What I Know About Cookies
May. 26th, 2006 01:52 pm1. Wet first, dry second, lumpy third. Sugar is wet, oatmeal is lumpy.
2. Parchment paper and an oven thermometer may not be necessary, but they can hardly be a bad thing.
3. White sugar is designed to taste like sweet. Just sweet. That's it. That's why we have it: for sweet that doesn't interfere much with other flavors. If you don't want your cookies to taste like just-sweet-that's-it, use another sweetening (brown sugar!, maple sugar, maple syrup, molasses, applesauce...) or make sure your cookies have other things in them.
4. Hungarian companies know from spices. "Sure, paprika," you may say to yourself, "but what do Hungarians know about good cinnamon?" Answer: lots.
5. It is silly to make cookies designed to appeal to people who are guaranteed not to eat them. This has obvious applications, but there are some subtler ones that may come back to bite you: will anyone who could possibly come into contact with these cookies notice or care if you've cut out a cocoa ginger moose cookie with a crooked back leg? No? Move along with your life, then. There are books to be read.
6. You can't trust how many cookies the recipe says it'll make, because those people are dirty rotten liars. People whose recipes you can trust in this regard: me, my mom, Aunt Ellen,
ksumnersmith, and one of
markgritter's grandmas but not the other. There may be others, but I can't vouch for them personally.
7. Eating raw eggs in cookie dough puts you at risk for salmonella. Taking a walk puts you at risk for sprained ankle, sunburn, getting hit by a car, lightning strikes. Loving people puts you at risk for getting hurt. Doing nothing at all puts you at risk for living a joyless existence until you die alone and miserable. You do the math on all this as you like, but I'll be over here licking the spoon.
2. Parchment paper and an oven thermometer may not be necessary, but they can hardly be a bad thing.
3. White sugar is designed to taste like sweet. Just sweet. That's it. That's why we have it: for sweet that doesn't interfere much with other flavors. If you don't want your cookies to taste like just-sweet-that's-it, use another sweetening (brown sugar!, maple sugar, maple syrup, molasses, applesauce...) or make sure your cookies have other things in them.
4. Hungarian companies know from spices. "Sure, paprika," you may say to yourself, "but what do Hungarians know about good cinnamon?" Answer: lots.
5. It is silly to make cookies designed to appeal to people who are guaranteed not to eat them. This has obvious applications, but there are some subtler ones that may come back to bite you: will anyone who could possibly come into contact with these cookies notice or care if you've cut out a cocoa ginger moose cookie with a crooked back leg? No? Move along with your life, then. There are books to be read.
6. You can't trust how many cookies the recipe says it'll make, because those people are dirty rotten liars. People whose recipes you can trust in this regard: me, my mom, Aunt Ellen,
7. Eating raw eggs in cookie dough puts you at risk for salmonella. Taking a walk puts you at risk for sprained ankle, sunburn, getting hit by a car, lightning strikes. Loving people puts you at risk for getting hurt. Doing nothing at all puts you at risk for living a joyless existence until you die alone and miserable. You do the math on all this as you like, but I'll be over here licking the spoon.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 06:56 pm (UTC)Risk
Date: 2006-05-26 06:58 pm (UTC)Hear hear.
B
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:06 pm (UTC)B
mm, spice cake.
Date: 2006-05-26 07:07 pm (UTC)You can, most definitely, Not trust how many whatevers my recipes
will make. Hell, I can't trust them. (giant cookies of doom: delicious;
many billions of tiny dot cookies: also delicious.) I don't even bother
with writing down ingredient quantities most times. Everything is a
wonderful, (maple or brown) sugar-ific mess.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:10 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:12 pm (UTC)I hope this is meant literally and that you now have the option to do so.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:35 pm (UTC)Re: mm, spice cake.
Date: 2006-05-26 07:37 pm (UTC)She eyed me, and sighed, knowing that it was all her fault I'd answered that way.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:45 pm (UTC)I am a big ol' fan of raw cookie dough. I will note, for those who like the middle of the road, that freezing kills the salmonella, so if you want to put your cookie dough in the freezer and eat it the /next/ day, you can have your cake and fear it, too.
I generally don't bother, I admit.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 07:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 08:52 pm (UTC)When I was 13, one of my favorite cousins (then about 35) came for a visit. I was throwing brownies together, and I told her the best part was the batter. She became upset. I quoted the odds to her and indicated my continuing intention to eat the batter. She became more upset. While I was putting the pan in the oven, she stole the batter bowl and ran water in it so I couldn't eat it.
The part that really made me mad was that she was perfectly willing to eat the brownies I had made. Too young to make brownie-batter related decisions for myself, apparently, but for her? No problem.
Still one of my favorite cousins, despite that.
Re: Risk
Date: 2006-05-26 10:36 pm (UTC)I do make a dish known as 5 peppers dd-b with pork, though. Even the first time, it didn't have *that* much dd-b in it. (And no rat at all, so far as I know.)
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 10:41 pm (UTC)And, as many people are saying, the chance of infection in just a few eggs is quite low. It's in commercial environments when you crack a few *dozen pounds* of commercial-grade eggs into one big container and mix that the odds of it being infected approaches unity.
But Pamela stopped letting us eat cookie dough and lick cake batter bowls a couple of decades ago, and we never started again. At this point she bakes so seldom it hardly matters, though.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 10:41 pm (UTC)Good show knowing the odds. Did you figure in a percentage for this tiny exposure (if any) building immunity in case you ever had a big exposure?
no subject
Date: 2006-05-26 11:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-27 01:04 am (UTC)Re: Risk
Date: 2006-05-27 04:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-27 04:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-27 04:41 am (UTC)How would you like this to be attributed in my .sig file? *)
Re: Risk
Date: 2006-05-27 12:53 pm (UTC)Re: Risk
Date: 2006-05-27 02:49 pm (UTC)Re: Risk
Date: 2006-05-27 02:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-27 04:20 pm (UTC)Re: Risk
Date: 2006-05-27 08:39 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-05-30 03:46 pm (UTC)I not only eat cookie dough, I eat day-old cookie dough chiseled from a block in the fridge.
I don't know how eggs are pasteurized, but if you want a germ-free chicken colony, you take eggs and wipe them with antiseptic so there aren't any bacteria on them. The eggs go into a big chamber with filtered everything so nothing gets in. Germ-free chickens! Great for immunity things.
no subject
Date: 2006-05-30 09:06 pm (UTC)Also, when we baked something, my mom would try to get as many chocolate chips or blueberries or whatever into the baked goods as possible, but Grandma would make sure there were at least a couple to eat in the dough. That was good, too.