Forgive me the title. I just like the idea of all my recipes lining up in a model like fashion, about to strut their stuff on the catwalk. (Sorry, runway these days I think).
Forgive me the title. I just like the idea of all my recipes lining up in a model like fashion, about to strut their stuff on the catwalk. (Sorry, runway these days I think).
Credit – debit, credit – debit. Oatmeal – fudge, oatmeal – fudge. Life is one long compromise. Like ordering a Diet Coke with your Big Mac, these cookies are almost neutral through their combination of virtuous oatmeal and sinful chocolate fudge.
The friend I made these for swears they’ve helped her (these are her words) not kill her partner. They’re having to do a lot of compromising at the moment you see. Food, relationships, just one long compromise. These are the cookies to help.
All comments gratefully received. I love reading them.
One year ago: Octonauts cupcakes and Walnut, fudge and Fleur de Sel cookies
Two years ago: Mutter paneer and Hot cross biscotti
Oatmeal & fudge cookies
Makes about 15
Ingredients:
Preheat the oven to 180C/Gas 4 and find 2 baking sheets. Mix the dry ingredients together and then rub in the butter until you have a fine breadcrumb consistency. They add the milk until the mixture comes together in a ball. Cut the fudge bars into 8 equal pieces and then take a piece of cookie dough about the size of a small plum. Squash, pop the fudge in the centre and then wrap the dough around the fudge until it sits in the middle. Roll between your palms until the cookie is smooth and sphere like and place on your baking sheet. Then squash a little so the top is just flattened. Repeat until all the dough is used, placing about 3 cm apart – these don’t spread like some cookies. I made 15 and had 1 piece of fudge left over perfect for my son to gobble up.
Bake for 20 minutes until just golden and starting to crack on the top. Allow to cool and enjoy with a chaser of compromise.
The lovely Jaime of Jaim’s Kitchen came along to my cupcake class and was a superstar. Then she came along to my bread class was a superstar and brought these biscuits for me. They’re so good you need them in your life. Here’s their story and recipe in Jaime’s words…
Cookies have a special place in my heart, and home.
I have lost count of how many batches of cookie dough we’ve gone through. My latest obsession (and my husband’s too) are these Walnut, Fudge and Fleur de Sel Cookies I made for friends over a week ago. They are so easy and quick to make, but I remember a time when baking cookies were well, not so easy-peasy lemon squeezy.
Before an electric hand whisk made it into our home (and way, way, way before powerful stand mixers entered it) we creamed butter and sugar by beating it with a wooden spoon. Every couple of minutes or so, I would ask my mum if it was ready and she would answer, “Check if the sugar has dissolved. If not, keep beating.” I was a scrawny kid. Later, after what seemed like an eternity of whisking and swapping from left hand to right and back again my mother would nod in approval and tell me to stop; the mixture is ready. But my joy is always short-lived when I see the eggs…and the beating resumes.
Oh but why bother, you might ask? Because cookies are good! In fact some are so very good, like my mother’s pineapple cookies, but unfortunately also happened to be the most tedious and difficult to make. And this is after she had already pre-cooked her own pineapple jam.
Sometimes I would deliberately appear incompetent and my mum would take over. She tuts jokingly and in Hakka tells me I will never gain strength in my arm without hard work. As a fidgety teenage, neither patience nor endurance were my forte (I’m glad to say this has massively improved with age) and repetitive tasks quickly lost its charm. So I ignore the dig, thankful to be spared further bicep-developing tasks for I had gone from an excited state to exhaustion, and was now on the verge of plain boredom.
But I liked watching my mum work at lightning speed. I would stay sitting close by, asking questions and making small talk until the cookie dough is formed and we could start shaping them (yes, the easy part). As I got older and electrical appliances arrived at our home, I grew to appreciate that wooden spoon more. Once albeit in a very long while, I take mine out to cream butter and sugar with. It is a great reminder that good things are really worth striving for; that the reward will taste oh-so-much-better when all of your heart, might, soul and love have been poured into it.
Walnut, Fudge and Fleur de Sel Cookies
Ingredients
250g unsalted butter, softened
112g caster sugar
100g light soft brown sugar
1 large egg
1 tsp vanilla extract
400g plain flour
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
150g mini fudge pieces (I love the ones by Morrisons)
150g roughly chopped walnuts
1 tsp fleur de sel (French sea salt)
Preparation
In a large bowl, cream the butter, sugars, egg, and vanilla extract using an electric mixer (or wooden spoon?). Start from the lowest speed, increasing the speed setting as the mixture comes together. Continue beating at high speed until the sugars have dissolved, the colour of the mixture has lightened and the texture is fluffy. Remember to scrape down the sides of the bowl.
First, sift 240g (equivalent to 1½ cups) plain flour into the creamed butter, sugars, egg, and vanilla extract. Fold in using a silicone spatula until well combined.
Next sift in the remaining 160g (equivalent to 1 cup) plain flour together with the teaspoon bicarbonate of soda. Fold again until well combined. Working in two batches will make it easier to work the flour into the creamed mixture.
Now add the fudge pieces, walnuts and fleur de sel. At this stage, the best tools to combine all the ingredients are your hands. So give them a good wash and dry, and get stuck in. Gently knead and form the mixture until the cookie dough comes together into a ball.
Chill Time
Turn the cookie dough out onto a large piece of cling film, wrap tightly and refrigerate between 30 minutes to 1 hour before baking.
Oven Settings
Preheat your oven according to these settings.
Type |
Temperature |
Bake Time |
Halogen |
160˚C |
25 minutes |
Conventional / Electric |
180˚C |
15 – 20 minutes |
Gas |
Mark 4 |
15 – 20 minutes |
Baking
Remove your cookie dough from the fridge. It should be firm, but not rock hard. I used to roll the cookie dough between my palms to form a perfect round but of late, I have been favouring a more rustic look. Pinch about 30g worth of cookie dough and place it in the palm of one hand. With other hand, use your fingers to pat the cookie dough into a rough round. Place it on your baking tray/cookie sheet and gently pat it down to slightly flatten the dough. Work quickly to avoid warming up the dough too much as you will lose the lines in the dough. Those little lines form lots of little cracks in the finished product, giving the cookies that lovely homemade feel.
I’ll never make a hand model. Apart from my gargantuan knuckles (which in the wrong light make my hands look distinctly transvestite-esque), they are also covered in scars. Mostly kitchen war wounds, selflessly gathered on my many missions to feed the masses. Some are less heroic. I have a particularly Scar Face style one gained whilst washing up wine glasses in a drunken fashion. I often get an urge to tidy after a few drinks. It’s odd, I know.
One of my many scars was acquired making Christmas fudge. The boiling fudge spat at me and Oh My Goodness, it hurt. This fudge is for those who like fudge but also reserve the right to consider a hand modelling career at some point in the future. Quick to make, oh so moreish, and all without a sugar thermometer in sight… makes a great Easter gift too.
Ingredients:
Place the marshmallows, butter, dark chocolate, ground cinnamon and orange zest into a saucepan. Heat on a low hob until completely dissolved, stirring regularly. Don’t be tempted to hurry it by turning up the heat – the chocolate will burn!
Remove from the heat and add the raisins and ginger, stir well and pour into a tin (approx. 24cm x 24cm) lined with greaseproof paper. (Don’t wait about as it starts to set sharpish.) Push small sugar eggs into the top if you wish (try and leave some clear lines to aid cutting) then refrigerate for 2 hours. Cut into squares and serve. I warn you, this stuff is addictive.
Just sign up to receive my latest blog posts straight to your inbox: Simply click here.
P.S. To sign up for my free monthly newsletter just click here. It has a baking SOS, recommendations on bits of kit I can’t live without, my kitchen catastrophe of the month, a sneak preview of a recipe coming up on this blog and a letter from me telling you what I’ve been up to.
Remember to check your inbox for a confirmation email and also to add my email recipesfromanormalmum@gmail.com to your contacts. Otherwise I could go to spam.