image http://thecraftingchicks.com/1-batch-of-dough-3-types-of-cookies/#_a5y_p=1691185
http://www.julieseatsandtreats.com/white-chocolate-raspberry-cheesecake-cookies/
The kids were asking for another pan of chocolate chip bar cookies, but usually when I make chocolate chip cookies I also make oatmeal raisin cookies, so I decided to make a half batch of each of them and try out my oatmeal raisin cookie recipe as bars, too. They turned out so chewy and delicious! We loved them cooked this way!
image courtesy From House to Home
Nothing breakthrough here today. I’m sharing my chocolate chip cookie recipe, which is actually really Nestle Tollhouse’s chocolate chip cookie recipe, but over they years I have made some modifications to suit our family.
image courtesy American Heritage Cooking
Last night, the kids felt like cookies but I didn’t feel like standing around scooping out and baking four pans full of perfectly portioned cookies. Instead of making them the “normal” way, I decided to just press the dough into a cookie sheet and bake them as bars. They turned out so delicious and moist, if a little bit thin, which reminded me that I used to do them this way back when and when I did I would double the dough for the same size pan. I will try them this way next time for a bit thicker bar.
These ginger cookies are a year-round family favorite, though the flavors lend themselves particularly well during the Christmas season. The recipe is an old family favorite that came from a neighbor of my grandmother’s. Sharon is the sweetest friend of my grandma’s, and she used to run the best daycare/babysitting service in town. She would cook up gigantic batches of these cookies and keep them in old ice cream containers right by her front door, so that when your parents came to pick you up she could send you out the door with one of these. I don’t know how we got our hands on the recipe, but I’m sure glad we did! Everybody who tries them just loves them!image courtesy Life Made Simple
The half batch is like a regular batch of cookies, and will make around 48 cookies. The gigantic original batch will feed an army. Try freezing them, though. Perfect to toss in school lunches; they will be thawed out and perfectly chewy just in time for lunch!
For Christmas, we put together a cookie sampler in cute little Christmas tins for coworkers at The Messy Mister’s work. We have had several requests for some of the recipes, so I thought I would post them all here. The general consensus was that these cream cheese sugar cookie bars were everybody’s favorite. A few people claimed they were “the best sugar cookies I’ve ever had!”
As far as sugar cookies go, I love these over a regular sugar cookie because you frost the entire pan at once and you’re done! No chilling, no cutting, no individual frosting. It simplifies the process so much, and that cream cheese makes them just melt-in-your-mouth delicious!
I’m not surprised everybody loved them; they truly are delicious. But I almost didn’t make them because 1. I worried how well they would package with the frosting and 2. I didn’t think they seemed very “Christmas-y”. But The Messy Mister insisted, and a little waxed paper between layers kept them from being a huge mess in presentation. Cute Christmas sprinkles didn’t hurt, either. recipe courtesy Real Mom Kitchen; I can’t remember where I got the image (if it’s yours, let me know and I will give credit where credit is due!)
The original recipe is for a full jelly roll pan size, but I’ve listed both the full batch and a half batch recipe here. Sometimes, my kids want these cookies and I don’t want an entire pan lying around (I usually end up being responsible for WAAY more than my share), so I often times will make just a half batch.
The original recipe also called for almond flavoring, of which I’m not always a huge fan, so I have modified it to use butter flavoring instead. Yum!