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All posts tagged chocolate chips

a fair trade

double chocolate biscotti

People don’t have dinner parties much nowadays, which is really a shame, I think. I mean, they still happen, less formally usually, but mostly eating at someone’s house has been replaced by meeting them at a restaurant. And there is something lost in not cooking for friends and being cooked for by them. For one, you won’t be trading recipes afterwards, and, that is a loss indeed.

My mom’s apricot chicken isn’t really hers; it came from Alice, who had our family over years ago. My favorite butter cake came from Mrs. Newman, who made it for us—especially for me—many times before I finally coaxed the recipe from her. Some of my most-loved meals came from someone else’s kitchen.

In a way, maybe that’s part of the appeal of food blogging. Pull up a good food blog, and you’re the guest in someone’s home, someone you come to know if you visit often enough. You see what ingredients and preparation went into the meal. You read the host’s reactions and promises for good outcomes. Over time, you come to trust the blogger, and, as here I hope, you find yourself tucking away the recipes like you would a good friend’s.

That said, I’ve got a real treat for you. Of all the cookies I’ve given people, these are the ones that everyone wants the recipe for. They are the first biscotti I ever baked, the ones that I made for my friend’s wedding, the ones that taste like chewy chocolate cookies with a bit of bite. I’ve made them for my family, co-workers, a boyfriend, long-distance friends. Everyone likes them. While biscotti traditionally seems a bit more refined than a classic chocolate-chip cookie (I remember that same old boyfriend telling me a kid wouldn’t like biscotti, but that was before he tasted them) these will please any palate. (And, as an added bonus, there will be no pistachio shelling involved (!!).)

If you’re at all intimidated by the term biscotti—and won’t there be double baking involved?—don’t be. These are so, so easy, I promise, I promise. I’ll risk my whole you’re-eating-my-food reputation on it. These biscotti are the kind of cookies you can count on, perfect to wow anyone who likes chocolate, and the work involved is no more than it would take to make any other cookie.

Essentially, for biscotti, you make up a cookie dough–simple ingredients like butter, flour, sugar, eggs, with the boost of cocoa powder for the chocolate flavor—which will be formed into two logs and baked. Remove from the oven and cool for an hour or overnight, then slice up into biscotti-size pieces to be baked again.

That’s it.

You can bake them longer or shorter to define the crunch factor. And they only improve over the next few days.



Hello, Twitter! Everyone else seems to be tweeting, so I decided to join them. If you’d like to keep up with Food Loves Writing on twitter, you can do so here, under the title foodloves (and if you’re a food blogger on there, let me know your twitter name).

On to the recipe!




Double-Chocolate Biscotti
Adapted from Better Homes & Gardens

For a traditionally crunchy biscotti—the kind you dip in your coffee without it dissolving into your cup—you’ll have to bake these a bit longer (it’s best to keep your eye on them). Before you go for crunchy, though, taste them after the first bake—they’ll be soft, chewy, a lot more like a fudgey cookie than a crunchy biscotti. A lot of tasters prefer them that way, in fact.

Ingredients:
1/3 cup butter
2/3 cup sugar
¼ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
2 teaspoons baking powder
2 eggs
1 ¾ cup flour
¾ cup white baking pieces, or bar, coarsely chopped
½ cup semisweet chocolate, chopped

Directions:
Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

In a large mixing bowl, beat butter with an electric mixer on medium speed for about 30 seconds. Add sugar, cocoa powder and baking powder, and beat until combined. Next, beat in eggs.

Beat in as much of the flour as you can. Using a spoon, stir in any remaining flour, white baking pieces and semisweet chocolate. Divide dough in half.

Shape each half into a 9-inch-long log, and place these logs, about four inches apart, on a greased cookie sheet. Flatten them slightly until about two inches wide.

Bake logs in a 375 degree oven for 20 to 25 minutes or until a wooden toothpick inserted near the centers comes out clean.

Cool on the cookie sheet on a wire rack for 1 hour (you can also wrap the logs in plastic and let stand overnight).

After you cool the logs, you slice them diagonally into biscotti-sized pieces. Place them, cut side down, on a fresh, parchment-lined cookie sheet. Bake for 7 to 9 minutes on each side, or for about 12 minutes total. Just watch them to see if they look like the right consistency.

The Best Cookies I Eat

**This recipe was featured in Bon Appetit‘s Blog Envy 2009 Contest, which, although we didn’t win, was fun to be considered for.

oatmeal chocolate-chip cookies

In my grandma’s world, there were two good Christmas gifts: clothing hangers, wrapped with their heads sticking out and placed under the tree, and, homemade food.

Every December, she stacked dozens of aluminum tins on the stairs to the dark, creaky attic of her Maywood bungalow. They were all different shapes and colors, some with holiday pictures of winter sleigh rides or smiling snowmen. And for the weeks leading up to December 25th, she filled them with what she baked: fudge, sugar cookies, pecan tassies, kolachkys, peanut butter cookies, chocolate-chip cookies, dessert bars. If you were one of the relatives, you got a tin. If you lived next door, you got a tin. If you were in one of her clubs or helped run her garage sales or somehow in some way knew Caroline, you got a tin. Bonus points if she found a recipe you liked, by the way: after she knew, you’d get it every year after.

This is the woman who gave me my first cookie lesson, letting me sample chocolate chips and lick the bowl afterwards. So I hardly need to say, when it came to baking in my book, she was the queen of cool. I liked everything she made, thought it over-the-moon delicious. And now, almost a decade after she died, I realize by teaching me to love food, she gave me another gift: something to keep when she left, to stay connected to her.

If she were alive, these oatmeal chocolate-chip cookies are what she’d make me for Christmas. They’re my favorites, and, let’s be honest, that’s saying something. The dough is simple: a basic chocolate-chip cookie with the addition of oatmeal. Yet the results are complex: a golden, crunchy texture with a strong bite, the kind that creates tiny crumbs on the corners of your lips and falling from your fingers. Rich with chunks of semisweet chocolate, the shape is bumpy and wrinkled.

Because this recipe is from Grandma, there are two things you have to understand.

(1) All affinities for KitchenAid aside, don’t use your standmixer. For these, it’s hand-stirred all the way, Baby, and, trust me, it matters.

(2) Every time I make this recipe, it turns out a little different, even though I’ve made it so many times, it’s near memorized. See, the thing about Grandma’s recipes, this one having been recorded by my mom, is that they were written cook to cook. She assumed I’d know how many chocolate chips to add when she wrote “Additions: nuts, chocolate chips, raisins” and what order to combine the list of ingredients.

So I’m going to reproduce the instructions here with the kind of specifics that she’d give (with a touch more detail), and you can feel free to tweak—really, you’d make my grandma proud. Just be prepared: Rarely does a batch of these come out of the oven without disappearing as quickly as it baked.

best cookies I eat

(I promised cookies for this holiday season, and, look, I deliver!)

Oatmeal Chocolate-Chip Cookies
from my grandma, Caroline, the best cookie maker there was

Ingredients:
1 stick of margarine (butter doesn’t work as well)
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup white sugar
1 egg
1 Tablespoon water
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup all-purpose flour (slight, not over)
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 1/2 cup old-fashioned oats
1 to 1 1/2 cups semisweet chocolate chips
OPTIONAL: raisins, walnuts—amounts up to you

Directions:
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. In a large bowl, combine all the ingredients but the oatmeal and the chocolate chips. After well-mixed, add the oatmeal and stir together. Then add the chocolate chips (and nuts, if preferred).

Drop by rounded tablespoon onto greased or Silpat cookie sheets. Baked for 12 to 15 minutes.

The Grow-on-You-Fast Cookies

The day after I made cowboy cookies, eating two of them at my desk in the middle of the afternoon, I told my coworkers that I wasn’t very impressed. The cookies were fine, good maybe, but they weren’t anything that special. A chocolate-chip cookie at heart, they include extras like coconut and nuts and oatmeal, becoming something too complicated and yet fairly simple at the same time. I managed to polish off both cookies, though, commenting aloud that they really were just fine, all while looking down at my plastic baggie, more sad than I’d admit that it was empty.

That was the first batch.

cookies

One habit I’ve developed after my experience with the New York Times chocolate-chip cookies is chilling the dough before baking (well, that and forming it all into rounded balls and placing the lot of them on the cookie sheet in the fridge ahead of time, meaning later I can just pull out as many as I want, ready to bake). So the first day I made cowboy cookies was the day I made the batter: I baked about 12 (two sheets).

The second time was a day later, another six cookies. I would have baked more, but I was tired and didn’t want to wait for them in the kitchen. This time, I liked the cookies a little more; maybe they had grown on me or maybe they had changed. It should also be noted, for the record, that the first batch was already gone by this second day.

cookies again

The final batch I made two (or three? now I’m forgetting) days later, needing to finish baking them all before the dough went bad. The huge benefit of pre-forming the dough is that the baking is SO easy. Literally, I turned on the oven and went to watch TV, then I came back and stuck my cookie sheet with its Silpat and six doughy balls in the oven. Out a batch, in a batch: the kitchen as clean as ever.

This third batch really was the best, less crunchy for some reason and very addicting. For the few days after that they lasted, I got into the habit, unfortunately, of grabbing one every time I would walk through the kitchen, which, truthfully, became more and more often.

These aren’t wow-someone cookies. They’re not especially beautiful or especially hard to make, and, at first bite, you’ll think ho-hum. But wait for the after effects. A few days into these, I swear you’ll wish you still had some left.

more cookies


Cowboy Cookies

Adapted from the queen of cookies, Martha Stewart

Ingredients:
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
8 ounces (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
3/4 cup granulated sugar
3/4 cup light-brown sugar
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups old-fashioned oats
6 ounces semisweet chocolate chips
3 ounces (3/4 cup) pecan halves
1/2 cup shredded unsweetened coconut

Directions:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. If you’re not using a Silpat, coat baking sheets with cooking spray, line with parchment, and spray parchment. Sift flour, baking soda, salt and baking powder in a medium bowl.

Beat butter and sugars with a mixer on medium-high until pale and creamy, about 3 minutes. Reduce speed to medium. Add eggs, 1 at a time, beating well after each addition. Beat in vanilla.

Reduce speed to low, and slowly add flour mixture, beating until just incorporated. Beat in oats, chocolate, pecans and coconut until combined. (Dough can be refrigerated for up to 3 days.)

Using a tablespoon, drop dough onto baking sheets, spacing 3 inches apart.

Bake until edges of cookies begin to brown, 11 to 13 minutes. Transfer baking sheets to wire rack, and let cool for 5 minutes. Transfer cookies to racks. Let cool. (Cookies can be stored up to 3 days.)