T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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438.1 | | ORION::BLACHEK | Chocolate is my destiny | Mon Dec 01 1986 14:52 | 19 |
| I start my Christmas cookies before Thanksgiving and freeze most
of them. I don't freeze cookies that have fruits in them--they
will stay moist by themselves.
I have never made anise cookies, but my Grandma Mangieri does, and they
always taste great. (She does freeze them.) I don't think the anise
ages well, so without the freezing, they get a little funny.
Yesterday I made three kinds of cookies and promptly freeze them.
Another good reason to freeze them is: out of sight, out of mind.
NO ONE touches the cookies in the freezer, so my supply is safe.
I just make sure to have other stuff in the house, then my cookies
are respected.
I did try to freeze the peanut butter cookies with the chocolate
kisses on top. I've never tried those before. I may live to regret
it...I'll let you know.
Judy
|
438.2 | freezing? cookies | CIVIC::JOHNSTON | | Tue Dec 02 1986 16:29 | 6 |
| pizelles [sp?] do NOT freeze well.
ditto, lacies & madeleines
springerles [sp?] freeze excellently well
as do, pecan sandies and 'rocks'
|
438.3 | freezable cookie | SKYLRK::WILDE | Dian Wilde | Wed Dec 03 1986 16:13 | 29 |
| -< freezing? cookies >-
Mandelbrot freezes very well...easy recipe is:
INGREDIENTS:
1 CUP BUTTER
2 CUPS SUGAR
6 EGGS
4 AND 1/2 CUP FLOUR
1 TABLESPOON BAKING POWDER
1 TEASPOON ALMOND EXTRACT
2 (2 AND 1/3 OZ.) JARS CHOCOLATE SPRINKLES
2 CUPS CHOPPED, TOASTED ALMONDS
PROCEDURE:
Cream butter and sugar. Add eggs one at a time, beating well each time.
add flour, baking powder, and extract. Mix. Fold in chocolate
sprinkles and almonds. Place in 4 oiled 9 inch by 5 inch loaf pans;
dough will be approx. 3/4 inches deep.
bake at 350 degrees farenheit 20 to 25 minutes or until dry. Turn out
onto cutting board and slice (serrated knife) into 1/2 inch wide pieces.
Do this while warm!
Place on cookie sheet and toast 5 to 10 minutes on each side (lightly
brown). Makes 6 dozen. Freezes forever!
|
438.4 | Toll House | KANE::POTUCEK | CLASSIFIED | Fri Dec 05 1986 14:37 | 3 |
| Toll House Mix does take to freezing in waxed paper. Remove from
freezer, unwrap, and cut with freezer knife. Bake
|
438.5 | freezing Xmas cookie dough? | AKOCOA::BBAKER | | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:56 | 8 |
| I know I'm planning ahead here, but how long can you freeze cookie
doughs? (Sugar, choc chip, etc.) I was hoping to get my Xmas cookie
dough made and frozen so all I'd have to do is bake and decorate later.
thanks,
beth
|
438.6 | 3 months max - wrap airtight | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Sep 08 1992 23:41 | 13 |
| > I know I'm planning ahead here, but how long can you freeze cookie
> doughs? (Sugar, choc chip, etc.) I was hoping to get my Xmas cookie
> dough made and frozen so all I'd have to do is bake and decorate later.
a general guide-line is to freeze cookie doughs, very well wrapped in
freezer wrap and then bagged in freezer bags (the wrap is airtight and
prevents freezer burn), no more than 3 months...so, start mixing
late this month and next...
erg...Christmas stuff already....and it is still in the 90's..I cannot
get into the mood.
|
438.7 | | WAGON::BUNNELL | | Mon Oct 12 1992 12:51 | 7 |
| YES! I do this all the time. THe real nice part about it is, if you
divide the dough up into small portions then you can bake several differnt
cookies all at one time, so you get a big variety with little work!
I guess I better get started here!
hannah
|
438.8 | cut out MORE time w/ spritz | WMOIS::RITCHIE | | Thu Dec 17 1992 12:13 | 5 |
| My secretary just informed me that if you freeze spritz cookies
after they're baked (and cooled), they are much softer when you
actually want to eat them. I hate dry and crisp spritz cookies!
Colleen :*)
|
438.9 | Freezing Fudge? | CSTEAM::BAKER | Spirit that won't let me go | Tue Oct 05 1993 15:25 | 7 |
| How long can you freeze fudge? I was thinking I might get the pb,
chocolate, and chocolate nut fudges out of the way (is FUDGES a word or
is 'fudge' one of those always plural always singular words?) Anyway,
can I freeze it and if so, how long?
Thanks!
~beth
|
438.10 | Fudge freezes | LANDO::EBENS | Mary Jean Ebens - BXB2-2/G06 | Mon Nov 15 1993 12:58 | 4 |
| I've frozen fudge for several months. It also keeps very well
unfrozen, wrap well, in a cool place. All that sugar is a presevative!
mj
|
438.11 | is this the sort of 'quick feedback' you want? | GOLLY::CARROLL | a work in progress | Tue Nov 16 1993 09:36 | 22 |
| Well, if what you are looking for is a program that will calculate out
your nutrition for you, COOKS is probably not as good a place to look
as WEIGHT_CONTROL. I think there is a similar note in there, re: PC's.
I *still* think you'd be better off with a book - even what you are
looking for, ie: quick numbers. It'll take less time to keep a pad of
paper by the fridge, and every time you eat something, write down how
many grams of fat it contains in one column, and how many you are
saving from what you would *otherwise* eat in another column.
So, say you would ordinarily have tuna w/ mayo, chips, cookie and
coffee w/ cream - 45 grams fat. Make the substitutions I suggestion,
and cut the total fat to 10 grams...so write 35 grams in the "saved"
column. That's 315 calories in fat alone that you are saving (9
calories per gram.) A pound is approximately (depending on your
weight, metabolism, etc etc) 3500 calories. So, just by changing your
lunch in those small ways, you would lose a pound in a little over 10
days. (Change your dinner and breakfast similarly and you could triple
that speed.)
No PC required! :-)
D!
|
438.12 | Clifford Tea Cookies | WONDER::MAKRIANIS | Patty | Fri Oct 28 1994 10:22 | 43 |
|
I know it was a while ago that the topic involved freezing
cookies/dough in preparation for the holidays, but I figured I would
add this recipe in. I make up this dough and freeze it (since you have to
anyways) so I have it all set to be cut into cookies. They are
delicious and really quick to whip up a few dozen at the last minute.
CLIFFORD TEA COOKIES
--------------------
Ingredients:
1 cup butter at room temperature
2 cups packed brown sugar
2 eggs
3 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup chopped nuts
Directions:
Cream butter and sugar throughly.
Add the eggs and continue to beat.
Sift flour, salt, and baking soda
together 3 times. Stir into the
butter mixture. Add the nuts. Pack
the mixture in a loaf pan and leave
in freezer overnight.
Preheat oven to 400 degrees Farenheit.
Cut frozen loaf in half lengthwise
and slice thin cookies. Place on
ungreased cookie sheet and bake
for 7 minutes. Watch them carefully.
They will overcook quickly.
NOTE: Keep dough in freezer when not
cutting, i.e., don't let the dough
start to thaw. It makes it hard to cut
the cookies.
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438.13 | bake while frozen? | CRAIGA::SCHOMP | Lord of the Rings | Mon Dec 09 1996 23:54 | 5 |
438.14 | | CSC32::K_MEADOWS | | Fri Dec 13 1996 12:40 | 1
|