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| I am in love with these cookies from Sam's Club. They are soft and chewy and thick. I am totally unable to make them. How do they make these 3 1/2" wide and 1/2" thick cookies? Mine just spread out and get thin. Do they pour them into a mold to get them so round and thick? Any ideas? |
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- Posted by Ginger_St_Thomas (My Page) on Fri, Nov 14, 03 at 18:05
| This is from Epicurious & is a Cook's Illustrated recipe: Cook's Illustrated's (Moist And Chewy) Oatmeal Cookies (With Raisins & Variations Cook's Illustrated #1 Oatmeal Cookies Why did it take six months to develop the right recipe for a chewy, thick, buttery oatmeal cookie? Well, it all started and ended with the back of the Quaker Oats box.... The challenge: When we considered doing a story on oatmeal cookies, the first place we went was the back of the Quaker Oats box, and the cookies the Quaker recipe produced were very good. Nonetheless, we wanted something more—more chewy, more moist, and more substantial. We were after a big, moist, chewy cookie with lots of real oat flavor. BIG CHEWY OATMEAL-RAISIN COOKIES Makes 16 to 20 large cookies If you prefer a less sweet cookie, you can reduce the white sugar by one-quarter cup, but you will lose some crispness. Do not overbake these cookies. The edges should be brown but the rest of the cookie should still be very light in color. Parchment makes for easy cookie removal and cleanup, but it's not a necessity. If you don't use parchment, let the cookies cool directly on the baking sheet for two minutes before transferring them to a cooling rack. Ingedients: 2 sticks (1/2 pound) unsalted butter, 1. Adjust oven racks to low and middle positions; heat oven to 350 degrees. In bowl of electric mixer or by hand, beat butter until creamy. Add sugars; beat until fluffy, about 3 minutes. Beat in eggs one at a time. 2. Mix flour, salt, baking powder, and nutmeg together, then stir them into butter-sugar mixture with wooden spoon or large rubber spatula. Stir in oats and optional raisins. 3. Form dough into sixteen to twenty 2-inch balls, placing each dough round onto one of two parchment paper–covered, large cookie sheets. Bake until cookie edges turn golden brown, 22 to 25 minutes. (Halfway during baking, turn cookie sheets from front to back and also switch them from top to bottom.) Slide cookies on parchment onto cooling rack. Let cool at least 30 minutes before serving. DATE OATMEAL COOKIES Substitute 1 1/2 cups chopped dates for the raisins. GINGER OATMEAL COOKIES Omit raisins and add 3/4 teaspoon ground ginger. CHOCOLATE CHIP OATMEAL COOKIES Substitute 1 1/2 cups semisweet chocolate chips for the raisins. NUT OATMEAL COOKIES Omit raisins, decrease flour to 1 1/3 cups, and add 1/4 cup ground almonds and 1 cup walnut pieces along with oats. Almonds can be ground in food processor or blender. ORANGE AND ALMOND OATMEAL COOKIES Omit raisins and add 2 tablespoons minced orange zest (remove zest with peeler, being careful to leave behind any white pith) and 1 cup toasted chopped almonds (toast almonds in 350-degree oven for 5 minutes) along with oats. Author(s): Christopher Kimball - Eva Katz |
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- Posted by arandygail (My Page) on Wed, Nov 19, 03 at 8:46
| I made the Big-Chewy Oatmeal Raisin cookies a couple days ago and they were very good. My husband took them to work and the guys decided that these were some of the best cookies I have made. (They are frequent recipients of baked goods.) So I would have to highly recommend these cookies. Gail |
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- Posted by Ginger_St_Thomas (My Page) on Wed, Nov 19, 03 at 16:42
| (Only if you leave out those nasty raisins. LOL) |
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| The next cookies I make for the kids at my ISP have to be oatmeal raisin ones-wonder if I could substitute choc chips?? Nah, I promised so will go buy some raisins. RL` |
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| You can buy Sam's Club Oatmeal Raisin Cookie dough (preformed and frozen) by the box (or any other kind of cookies they carry). If I remember right you get around 200 cookies for $32. Just place 12 on a cookie sheet and bake. Yummy hot gooey cookies in 16 minutes. Just ask the person working in the bakery. They're great if you're having a big party or a box will last a long time in your freezer when just cooking a dozen at a time. |
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| Mmmmmmm--I left out the nasty raisins, too! Delicious!! I made mine a little smaller (about 2 to 2.5 inches each, got 20 out of half a recipe) and baked for 15 minutes--I think these are the best oatmeal cookies I've ever made. Thanks for the recipe! |
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- Posted by angel_2009 (My Page) on Sun, Jan 18, 09 at 20:04
| I tried these cookies and they were very dry. What might I have done wrong? I did not cook them right away. But refrigerated them over night. Help |
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| I made these today and they were outstanding. Really great. My friend went into great detail about why he loved the cookies (as he was eating them) and kept saying how they were crispy on the bottom, but soft on the insides. The recipe is a keeper. Thanks. Jo |
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| I made this recipe and the cookies were dry, like another poster's. Also, I thought they were overly sweet and the flavor was too oatmeal-ey. Used whole rolled oats. |
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