T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3313.1 | | ELWOOD::CHRISTIE | | Thu Nov 07 1991 16:41 | 5 |
| Well, you could always buy mint chocolate chips, melt them down and
reform them into bigger pieces.
L
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3313.2 | craft shop | ATLEAD::PSS_MGR | name | Fri Nov 08 1991 08:11 | 10 |
|
I was at a craft store, Michael's, last night (in Atlanta) and
in the cake decorating aisle they had all kinds of chocolates
for cooking that you are talking about.
Try a craft shop where you live...better yet, save gas and call
around.
Good luck,
Kristen
|
3313.3 | Sources for Wafers... | TENVAX::MIDTTUN | Lisa Midttun,285-3450,NIO/N4,Pole H14-15 | Mon Nov 18 1991 11:23 | 23 |
| Just an update for those of you following this saga....
I did get several references on where to find these mint
chocolate wafers. Most craft and candy stores do carry chocolate
wafer, but they don't have mint flavored cholocate. A fellow noter
and another friend did find them for me, though (Horray!)
Info. is as follows:
- Bordon, Inc. 134 Cambridge St. Cambridge, MA. (617) 498-0500
Hours: 9-6 Mon. - Friday, Some Saturdays 9-3 (call first)
This is an candy factory outlet store near the Museum of Science in
Boston/Cambridgeside Galleria/Lechmere Station. They don't ship small
quantities (although they made is sound like this might be negotiable).
Price: $1.95/lb. (NOTE: The box label says 'Richfield Candy Co.', I
think. Not sure if they're a subsidiary of Bordon or not.)
- Burnham and Brady, Inc. 34 Burnside Ave., E. Hartford, CT (203)
528-9271. Will ship, no minimum quantity. Delivery is several days
after order as these are not stock items. They must be made to
order. Price: $8/lb.
NOTE: Cookie recipe is in the next reply
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3313.4 | Mint Surprise Cookies | TENVAX::MIDTTUN | Lisa Midttun,285-3450,NIO/N4,Pole H14-15 | Mon Nov 18 1991 11:24 | 31 |
| MINT SURPRISE COOKIES
---------------------
BAKE AT 375 oF for 10-12 min.
INGREDIENTS:
3 C. flour
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. baking soda
1 C. butter or margarine
1 C. sugar
1/2 C. brown sugar
2 eggs
2 Tblsp. water
1 tsp. vanilla
mint chocolate wafers
walnut or pecan halves
DIRECTIONS:
1. Sift together flour, salt, and baking soda in a separate bowl.
2. In a separate bowl, cream butter and gradually add sugar and brown
sugar. Cream well.
3. Blend in eggs, water, and vanilla. Beat well.
4. Add dry ingredients. Mix well. Cover and refrigerate for at least 2 hours.
5. Enclose mint chocolate wafers in dough (enough to cover wafer).
6. Top with pecan or walnut half.
7. Bake on ungreased cookie sheet at 375 oF for 10-12 minutes.
|
3313.5 | Why not a mint candy? | MCIS5::CORMIER | | Mon Nov 18 1991 16:14 | 6 |
| Curious, why wouldn't an "andes" mint work? My guess is that it would
melt and eliminate the "surprise" aspect; the wafers are tempered and
remain whole during the baking process? This sounds like a great
recipe, but I do wonder if I can substitute a mint candy, rather than
search in my area for the wafers????
|
3313.6 | Thin Mints work too | CTHQ2::SANDSTROM | born of the stars | Mon Nov 18 1991 16:36 | 15 |
| I've made them succesfully with "Thin Mints". These are the candies
that are about the size of a half-dollar, chocolate coated, with a
white mint filling. I learned after the first batch to line my cookie
sheet with foil or wax paper - when the inside melts it can create
qiute a mess if the cookie dough isn't wrapped entirely around the
candy or if it just leaks!
Using the Thin Mints you get the mint flavor and a thin layer of
chocolate in the middle of the cookie - you don't see the white layer
since it melts into the dough. (and no, you don't have to change
the recipe at all to compensate for the melting mint)
These are on my "must have" list of cookies for every holiday!
Conni
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3313.7 | Andes candies can work... | STAR::LEWIS | | Tue Nov 19 1991 08:13 | 13 |
| > Curious, why wouldn't an "andes" mint work? My guess is that it would
> melt and eliminate the "surprise" aspect; the wafers are tempered and
> remain whole during the baking process? This sounds like a great
> recipe, but I do wonder if I can substitute a mint candy, rather than
> search in my area for the wafers????
I've used the Andes candies when I've made these. As long as the dough
completely covers the candy, you don't lose the surprise aspect. I do
break them in half. They aren't *exactly* like I remember as a child,
but they're sure close enough.
Sue
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3313.8 | Mint chips/Andes both work... | TENVAX::MIDTTUN | Lisa Midttun,285-3450,NIO/N4,Pole H14-15 | Tue Nov 19 1991 09:53 | 10 |
| RE: last several....
My mother-in-law has tried several methods...using many of the mint
chocolate chips and using 1/2 of an Andes or thin mint. Both work,
althought the chocolate chips method is much more time consuming...
I was just trying to find these wafers as that would allow her to
make the cookies 'the old-fashioned' way. I thought this would be
a nice Christmas surprise for her (and her kids...who haven't had the
'original' recipe in years!). For those of you who can't find the
wafers locally, substitute the Andes mints.
|
3313.9 | Flavor them like you flavor sugar with vanilla | CUPTAY::FARINA | | Thu Mar 26 1992 12:59 | 13 |
| This is really late, obviously, but couldn't you buy plain milk or
semi-sweet wafers (like the candy-making wafers or the large Nestle
chips they make now) and put them in a tightly covered container with
cheesecloth or cotton soaked with pure peppermint extract? I know that
when I buy chocolates at truly fine chocolate shops (a luxury!), they
refuse to put peppermint creams in with the rest unless you're going to
eat them immediately. They always say that the rest of the chocolates
will taste like the peppermint.
You've found sources, so it doesn't matter. Has anyone tried this,
though?
Susan
|