my eye since the reviewers of this recipe couldn't stop raving about how these were heavenly perfection. Over a hundred reviews of this recipe! So I had to try them and...yes, these are the best oatmeal raisin cookies I've ever had. Moist, chewy, and full of flavor. Made this recipe (http://www.recipezaar.com/35813)(link includes approximate nutritional info) and following suggestions in the reviews, I added 1 tsp cinnamon and decreased oats to 2.5 cups.

fitfool: (smile)
Excellent cookies though they weren't chewy for me. Chocolate cookies with bursts of cherry flavor. I had used a tiny bit less butter than called for and made small tablespoons of dough for the cookies. Michael liked these a lot though he would’ve liked more cherries. Another friend thought the cherry flavors overwhelmed the chocolate. Next time I think I’ll chop up the cherries to spread the bits out more evenly throughout the dough and maybe add more chocolate chips. Also will try to cut back a little on the sugar, add more butter, and bake it a little less because these were more on the crunchy side than chewy (though that might also be because I made the cookies small). I used the electric mixer which made things so much easier. (thank you to everyone who helped me get over my fear of the mixer!) Finished in about 75 minutes and ended up with 43 cookies instead of the predicted 30. (Would bigger cookies have helped keep them chewier?)

fitfool: (smile)
Yum! This was my first attempt at making chocolate chip cookies from scratch. Is there an easier way to mix up the dough that I don't know about? Or is mixing in the flour supposed to feel like a workout? I just used a fork for both the creaming step and also for the flour step. Mixing around and around in a circle got tiring and I even had to take a break. But we got cookies out of it so I'm happy! We got a lot of cookies actually. Can I toss these in the freezer at this point? Or should I have frozen the cookie dough if I wanted to spread it out over a longer time?

Edited to add:Right out of the oven they were soft and chewy. But once they had cooled, they turned hard and crunchy. Microwaving on high for 15 seconds gives me a crisp exterior with a chewy inside. I like my cookies chewy so the microwave saves it. Is there a way to make it stay chewy on its own? Add back more butter? Make the cookies bigger?

fitfool: (smile)
I had requested recipes for a very thin tea cookie and a few people suggested Moravian Cookies. The descriptions sounded right and I eagerly baked a batch up. While they look pretty, they're not the cookies I had remembered eating before. Either I made these wrong or this particular flavoring is too sophisticated for my palate. In case anyone else likes these, I'll post the recipe and photos here anyhow.

And if any of you know the name or the recipe for the cookies I'm thinking about, please let me know! They were a pale yellow in color and had a buttery or shortbread-like taste to them. They were perfect with tea.
fitfool: (smile)
Chocolate Brownie Cookies [livejournal.com profile] minxy_baby made me drool when she posted a recipe for

Chocolate Brownie Cookies

which my boyfriend and I finally got a chance to try tonight much to our delight. Thanks for sharing this recipe!


Click to see recipe, bigger picture, and notes )

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