Skip to main content

Food with Friends, Part 2

         I like a lot of things about cooking, and now baking too. Making food is a tangible reward, where your efforts immediately pay off. I think having at least one activity like that is important for a graduate student, where your work payoffs are not immediate. Plus, as I have discussed on this blog, making food is a great method of self-care. You need food to survive. Why not frame it as a moment of caring for yourself?

But I think my favorite thing about cooking (and baking) is the element of sharing. Cooking a meal for others, for me, is a real gift and chance to enjoy some time together. The idea of sharing extends into recipes as well. Some of my favorite dishes are things I’ve learned from friends and family members. Even when I find recipes from random blogs, it still feels like being in a concentric circle of food and knowledge sharing.

At the end of July, I made a recipe deeply steeped in sharing. I’ve been looking for a good homemade chocolate chip cookie recipe, as I’m growing more confident in my baking abilities. The first one I got was from a friend, Kristen. I met her and her daughter Maddie when I first moved to Santa Barbara, and we’ve remained friends since. Kristen described the recipe she uses as “foolproof,” so I made it when she shared it with my mom. Continuing in the spirit of sharing, my mom and dad also “chipped” in making the recipe. And when I found that there were a few too many for three, I gave the rest to my friend Liza.


Raw cookie dough

    The cookies turned out golden brown on the outside and nicely moist on the inside, with perfectly melted chips. In other words, they were perfect! I will definitely be making these again, and using them to spread a little joy.

1 dozen wonderful cookies, all done!


Chocolate Chip Cookies: Makes 2-3 dozen, depending on the size of dough balls you make.


Prep Surface Ingredients and Equipment:

2 cookie sheets*

Parchment paper (for nonstick pans)

2 medium mixing bowls

Flat cake spatula


Cookie Ingredients:

¾ cup Crisco vegetable shortening OR equivalent amount of butter (you can also split the two, say ½ cup Crisco and ¼ cup butter)

1 ¼ cups firmly packed brown sugar**

2 tablespoons milk

1 tablespoon vanilla extract

1 medium or large egg

2 cups all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon salt

¾ teaspoon baking soda

1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips


Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Mix all the wet ingredients in one bowl: shortening, brown sugar, milk, and vanilla until smooth and incorporated. Mix all the dry ingredients in another bowl: flour, salt, and baking soda. Add the egg to the wet ingredients and stir until smooth. Add the dry ingredients to the wet in small bursts, stirring until all ingredients make a smooth and mildly sticky blend. Stir in chocolate chips.

Form the dough into balls and place on the baking sheet in sets of 6-8. Keep them roughly 3 inches apart. For a size reference, make one ball with a rounded tablespoon of dough. Bake 8-10 minutes for chewy cookies, or 11-13 minutes for crispy cookies. If you use two pans, you can bake one set of cookies while the other set cools.


*A specialized cookie pan, with air inside the bottom, will give you puffier cookies.

**Light or dark brown sugar is appropriate. If you choose dark, the cookies will be very moist and may look undercooked, but they are fine. We used a mix of light and dark, because I had some older sugar I needed to get rid of.


Comments

  1. Those cookies were great! I like how you've included all the extra little tips. Baking success!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I think when we visit next you should continue to refine your chocolate chip cookie technique! ��

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

(Responsibly) Conquer Your Fears

Many folks have compared COVID-19 to probably the scariest bacterium I can think of: Yersinia pestis . Its other name is “the plague.” The Black Death of 1347-1352 is the hands-down winner of my Worst Time to Be Alive Award. Anywhere between ⅓ and ⅔ of Europe, and just shy of 25% of the world’s population - you heard that right, the world - died as a result of the Black Death. It’s no wonder a lot of folks then thought they’d reached the End Times. Speaks for itself, I think. But here’s the thing. The mid-1300s weren’t the End Times, we recovered, and humanity learned some valuable lessons from the Black Death. The ones that strike me most live on in danse macabre art. These art pieces (including music! ) show us that death is everyone’s lifelong companion, and can come calling no matter your age or social standing. That might be a scary thought at face value. The fact that people started representing that fear post-Black Death suggests, to me, that they’re confronting the fea...

Healthy Living

My friend Liza said something very appropriate at the pandemic’s beginning. She said, “Self-care is not optional anymore.” I think that’s true, in whatever form self-care takes for a particular person. The occasional face mask or bath, exercise, daily check-ins with friends...I define self-care in my own head as “any pleasant activity that makes you feel calm, less stressed, or good about yourself.” Some of my own favorite self-care activities include going outside for a walk, reading a good/favorite book, and baths with a nice face mask. But there’s a specific self-care thing I do that has become much more important these days: healthy cooking. Cooking in general, as this blog attests, is one of my own ways of self-care. But let’s be honest: not everything I make leaves me feeling exactly healthy afterwards. For example, the Red Lobster biscuits I made are wonderful, but after actually trying them, I have classified them as a very occasional treat! Healthy recipes, on the othe...

Words/Food With Friends: A Book Review

I’ve been reading a lot of books lately, for my own enjoyment as well as studies. One of those enjoyment books was A Sampling of Life, One Taste at a Time: A Food Memoir , which my college friend Martha Wallace published this year (available on Amazon here! ). What a wonderful, and tasty, read! The book focuses on both events from Martha’s life, and the recipes connected to her memories. It spans many locations, from Georgia to Africa and Spain, and memories sweet, salty, and bitter. Me and Martha outside of Oviedo, 2014 From a technical perspective, one of my favorite things about Martha’s book is its imagery. When she describes her grandfather’s garden, I smell the flowers and taste the vegetables. I can visualize her family barbecue, her and her sons baking in the kitchen. As a writer myself, I know that imagery and description are hard to get right. Just the correct amount of detail is needed: too much, and you lose the reader in the weeds; too little, and no one can ...