Cookie Recipes

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Just Curious as too when the Oats get Cooked or is that when they are stirred in after peanut butter and vanilla is smooth...?!? Is that Mixture Warm enough to cook the oats...? Thanks... 👩‍🍳
The oats are not cooked. Just stir them into the warm mixture and drop the cookies on a sheet of waxed or parchment paper. They are warm when you drop them and they will spread out. Sometimes they are flatter than other times. I have also had the heated mixture sugar on me, meaning that there will be some crystalizing. Other times, they are smooth. I know there must be a reason that they crystalize, maybe sugar being on the side of the pan and not being stirred in well enough.
 
@Snowman we’ve made these weird oatmeal no bakes. Yes, it is true, you don’t cook the oats. I’ve got no explanation on why. I think they might seem healthy but I’m not sure that’s true, after all, they’re COOKIES. We always used the quick oats. They are so yummy.
 
@Snowman we’ve made these weird oatmeal no bakes. Yes, it is true, you don’t cook the oats. I’ve got no explanation on why. I think they might seem healthy but I’m not sure that’s true, after all, they’re COOKIES. We always used the quick oats. They are so yummy.
Here on Barsoom they are called preacher cookies !
 
Sheepdog (RIP) posted this recipe very early on in the life of this forum. I'm trying to make a list of cookies that I want to make before Christmas, so I am trying to put all the cookie recipes here.

https://www.homesteadingforum.org/threads/the-only-real-cookie.151/

I worked for years to make a real cookie and after you try these you will understand that all other cookies are not real cookies at all.

Ingredients:
1/4 pound butter
1/2 cup hard packed dark brown sugar
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract (use the real stuff not "vanilla" flavoring)
1/2 teaspoon salt (table salt not sea salt or kosher salt or that Himalayan pink salt)
1 extra large egg (you can substitute two small eggs as long as they come from chickens)
1/2 teaspoon baking soda (no more - just a level 1/2 teaspoon or it will taste soapy)
1 level tablespoon baking powder (you can use more but it just wastes baking powder)
3/4 cup all purpose flour (this is necessary to help hold these cookies together)
1 cup old fashioned rolled oats (if you use the fast cooking oatmeal add two extra table spoons of them)
3/4 cup chopped walnuts (you can substitute pecans if you must)
12 ounces of semi-sweet or dark chocolate chips (I cannot be held responsible if you use milk chocolate chips. Don't blame me when the world abruptly ends in a fiery hell )

preheat over to 350F ( too much heat and they will burn and too little and they will be gummy cups and not cookies)

Mixing them:
Cream butter, sugars, vanilla, and salt in a mixing bowl and then whip until fluffy
Beat in the egg(s), baking soda, and one teaspoon of water.
In a separate bowl combine and whisk flour, baking powder and oats together until evenly mixed (you don't want independent lumps of flour and oats in your cookies)
Combine the dry ingredients with the egg and sugar mixture until it is friendly - don't let them get all mushed together.
Fold in the chocolate chips and walnuts until it is an even mixture
Using a serving spoon (like a big table or soup spoon only bigger) drop the dough on a greased cookie sheet and flatten to about a half inch thick. Space cookies with at least 1/2 inch between them. (you don't want a cake, these are cookies!)
Bake at 350F for 10 to 12 minutes. they should just start to lightly brown on the bottom and still look "wet" on top.
Turn the oven off and open it letting the cookies rest for 2 minutes and then remove to rack for cooling.
These cookies will stay moist for days unless they are overcooked or they are all eaten in the first hour after they cool.
Serve sparingly, two cookies, with a glass of cool milk or hot black coffee.
Cookies that are left should be stored in a locked container to keep the kids and husband from pilfering all of them.

a lot of humor in this but they really are the only real cookie ever made and it did take years to get this just right. Enjoy!
 
@LadyLocust , you showed a photo of icicle cookies that you made for a cookie exchange. I looked for a recipe to see what they are like. This seems to be the recipe for those cookies. The challenge is that the recipe is in grams.


Imagine delicate, glittering icicles..., but they're actually edible and delicious! This video will show you how to make these magical cookies that are as festive as they are scrumptious.

Ingredients for 16 large cookies

1 egg - room temperature
90g - softened unsalted butter (3/4 cup)
50g - granulated white sugar (1/4 cup)
50ml - milk room temperature (whole or 2%) (0.211338 cup ???)
240g - white all purpose flour (2 cups_
1 teaspoon of baking powder
a pinch of salt
200g - jam cold and thick (0.89 cups ???)
Some confectioners sugar for dusting cookies

Chilling time:
Form the dough and refrigerate it for 15 minutes before shaping your cookies.
Shape the cookies and refrigerate them again for 15 minutes before baking.

Bake in preheated oven 360F (~180C) -15 minutes
 
@LadyLocust , you showed a photo of icicle cookies that you made for a cookie exchange. I looked for a recipe to see what they are like. This seems to be the recipe for those cookies. The challenge is that the recipe is in grams.


Imagine delicate, glittering icicles..., but they're actually edible and delicious! This video will show you how to make these magical cookies that are as festive as they are scrumptious.

Ingredients for 16 large cookies

1 egg - room temperature
90g - softened unsalted butter (3/4 cup)
50g - granulated white sugar (1/4 cup)
50ml - milk room temperature (whole or 2%) (0.211338 cup ???)
240g - white all purpose flour (2 cups_
1 teaspoon of baking powder
a pinch of salt
200g - jam cold and thick (0.89 cups ???)
Some confectioners sugar for dusting cookies

Chilling time:
Form the dough and refrigerate it for 15 minutes before shaping your cookies.
Shape the cookies and refrigerate them again for 15 minutes before baking.

Bake in preheated oven 360F (~180C) -15 minutes

A little different than the one I used and yes I had to do some conversions and figure it out. I can type it out if you’d like, but it would be tomorrow maybe. I’m about out for tonight. Here’s the one I used.
 
I can only make one cookie. you fry it instead of baking it.

2 cups of white cornmeal. Yes, CORN MEAL.
2 eggs.
1/4 tablespoon of baking soda.
1/4 cup of Bisquick.
1/4 tablespoon of salt.
1/2 a cup of maple sugar.
1/2 a cup of crushed walnuts.
Mix well and cover, let sit overnight to rise.

Stir into a pre-warmed skillet on medium heat greased with butter like a pancake, when the top is covered in bubbles, garnish with pecans or more walnuts and flip. when cool, cover in vanilla icing OR mix into the batter. if you're careful you can make one huge Santa Claus cookie!
 
Lebkuchen ( German gingerbread)

1 cup of honey, 1 cup of brown sugar, 1 stick of butter, melt in a pot on low heat, cool a little
add: a few cups of flour to make a loose dough, 1 egg, 100 g of ground almonds, 1 tbsp cocoa powder, 1 tsp cinnamon , half tsp cloves, allspice , pinch of nutmeg ( NO ginger, doesn;t go in there) , stir the dough for a while until well mixed. Dissolve 1 tbsp potassium carbonate ( Pottasche) in 2 tbsp of rum. When dissolved, mix with dough and add enough flour to make a sticky dough. Let it sit in fridge overnight, then take it out and let it warm up a little. It will be very hard and still somewhat sticky. Roll out about 1\4 inch thick and cut out whatever shapes you want. Bake at 350 for about 10-15 minutes
If you want you can put powder sugar and vanilla icing on them when cold

I have tried substituting baking soda and baking powder for the pottasche, and they were eatable but not great , if you really want to make them you can order the stuff on Amazon
 
Lebkuchen ( German gingerbread)

1 cup of honey, 1 cup of brown sugar, 1 stick of butter, melt in a pot on low heat, cool a little
add: a few cups of flour to make a loose dough, 1 egg, 100 g of ground almonds, 1 tbsp cocoa powder, 1 tsp cinnamon , half tsp cloves, allspice , pinch of nutmeg ( NO ginger, doesn;t go in there) , stir the dough for a while until well mixed. Dissolve 1 tbsp potassium carbonate ( Pottasche) in 2 tbsp of rum. When dissolved, mix with dough and add enough flour to make a sticky dough. Let it sit in fridge overnight, then take it out and let it warm up a little. It will be very hard and still somewhat sticky. Roll out about 1\4 inch thick and cut out whatever shapes you want. Bake at 350 for about 10-15 minutes
If you want you can put powder sugar and vanilla icing on them when cold

I have tried substituting baking soda and baking powder for the pottasche, and they were eatable but not great , if you really want to make them you can order the stuff on Amazon
I hope you'll be okay with me reposting your recipe with each ingredient having its own row. It just makes reading recipes easier for me. I would like to make this recipe and likely will.

1 cup of honey,
1 cup of brown sugar,
1 stick of butter, melt in a pot on low heat, cool a little
add: a few cups of flour to make a loose dough,
1 egg,
100 g of ground almonds,
1 tbsp cocoa powder,
1 tsp cinnamon ,
half tsp cloves,
half tsp allspice ,
pinch of nutmeg
( NO ginger, doesn;t go in there) ,

stir the dough for a while until well mixed.
Dissolve 1 tbsp potassium carbonate ( Pottasche) in 2 tbsp of rum. When dissolved, mix with dough and add enough flour to make a sticky dough.

Let it sit in fridge overnight, then take it out and let it warm up a little. It will be very hard and still somewhat sticky. Roll out about 1\4 inch thick and cut out whatever shapes you want. Bake at 350 for about 10-15 minutes
If you want you can put powder sugar and vanilla icing on them when cold

I have tried substituting baking soda and baking powder for the pottasche, and they were eatable but not great , if you really want to make them you can order the stuff on Amazon.
 

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