Sarah and her son Jack came over for dinner last night. While I prepared chicken-fried venison out of some elk steaks we had in the freezer, I got the yellow box out of the cabinet and slid it across the counter to Sarah with instructions to pick out a cookie recipe that would not require a trip to the grocery store. She narrowed it down to two contenders, and the winner for the evening was Peanut Blossoms.
I am not a huge fan of peanut butter cookies, but these are dangerously yummy and easy to pop in your mouth. The batter is simple to prepare, too.
For the record, I used Smucker's Natural Peanut Butter.
The only thing I varied from the recipe was that I used butter rather than shortening.
The only drawback to this recipe is that it is rather tedious work to roll and sugar-coat all those teaspoon-sized balls of dough. I asked Sarah to help me, but only on the first batch; as I meticulously scooped and rolled each ball, then coated them evenly in sugar and set them in perfect rows on the cookie sheet, Sarah loosely pinched the dough into odd-shaped clumps, tossed them briefly in the sugar, then dropped them randomly on the cookie sheet. I'm sure her cookies would have turned out just as delicious as my cookies, but I nonetheless re-coated them in sugar and rearranged them on the cookie sheet before baking (if that tells you anything about me). My real point here is that these are totally worth the time and effort, but I suggest watching tv or chatting with a friend during the time-consuming ball-rolling phase of the recipe.
I think the recipe makes about six dozen cookies, but *someone* kept eating the raw dough balls off the cookie sheet, so it could have been more.
I also suggest making sure the oven is fully preheated. I was trying to multi-task and didn't notice the oven wasn't ready when I put in the first batch, and ended up scorching the bottom of the cookies. Oops.
Really, really delicious. I usually think of peanut butter cookies as being denser and heavier than other kinds of cookies, but these are nice and light. And, like I said, because they are so small, it's a little too easy to pop them in your mouth.
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UPDATED 10/26/11
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My daughter reminded me last night that she needed to take a snack to share for school today, so I pulled up this recipe since I remembered it being easy and delicious. Despite the tedious hand-rolling of the cookie dough, I had the entire batch of cookies prepared and baked in exactly an hour, and even had the dishes and utensils washed before the last batch came out of the oven!
Because I didn't want to mess with softening butter in the microwave, I went ahead and used shortening as the recipe calls for. I don't know that it made a difference, because they were just as light and delicious as I remember them being the first time.
In measuring out the dough, I scooped out a slightly-heaping teaspoonfull (I know "heaping teaspoon" is a relative term). Here's how they looked as I set them on the baking sheet:
I fit 30 cookies on the cookie sheet, and after the second batch, I had enough dough left for about maybe 15 more cookies. Out of curiosity, I started measuring out level teaspoons of the dough, to see how smaller cookies would turn out. After all, the recipe calls for "quarter size" balls of dough, and my heaping teaspoonfulls were quite a bit bigger than a quarter. Finishing off the last of the dough, I ended up with 32 more cookies. I baked the smaller cookies same amount of time - 8 minutes - and they came out just barely browned.
Here's a photo of both the larger and smaller cookies, along with the teaspoon I used, and a quarter thrown in for the heck of it:
Cute, huh?
As before, these cookies are dangerously easy to pop in your mouth. I ate four before I realized it.
Also, these cookies pretty much require a glass of milk to wash them down. I really can't remember the last time I drank a glass of plain white milk, but this was an occasion that demanded it.
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UPDATED 12/23/11
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Ohhhh... you know how sometimes you have to look at something when you're not really paying attention in order to "see" what you're looking at?
I decided to make Peanut Blossoms as part of my holiday cookie menagerie, and suddenly, without even trying, the last line of the recipe card made perfect sense. It had been a complete mystery every other time I'd looked at it, but now I totally get it.
"Chocolate drops press. - 2-5 min" means to take the cookies out of the oven, press a "chocolate drop" into each one, then return the pan to the oven 2-5 minutes until the chocolate melts. Of course! I've seen those types of cookies countless times, but I've never made them myself, so maybe that's why it wasn't clicking for me.
Hershey's Kisses seemed the obvious choice for chocolate drops, except that I didn't have any on hand, and I am not a fan of Hershey's chocolate, anyway. I did, however, have a bag of Ghirardelli dark chocolate chips, which were nice and plump, the perfect size for my little Peanut Blossoms.
So, as soon as the next batch came out of the oven, I pressed a chocolate chip into each one. As it turned out, the chips were small enough and the cookies were hot enough to melt the chocolate completely without needing to return the pan to the oven. The chips melted into perfect little chocolate puddles, and now I think the cookies are even cuter than before.
The other thing I learned this time around was not to overbake these cookies. I had new baking sheets rather than the old air-bake sheet I used before. The cookies came out a little too brown on the bottom, and they were much harder after they'd cooled, so I didn't like them as much. I should have watched them more closely and adjusted my baking time.
Other than that, this recipe is still one of my favorites, and I'll be sure to have chocolate chips on hand next time!
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Peanut Blossoms
Shirley Mace - 1966
Mix in a small bowl:
1¾ cup flour
1 tsp baking soda
½ tsp salt
Cream together in a larger separate bowl:
½ cup shortening [or butter]
½ cup peanut butter
Add:
½ cup white sugar
½ brown sugar, packed
1 egg, unbeaten
2 tbsp milk
1 tsp vanilla
Beat well
Blend in dry ingredients
Shape dough into quarter-size balls - approximately 1 tsp
Roll dough balls in white sugar and place on ungreased cookie sheet
Bake at 375° for 8 minutes
Remove from oven and press chocolate drops into each cookie, then return to oven 2-5 min until chocolate melts (or not at all, depending on the size of the chocolate).
[
For best results, do not overbake!]
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