Posted by Beth on Mar 8, 2023 in Blog, Bready or Not, cookies | Comments Off on Bready or Not: Big Soft Ginger Cookies
These Big Soft Ginger Cookies are delicious any time of year!
These things taste like gingerbread. They are soft, chewy, and fragrant, with a delicate crunch from the coarse sugar topping. They are good on their own, or with a hot drink!
These take some planning, as the dough is soft and could use some chill time. Make it a little bit ahead of when you plan to bake. A few hours will do; overnight is great, too. Then bake away!
Modified from Allrecipes Magazine Dec/Jan 2014 issue.
Make the dough a few hours or a day ahead of time, and bake up these big cookies in little time! Each one tastes a lot like gingerbread, only in a personal, portable version. Modified from Allrecipes Magazine Dec/Jan 2014 issue.
Course: Dessert, Snack
Keyword: cookies, gingerbread
Author: Beth Cato
Equipment
baking sheet
parchment paper
tablespoon scoop
plastic wrap or sealed bag
Ingredients
2 1/4cupsall-purpose flour
2teaspoonsground ginger
1teaspoonbaking soda
3/4teaspoonground cinnamon
1/2teaspoonground cloves
1/4teaspoonsalt
3/4cupunsalted butter (1 1/2 sticks) room temperature
1cupwhite sugar
1large egg room temperature
1Tablespoonwater
1/4cupmolasses
3/4cupcoarse sugar such as turbinado
Instructions
In a medium bowl, combine flour, ginger, baking soda, cinnamon, cloves, and salt. Set aside.
In a big bowl, cream together butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the egg followed by the water and molasses. Slowly mix in the dry ingredients, scraping the bottom of the bowl a few times.
Once everything is mixed, encase the dough in plastic wrap and chill in fridge for a few hours or a day or two.
When ready to bake, preheat oven at 350-degrees. Line a large baking sheet with parchment. Measure coarse sugar into a bowl.
Using a tablespoon scoop or tablespoon, shape dough into small balls. Roll dough in coarse sugar. Set spaced-out on prepared baking sheet.
Bake for 10 to 12 minutes, until cookies are set and starting to crinkle across the top. Let rest on sheet for another 10 minutes, then transfer to a rack to fully cool. Store in a sealed container at room temperature.
I’ve done a lot of different apple cakes. This Apple Sheet Cake is unique in that it’s 1) in a casserole dish, so can feed a lot of people, and 2) uses apple butter, diced fresh apple, diced dried apple, and cross-wise sliced fresh apples on top!
It probably goes without saying that this cake is loaded with apple flavor. There’s just enough batter to complement the fruit. Really, this is all about the apples.
I think the apple butter in particular carries a lot of weight here. It adds a touch more spice, but most of all it adds moist texture to the crumb.
Modified from a clipping for Applicious Sheet Cake.
This 13×9 apple cake brims with apples in many forms, and will feed a lot of people! The leftovers are also great to freeze.
Course: Breakfast, Dessert, Snack
Keyword: apple, cake
Author: Beth Cato
Equipment
13×9 pan
aluminum foil
uneven spatula
Ingredients
Cake
2medium baking apples
1/3cupunsalted butter melted
1 2/3cupbrown sugar packed
1cupapple butter
2large eggs room temperature
2teaspoonsvanilla extract or vanilla bean paste
1 2/3cupsall-purpose flour
1teaspoonbaking powder
1teaspoonbaking soda
1/4teaspoonsalt
1cupdried apples finely chopped
Icing
1Tablespoonunsalted butter melted
1Tablespoonmaple syrup
1/2cupconfectioners’ sugar
1/4teaspoonvanilla extract
1Tablespoonmilk or half & half
Instructions
Preheat oven at 350-degrees. Line a 13×9 pan with foil and apply nonstick spray or butter. Set aside.
Peel, core, and shred or finely dice-up one apple. Thinly slice the other apple cross-wise, removing the seeds.
In a large bowl, mix together butter, brown sugar, apple butter, eggs, and vanilla. Add flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt, scraping bottom of bowl to make sure everything is mixed. Fold in the shredded/diced fresh apple and the chopped dried apple. Spread batter in pan, using uneven spatula to level out. Arrange apple cross-sections over cake.
Bake for about 40 minutes. The middle should pass the toothpick test. Move to a wire rack.
Immediately mix glaze to go over hot cake. Drizzle it all over the top, using the back of a spoon or a pastry brush to distribute across surface. Cool completely to set the glaze, speeding process in fridge if desired.
Use foil to lift cake onto a cutting board to slice. Pieces can be individually wrapped and frozen for later, or will keep several days covered in the fridge. Eat cold or warmed slightly in microwave.
I reinvent Snickerdoodles on a regular basis, and here’s a fun new take: Chocolate Chai Snickerdoodles.
The flavor of these is chocolate-forward, followed by the warm combination of spices. The combo is fantastic, and the texture of the cookies is soft and chewy.
I highly recommend mixing up the sugar and spices a day or so in advance. There is such a variety involved that the measuring and washing of the measuring spoon ends up being the most tedious aspect of the entire recipe.
Bready or Not Original: Chocolate Chai Snickerdoodles
These luscious snickerdoodles are chocolate-forward, followed by a warming mélange of spices. The spice mixture can be done a day or two in advance, or right before baking. Using a teaspoon scoop, this makes about 50 cookies.
Course: Dessert, Snack
Cuisine: American
Keyword: chocolate, cookies, snickerdoodle
Servings: 54
Author: Beth Cato
Equipment
parchment paper
baking sheet
teaspoon scoop
Ingredients
2 1/2cupswhite sugar
1teaspoonground cinnamon
1teaspoonground ginger
1teaspoonground cardamom
1/2teaspoonground allspice
1/4teaspoonwhite pepper
1cupunsalted butter (2 sticks) room temperature
2large eggs room temperature
2 1/4cupsall-purpose flour
1/2cupbaking cocoa sifted
2teaspoonscream of tartar
1 1/2teaspoonsbaking powder
1/2teaspoonsalt
Instructions
Preheat the oven at 350-degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment. Combine the first six ingredients; reserve a 1/2 cup in a separate bowl.
Beat the butter until soft. Add the bulk of the spice mix, continuing to beat until light and fluffy. Add the eggs and vanilla.
In a separate bowl, combine the flour, cocoa, cream of tartar, baking powder, and salt. Slowly work this into the butter mix.
Use a teaspoon scoop or spoon to form small balls. Roll them in the reserved sugar-spice mix. Set them spaced out on the baking sheet.
Bake for 10 to 12 minutes. Due to the cocoa, it is hard to gauge doneness by color, so look for them to be set with some light crackling. These don’t crackle as much as standard snickerdoodles, though. Let them rest on the sheet for about 10 minutes, then transition them to a rack to completely cool.
Pie is good. Portable pie is something special indeed. These Baked Lemon Curd Hand Pies are a real treat.
This is a pairing of recipes that dirties numerous dishes and spaces, but the result is a good batch of hand pies. The recipe makes roughly 18 to 20, so make these for a group!
I usually experiment with freezing my baked goods to see how they keep, but I didn’t do so with these. My husband took them to work, where they were pretty much inhaled!
Use homemade lemon curd, if you have a reliable recipe, or use a trustworthy brand. I recommend going with one that is pretty thick, as a watery one might interfere with the seal of the pies.
This dough comes together quickly in the food processor. Make at least a few hours ahead of assembling the hand pies, or freeze the dough for later. Modified from Bake from Scratch Magazine July/August 2021.
Author: Beth Cato
Equipment
food processor
food scale
plastic wrap
Ingredients
2 3/4cupsall-purpose flour
1teaspoonkosher salt
1cup plus 1 Tb unsalted butter
1/2cupice water
2teaspoonsapple cider vinegar
Instructions
Place the flour and salt in the bowl of the food processor. Pulse to combine. Cut the butter into cubes and add, pulsing until the pieces are pea-sized.
In a liquid measured cup, combine the ice water and vinegar. With the processor running, pour in the liquid until the dough comes together. It will look crumbly but should come together if squeezed between fingers.
Turn out the dough and divide it in half. Wrap tightly in plastic and chill for at least 2 hours. Store in fridge for a few days or freeze for later.
These hand pies don’t take long to come together since the dough is already made and prepared lemon curd is used for the filling. Makes 18-20 pies. Modified from Bake from Scratch Magazine July/August 2021.
Course: Breakfast, Dessert, Snack
Keyword: hand pie, lemon, pie
Author: Beth Cato
Equipment
flour for dusting
2 1/2-inch cutter
basting brush
parchment paper
baking sheet
Ingredients
hand pie dough
1cuplemon curd
1large egg room temperature
1Tablespoonwater
coarse sugar optional
Instructions
On a lightly floured surface, roll out half of the prepared pie dough to be about 1/8-inch thick. Using a 2 1/2-inch cutter, cut dough, reforming scraps to roll out again.
Dollop about a teaspoon of lemon curd into the center of half of the dough rounds.
In a small bowl, beat together the egg and water. Brush the egg mix around the edges that surround the curd; do not discard egg wash. Top each with a remaining dough circle, stretching them slightly to cover. Press edges firmly to seal, then apply the tines of a fork to bind the halves. Chill hand pies in fridge for 1 hour.
Preheat oven at 425-degrees. Line baking sheet with parchment paper. Place hand pies on parchment. Brush tops with remaining egg wash, then use the tip of a knife to cut a small x in each to vent steam during baking. If desired, sprinkle coarse sugar over the tops.
Bake for 13 to 16 minutes, until pies are golden. Move to a rack or different sheet to completely cool. Store in a covered container. Best eaten within a day or two.