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Posts Tagged ‘Chocolate’

Icebox S’mores

November 19th, 2009
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Gourmet Smores? ... yes.

Super easy, no bake cookies! And see how fancy they look? These are some time consuming cookies to make, but honestly, most of that time is your refrigerator doing the work. It’s really only a little time up front and then some more time on the back end (if you plan on wrapping them up). Overall these are some of the easiest cookies I have made, and they’re already on my top 5 favorite list.

cookie credit: Joy the Baker (yet again)

Without further adu:

INGREDIENTS (makes 18-24 cookies)

  • 1 box of graham crackers (14 oz)
  • 3 handfuls of mini marshmallows
  • 3 sticks and 2 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • 3/4 cup cocoa powder
  • 3/4 cup light corn syrup
  • pinch of salt

DIRECTIONS

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Get out a large bowl and crumble the graham crackers into it. Break them into medium sized peices (about 1/8 of a cracker). Then toss in 2 handfuls of marshmallows. Set this bowl aside for now.

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In a medium sauce pan, combine the butter, cocoa powder, corn syrup, and a pinch of salt. Warm it on the stove until all of the ingredients are melted and mixed smooth. Now turn off the heat and let it cool for a few minutes.

While waiting, prepare a 9 x 13 pan with a parchment paper to line it. When the time is up, pour the chocolate into the bowl with the crackers and marshmallows. Stir this mixture up until all the graham crackers are coated in chocolate. Then pour it all into the pan. Spread the dough around and press it down with your fingers using a second piece of parchment paper. Once its well spread out, sprinkle another handful of marshmallows on the top and press them in.

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Now you should have a flat tray full of cookie mash. Set it aside for 30 minutes before placing the tray in the fridge for at least a few hours (preferably over night). Once cooled, cut the cookies into bars and serve them up.

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Keep any uneaten cookies individually wrapped in the fridge.

Chocolate Mint Chip cookies

November 11th, 2009

P1020626I was inspired to make these cookies because there’s this place I sometimes go to on campus to get hot chocolate, and they have these very chocolatey cookies with green mint M&M’s. Somehow I always eye these cookies but never buy them. Sorry cookies, for always being my second choice!

Today I honor these second-place cookies by trying to reproduce them. Sadly, things didn’t work out as planned. I couldn’t find mint M&M’s! I had to substitute mint chips. Well… the switcheroo served me well because I think they turned out great!

I basically followed a “Chewy White Chocolate Chocolate cookie” recipe (found here), but replaced the white chocolate chips with a 2:1 mix of mint chips and regular chocolate chips. You guys all know how I feel about white chocolate… grrr. But this recipe was fixed right up with mint chips!

P1020623Here’s the recipe:

  • 1 3/4 cups flour
  • 1 1/4 cups cocoa powder
  • 1 cup white sugar
  • 3/4 cup light brown sugar
  • 2 tsps. baking soda
  • 1 cup butter
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 tsp. vanilla
  • 1/4 tsp. salt
  • 1 1/3 cups mint chips
  • 2/3 cup chocolate chips
1 3/4 cups flour
1 1/4 cups cocoa powder
1 cup white sugar
3/4 cup light brown sugar
2 tsps. baking soda
1 cup butter
2 eggs
1 tsp. vanilla
1/4 tsp. salt
1 1/3 cups mint chips
2/3 cup chocolate chips

The directions go like pretty much any other cookie you make… cream butter and sugar, then add eggs, then mix dry ingredients together and combine them with the butter-egg-sugar mixture. Finally, add the chips and mix. Ho hum. Except, oh wait, you replace about a cup of flour with 1 1/4 cups of cocoa powder! Holy cow! Okay, so here’s the thing. When I started adding the dry ingredients to the creamy ingredients things didn’t really seem right. It seemed too dry and tough. I was pretty concerned that I had done something wrong, but everything turned out fine in the end (minus some sore mixing muscles). So don’t sweat it.

Set oven to 350 degrees and bake about 10 minutes (I did about 13 minutes but my cookies were quite large). Let cool on tray for longer than usual, maybe another 10 minutes, before moving to a wire rack. These guys are pretty smushable.

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Professional Cookie Image courtesy of Donald Chan

Chocolate Marshmallow Cookie Sandwiches (Moon Pies)

November 5th, 2009
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Moonie, Wormtail, Padfoot, and Prongs ... ok, just Moonie

Good things are a-brewin’. First of all, Switzerland was awesome! A giant thanks to Jan and Kim. I am still living on a little bit of a high from that trip, so I am taking all of life’s little annoyances in stride. I am also getting very close to making a large shift in my career path. Just knowing what is on the horizon is giving me daily energy and a better outlook on life. Last, and certainly not least… look at those cookies! I think these are the most amazing cookies I have made to date. I absolutely do not want to wait to eat one! The marshmallow filling is perfect. These cookies are a pretty large time commitment since they are completely from scratch, but man, is it worth it. Seriously…. these cookies will make you a star.

Big thanks to Nan Slaughter @ Pots and Pins for this recipe.

INGREDIENTS (makes 12-15 cookies)

Cookies:

  • 1 cup sugar
  • 5 tbls butter, softened
  • 1 tspn vanilla
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 5 tbls unsweetened cocoa
  • 1 tspn salt
  • 1 tspn baking soda
  • 1 tspn baking powder
  • 1 cup buttermilk

Filling:

  • 1 envelope unflavored gelatin
  • 1/2 cup cold water
  • 1/2 cup sugar
  • 1/4 cup light-colored corn syrup
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1/4 cup cold water

DIRECTIONS

Preheat your oven to 375ºF.

First thing to make will be the cookies. In a large bowl, combine the butter and sugar. Beat it together until blended. Add in the eggs and vanilla and beat it together until it is fluffy. In a separate bowl combine the flour, cocoa, salt, baking soda, and baking powder. Whisk it together until its all nice and mixed.

Now go back to your first bowl with the wet ingredients and start adding the dry ingredients and buttermilk a little bit at a time. Do this while mixing the batter, and alternating buttermilk and dry ingredients as you go. Scrape down the bowl a few times and make sure that the batter is well mixed.

On a parchment lined cookie tray, start spooning heaping tablespoon sized cookie batter. Leave a couple of inches between the cookies so that they don’t touch while cooking. Bake each tray for 9-10 minutes until fully cooked (use a toothpick to test). Let the cookies cool for a few minutes and then move them to a cooling rack. Keep baking until all the batter is used up. (should be about 30 cookies)

The filling is the fun part of these cookie sandwiches. First put the 1/2 cup of water in medium to large mixing bowl. Sprinkle the gelatin powder into the bowl and set it aside.

In a small saucepan put the other 1/4 cup of water, sugar, corn syrup, salt, and vanilla. Heat it on the stove until it reaches 244ºF. Apparently some people have a thermometer in their kitchen, so use that if you got it. I just waited for it to just start to simmer and then called it a success (my filling turned out great). Pour the hot liquid into the gelatin bowl and start mixing. Start by mixing on low for a little bit and then turn up the speed to max. The mixture will start to froth a bit and eventually will work itself into a thick foam. It supposedly takes anywhere from 6-10 minutes for the filling to get thick enough to use, but for me it took a little bit longer.


I think it has to do with the temperature… it needs to cool adequately before it will start to set. Anyways, you’ll get there. Now start spooning giant blobs of fluff onto the bottom of your cookies, using a second cookie on top to make a heavenly sandwich. Let the cookies set for an hour (or less if you are impatient).

Now pour a glass of milk and eat up!

Author: Categories: Classic Cookies Tags: ,

Toblerone chocolate chunk cookies

October 16th, 2009
tob2Well, we have been in Switzerland since Friday. Interlaken had been having beautiful weather with temperatures in the 70s! (That’s about 20 C for you Europeans). That is, until we got here… now it is in the 40s, or about 4 C. Well, it has made our high altitude hikes very scenic and also cold, requiring lots of hot chocolate when we get back. Here is how we make up for all those calories we burnt while hiking… making a whole batch of cookies without our coworkers to share them!
1 cup butter : 226 g butter
1 1/2 cups sugar : 300 g zucker
2 eggs : 2 eier
1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract : 1 1/2 tsp vanille-extrakt
2 1/4 cups flour : 295 g weissmehl
1 tsp baking soda : 1 tsp haus natron
1/2 tsp salt : 1/2 tsp salz
1 1/2 cups Toblerone chunks : 200 grams Toblerone brocken
Baking in a foreign country is always fun. Most of the ingredients are easy to figure out, for example eggs (not much else looks like eggs) or butter (german: butter). But some are more of a guessing game. For example, baking soda is haus natron… or so we think. The cookies turned out fine so I guess we were right.
So far we haven’t bought any super fancy chocolate, but we got some store brand chocolate which was delicious! And Toblerone for the cookies of course. Almost everything here is much more expensive than the US, except cheese. You can get a wedge of Brie for about half what it would cost in the states! So we have been chowing down on that. Yum!

tob2Well, we have been in Switzerland since Friday. Interlaken had been having beautiful weather with temperatures in the 70s! (That’s about 20 C for you Europeans). That is, until we got here… now it is in the 40s, or about 4 C. And even colder at the higher altitudes. Well, it has made our hikes very scenic and also cold, requiring lots of hot chocolate and cookies when we get back. Here is how we make up for all those calories we burnt while hiking… making a whole batch of cookies without our coworkers to share them!

tob3

  • 1 cup butter: 226 g butter
  • 1 1/2 cups sugar : 300 g zucker
  • 2 eggs : 2 eier
  • 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract : 1 1/2 tsp vanille-extrakt
  • 2 1/4 cups flour : 295 g weissmehl
  • 1 tsp baking soda : 1 tsp haus natron
  • 1/2 tsp salt : 1/2 tsp salz
  • 1 1/2 cups Toblerone chunks : 200 grams Toblerone brocken

tob4Baking in a foreign country is always fun. Most of the ingredients are easy to figure out, for example eggs (not much else looks like eggs) or butter (german: butter). But some are more of a guessing game. For example, baking soda is haus natron… or so we think. The cookies turned out fine so I guess we were right.

tob1So far we haven’t bought any super fancy chocolate, but we got some store brand chocolate which was delicious! In the US I refuse to buy store brand chocolate just on principle. And Toblerone for the cookies of course. Almost everything here is much more expensive than the US, except cheese. You can get a wedge of Brie for about half what it would cost in the states! So we have been chowing down on that. Yum!

Devil’s Food Crinkle Cookies

September 10th, 2009
Devils Food was actually sent from heaven.

Devils Food was actually sent from heaven.

Devil’s Food is one of my favorite desserts of all time. Right up there with cheesecake, blueberries, and dark chocolate. Zoe stumbled upon the following recipe on the internet and it was so simple and easy, I knew that I was going to have to try them sooner or later. Well, sooner won.

We have both been so busy with work/school that it has been getting difficult to maintain the motivation to keep making cookies every week. Recipes like this one are perfect because they don’t require a big time commitment, or a bunch of ingredients, so really there is no excuse not to make them. Yes, I am talking to you…. go make them!

The results of this week’s baking experiment are below:

INGREDIENTS (makes 25-30 cookies)

Ingredients

  • 1 box devils food cake mix (18.25 oz.)
  • 1/2 cup vegetable oil
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 cup powdered sugar
  • …thats it?
  • yep. crazy simple!

DIRECTIONS

Preheat your oven to 375°F and prepare a baking tray with parchment paper.

Mix (by hand) the cake mix, eggs, and oil together in a large mixing bowl. Whew, these cookies are so complicated! There you go, stick that dough in the fridge for 15-30 minutes while your oven heats up.

Put the powdered sugar in a small bowl. Now start scooping the dough into ~1″ diameter balls. I prefer my cookies a little larger so don’t worry about them being a bit big. The larger dough balls will actually crack better during the cooking. Take each ball and roll it around in the powdered sugar. Try to get them as coated with sugar as you can. Place them a couple of inches apart on the baking tray. I was able to get 15 cookies on one tray, but they were just starting to touch, so maybe 12 is better.

Bake the cookies for 8 minutes. If you overcook them they will be a bit dry (like the edges of brownies) which some people seem to prefer, but not me. Let them cool for a minute before moving them to your serving plate. These cookies are so fast and easy that I think you should serve them right away. If you want some more later, just make some more then!

Seriously, don’t forget the milk with these bad boys. They go together like…. well, like milk and cookies, but you know, like, to the extreme!

Author: Categories: Exotic Cookies Tags: ,