Makes 5 dozen cookies
Use cookie or baking sheets that measure at least 15 by 12 inches. Don’t be disconcerted by the scant amount of batter: You really are going to spread it very thin. Use the edges of the parchment paper as your guide, covering the entire surface thinly and evenly. For easier grating, freeze a 2-inch piece of peeled ginger for 30 minutes, then use a rasp-style grater.
WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS:
The original recipes for Fairy Gingerbread Cookies melted in our mouths but were also severely lacking in flavor. A bit of vanilla extract and salt helped boost the otherwise bland confections. Doubling the ginger added a much-needed kick, but without any competing flavors it was overwhelming. We cut back a little and toasted the ground ginger to bring out its natural flavor. Grating fresh ginger straight into the batter added even more intense ginger flavor.
Switching from bread flour to all-purpose flour made the batter slightly easier to spread onto an overturned baking sheet or cookie sheet. A little baking soda helped retain the cookies’ airy crispness.
- ground ginger
- all-purpose flour
- baking soda
- Salt
- packed light brown sugar
- grated fresh ginger
- vanilla extract
Makes about 8 dozen
Any Hershey’s Chocolate Kiss—dark, milk, white, or "Hugs"—works in this recipe. For best results, the cookies should be baked on the middle rack, one baking sheet at a time. This recipe can be cut in half.
- all-purpose flour
- table salt
- baking soda
- baking powder
- roasted salted peanuts
- packed dark brown sugar
- granulated sugar
- creamy peanut butter
- vanilla extract
Makes 16 cookies
Avoid using a nonstick skillet to brown the butter; the dark color of the nonstick coating makes it difficult to gauge when the butter is browned. Use fresh, moist brown sugar instead of hardened brown sugar, which will make the cookies dry. This recipe works with light brown sugar, but the cookies will be less full-flavored. For our winning brand of chocolate chips, see related tasting.
- baking soda
- table salt
- vanilla extract
- large egg
Makes 16 wedges
Use the collar of a springform pan to form the shortbread into an even round. Mold the shortbread with the collar in the closed position, then open the collar, but leave it in place. This allows the shortbread to expand slightly but keeps it from spreading too far. Wrapped well and stored at room temperature, shortbread will keep for up to 7 days.
- old-fashioned rolled oats
- cornstarch
- table salt
Makes 2 dozen cookies
The final dough will be slightly softer than most cookie dough. For the best results, handle the dough as briefly and gently as possible when shaping the cookies. Overworking the dough will result in flatter cookies.
WHY THIS RECIPE WORKS:
Traditional recipes for sugar cookies require obsessive attention to detail. The butter must be at precisely the right temperature and it must be creamed to the proper degree of airiness. Slight variations in measures can result in cookies that spread or cookies that become brittle and hard upon cooling. We didn’t want a cookie that depended on such a finicky process, we wanted an approachable recipe for great sugar cookies that anyone could make anytime. We melted the butter so our sugar cookie dough could easily be mixed together with a spoon—no more fussy creaming. Replacing a portion of the melted butter with vegetable oil ensured a chewy cookie without affecting flavor. And incorporating an unusual addition, cream cheese, into the cookie dough kept our cookies tender, while the slight tang of the cream cheese made for a rich, not-too-sweet cookie.
ATK Radio, April 7, 2012: The Mysterious Power of Detoxing
- baking soda
- baking powder
- table salt
- vegetable oil
- large egg
- milk
- vanilla extract
Excellent
- sugar
- egg
- vanilla
- oats
- flour
- cinnamon
- baking soda
- M&M's
- butter melted...
- white sugar...
- brown sugar...
- vanilla..
- . pinch of salt...
- egg yolk...
- flour...
- chocolate chips...
- sifted confectioners' sugar
- flour
- salt
- rolled oats
- chopped walnuts
- raspberry jam
Haven’t tried…but good to know.
Makes a perfect, shiny glaze.
- powdered sugar
- almond flavoring OR flavoring of your choice
- light corn syrup
- milk
Might try a peppermint flavored sugar cookie glaze.
See my recipe in this book for “Best Sugar Cookie Frosting”.
- additional powdered sugar for rolling
- finely crushed hard peppermint candies
- peppermint extract
- egg whites
- egg yolk
- powdered sugar
- salt
- flour
- baking powder