T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1579.1 | Don't use softened butter! | MOSAIC::M_BELANGER | Moe Belanger | Fri Dec 30 1988 08:31 | 8 |
| I've been making chocolate chip cookies for quite a few years and
I noticed that if you do not use softened butter ( take it directly
from the refrigerator ) that the batter will be firm enough to make
the type of cookies you're looking for. Also, when placing them
on the cookie sheet make hight piles of batter, that way when they
spread they will not spread too wide and still remain high.
Moe
|
1579.2 | More cookie hints | CTCADM::DUGGAN | | Fri Dec 30 1988 12:28 | 17 |
|
Other hints:
Before starting, put the chips and the cookie pans in the refrigerator.
This prevents chips from melting to nothing and cool pans prevents
batter from spreading.
After mixing, put the batter into fridge for 1/2 - 1 hr.
Also, the type of brown sugar (light or dark) effects the color
(appearance) of the cookie.
Last, I preheat oven for only 5 minutes and then bake for 9 minutes
(but this will depend on your own oven)
|
1579.3 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Dec 30 1988 13:12 | 17 |
| Re .1, .2:
I'm not sure I was clear; I want the batter to spread. I can make
"cookie lumps" very easily; it's one of my great skills. Actually,
I've just learned how to alter the recipe to make excellent "normal"
chocolate-chip cookies: Golden-brown, crispy but not hard, and just a
bit higher than the chips themselves.
Now I'm looking to have the cookies be lighter than golden-brown, just
barely browned at all, and the batter should spread so that the cookie
is low and the chocolate chips are visible as lumps in the cookie, but
it should remain soft. I can probably get the color and softness by
reducing the cooking time or changing the temperature, but I don't know
how to get the batter to spread.
-- edp
|
1579.4 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Fri Dec 30 1988 14:39 | 2 |
| Reduce the amount of flour.
|
1579.5 | a sudden stop! | MPGS::PROCESS | | Mon Jan 02 1989 02:34 | 6 |
|
Immediately after removing from oven, hold cookie sheet 10-12 inches
above countertop........and DROP it!!! Don't slam it, just drop it
flat.
Works every time!!
|
1579.6 | | BEING::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Jan 03 1989 08:29 | 9 |
| Re .4:
> Reduce the amount of flour.
That did it, thanks. And it doesn't take much; reducing the flour by a
sixth completely flattens the cookies.
-- edp
|
1579.7 | | INDEBT::TAUBENFELD | Ilza Egk | Wed Jan 04 1989 08:55 | 5 |
|
You can also do it by packing the brown sugar harder...that I learned
by mistake...
|
1579.8 | try a pizza stone | TLE::KRUGER | | Wed Jan 04 1989 16:15 | 3 |
| We cook our chocolate chip cookies on our pizza stone. It gives
a wonderful result -- the cookies come out nice and soft and a little
chewy.... yum!
|
1579.9 | Toll House Cookies | BTO::GEORGE_L | | Thu Jan 05 1989 18:07 | 7 |
| I just follow the recipe on the back of the Hershey chocolate chip
bag for Toll House cookies. They always come out perfect. I bake
them for 8 minutes and they are nice and chewy. I sometimes put
the batter in a 9x13x2 pan and make squares instead. These I bake
for about 20-25 minutes. Either way they're great right out of the
oven with a cold glass of milk!
|
1579.10 | | CIMNET::GLADDING | Exactly the same but different | Fri Jan 06 1989 09:36 | 6 |
| Actually, the Toll House cookie recipe is on the Nestle
chocolate chips bag, not Hershey. Hersey may have a cookie
recipe on their bag, but they're not original "Toll House".
FYI
Pam
|
1579.11 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Jan 06 1989 13:09 | 11 |
| Re .9, .10:
I had always used the recipe on the bag, but the cookies often came out
in mounds and always became hard little cakes if not eaten while warm.
Reducing the butter by a quarter cured this perfectly.
By the way, the original Toll House burned down approximately five
years ago.
-- edp
|
1579.12 | Dear Jane Dough | NECVAX::OBRIEN_J | somewhere over the rainbow | Mon Jan 09 1989 16:43 | 13 |
|
This same question was asked in the December 88, Country Living
Magazine "Dear Jane Dough":
A. Cookie crunch is based on good old-fashioned chemistry, not
on secret ingredients. Cookies made with butter are going to be
crispy; vegetable shortening will make a softer, more shortbreaklike
cookie. ....... Gwen Steeger, in The Search for the Perfect Chocolate
Chip Cookie (Storey Publications; $7.95), suggests that baking in
a 400-degree oven for about 8 minutes will yield softer, chewier
cookie; a 300 or 325-degree oven for 15 minutes will net harder
ones.
|
1579.13 | butter is best | CURIE::FERESTIEN | | Tue Jan 10 1989 12:14 | 9 |
| re 12. I don't agree with Country Living Mag....I have always
baked cookies with Butter and they Always come out chewy.....
I haven't looked at all the recipes submitted but the best that
I have found is the famous "mrs fields supposed recipe"......if
it is not here, I can bring it in....
/the cookie monster
|
1579.14 | | USMFG::PJEFFRIES | the best is better | Tue Jan 10 1989 12:42 | 7 |
|
re..13
I also disagree with Country Living MAg...I only use butter when
I am making Christmas cookies or for a real special occasion, and
I always make my choc chip cookies crisp. I make adjustments with
the flour.
|
1579.15 | | WITNES::HANNULA | Round Up the Usual Suspects | Tue Jan 10 1989 13:48 | 6 |
| Re .12
What is vegetable shortening? Is it another one of those butter
substitutes?
-Nancy
|
1579.16 | Crisco | USMFG::PJEFFRIES | the best is better | Tue Jan 10 1989 14:34 | 4 |
|
Crisco would be a vegetable shortening, any shortening with out
animal fat, made with corn oil, cottonseed oil, palm oil etc.
|
1579.17 | butter-flavored crisco for cookies | THE780::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Tue Jan 10 1989 16:15 | 7 |
| > Crisco would be a vegetable shortening, any shortening with out
> animal fat, made with corn oil, cottonseed oil, palm oil etc.
although bad for your heart (it's coconut and palm and palm kernel oil
that solidifies best), the butter-flavored crisco really is nice to
bake cookies with....great sugar cookies! I use half that and half
real butter for my chocolate chippers.
|
1579.18 | Baking extra large cookie? | AKOCOA::BBAKER | | Tue Jun 23 1992 09:55 | 17 |
| I have a question (moderator - feel free to move this to an appropriate
note if it shouldn't go here):
I'd like to make a LARGE chocolate chip cooke (like you see in the
Cookies Cookin' places. Large enough for me to write a msg on.
My question is: should I alter the recipe at all and what about baking?
I thought I'd use my original recipe, spread the dough out on a cookie
sheet, and use a lower temp and just keep checking the cookie for
doneness. I just don't want it to get hard and burned on the edges and
mushy in the middle.
Any suggestions?
thanks,
beth
|
1579.19 | Check it out at a library, it should be there... | ASDS::SARAO | Field testing every Saturday @ TONYS | Wed Jun 24 1992 06:51 | 8 |
|
There is a book out called "MONSTER COOKIES" and it tell you how
to make such a cookie. I've never tried it but I have them all over
the place.
Robert
|
1579.20 | brown sugar choc chip cookies-martha stewart | EVER::LALIBERTE | PSG/IAE - OGO | Wed Sep 04 1996 13:31 | 8 |
| Does anyone have the Martha Stewart receipe for
BROWN SUGAR CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES
that she claims is her favorite receipe ??
thanks
|
1579.21 | Just a guess... | SHRCTR::SCHILTON | Sacred cows make the best hamburger | Wed Sep 04 1996 16:55 | 8 |
| You know, in looking at those cookies this morning, they look
just like my regular old (big) Tollhouse chocolate chip cookies that
have just been a tad too overdone.
Maybe she just didn't want to use the registered trademark name of
Tollhouse??
Sue
|