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  • Cookies for Breakfast: Review and Giveaway

    1 vote

    Ingredients

    • Oatmeal Raisin Cookies (with plenty o' raisins)
    • Pre-heat oven to 350F (180C)
    • 1/2 cup unsalted butter at room temperature
    • 2/3 cup light brown sugar
    • 1 egg
    • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
    • 3/4 cup all-purpose (plain) flour
    • 1/2 tsp baking soda (bicarbonate of soda)
    • 1/2 tsp salt
    • 1/2 tsp cinnamon
    • 1 1/2 cups old fashioned rolled oats or quick cooking oats
    • 2/3 cup raisins

    Directions

    Cookies for Breakfast!The Cookiepedia is a fun cookie recipe book from Stacy Adimando with photos by Tara Striano. The Cookiepedia features 50 classic recipes for everything from Amaretti and Animal Cookies to Gingersnaps Rugelach, Snickerdoodles and dozens of other favourites, plus hundreds of ideas for adapting recipes and making them your own.

    About the Author

    Stacy Adimando lives in Brooklyn and is the current deputy lifestyle

    editor or Everyday with Rachael Ray. She is a graduate of the Institute

    of Culinary Education and weekly contributor to Serious Eats.

    About the Book

    I really like the way that many of the books published by Quirk are laid out. This one is ring-bound so it lies flat, the inner cover features a 'Cookie Baker's Cheat Sheet' with a basic cookie recipe and some conversions for butter and chocolate chips. The inside back cover features a full conversion chart and oven temperature chart which is very helpful for us European bakers.

    After the acknowledgements we are straight into The ABCs of Cookie Baking, very useful if you are new to baking. This followed by Cookie Speak, a sort of glossary of terms, and some cookie decorating ideas.

    Cookiepedia

    On to the recipe chapters:

    Buttery Cookies includes Animal Cookies, Sables, the enticing Everything but the Kitchen Sink Cookies, Old Fashioned Sugar Cookies and Maple Frosted Pecan Cookies.

    Chocolaty Cookies includes Chocolate Sandwich Cookies, Mint Thins, Brownies and Florentines.

    Fancy Cookies includes French Macarons, Black and White Cookies, Alfajores and Pinwheels.

    Spicy Cookies includes Cardamom Cookies, Gingersnaps, Molasses Spice Cookies, Green Tea Cookies and Salt and Pepper Cookies.

    Nutty and Seedy Cookies includes Peanut Butter Cookies, Sesame Crisps, Caramel Nut Bars and Pistachio Butter Cookies.

    This is only a selection of the cookies there are more!

    1. Cream together the butter and sugar on medium speed for a few minutes until the mixture is light and fluffy. Add the egg and vanilla and mix a bit more.

    2. Sift the flour, baking soda, salt and cinnamon into a bowl. Pour in the flour mixture and run the mixer motor on low, just to work it in. Stir in the oats and raisins with a spoon.

    3. Scoop out tablespoon-sized balls of dough onto parchment paper lined cookie sheets about 2 inches apart.

    4. Bake for 12 to 14 minutes, rotating cookie sheets half way through baking. Let cool and enjoy.

    Tip: For a taller, chewier oatmeal cookie, chill the dough for 10-15 minutes, or until a little firmer before baking.

    More Mix-ins to try

    Dried Cherries

    White Chocolate Chips

    Chocolate-covered Raisins

    Toasted Almonds

    Toffee Bits

    Dark Chocolate chunks

    Cranberries

    Chopped Soft Caramels

    Peanut Butter Chips

    The Oatmeal and Raisin Cookies are delicious, they are not over-sweet and the combination of oats and raisins really did remind me of eating a bowl of delicious cinnamon flavoured porridge! They are of course much more convenient to eat and seemed to improve after a few days.

    Who is it for?

    Anyone who likes to bake cookies. Particularly good for beginners but there are some good tips and interesting combinations. More experienced bakers will like the fact that the book provides you with the means to understand how to make your own cookie recipes.

    Pros

    The recipes are well laid out and I really liked the tips and additional ideas. Each recipe also has a little section for notes, ideal for trying out your own combinations or noting how many cookies you actually managed to get from the recipes, I never seem to get the same number as stated in any recipe book!

    Cons

    Some of the recipes are rather basic, but then it is sub titled 'Mixing, Baking and Reinventing the Classics' however, if you already have a lot of books with cookie recipes you might find you already have many of these recipes, although the additions are interesting. The photographs are a bit odd and not terribly appealing, they are also not next the recipe but form the first two pages of each chapter.

    Worth Buying?

    The real joy of this book is the potential it has for you to create your own cookies, so if that is something you would like to do, then I would certainly recommend The Cookiepedia.

    The Cookiepedia by Stacy Adimando

    Photographs by Tara Striano

    Published by Quirk Books

    Distributed in the UK by PGUK

    Price at popular online bookshop £12.97

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

    Thanks to Mat at PGUK for providing me with a copy of The Cookiepedia for review and for the giveaway. I was not paid for this review and all opinions are my own.

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