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Recipe Goldmineon
How to Make Refrigerator Cookies
By Dennis Weaver
Baking cookies seem to fill the house with a sense of well being. Perhaps
it is the smell of butter, vanilla, and spices emanating from the hot
oven. Maybe it is the love and caring attention that is evident in cookies.
Consider refrigerator, or icebox, cookies. Drop cookies are quick cookies;
refrigerator cookies are convenient cookies.
Refrigerator cookie dough can be made up ahead of time--even months
ahead--and stored until ready to bake. Baking that stored refrigerator
cookie dough is mess free, takes little time, and you only need to bake
what you need for the moment.
To store your refrigerator cookie dough until you are ready to bake,
roll the refrigerator cookies into logs (or blocks) as directed in the
instructions then wrap them in waxed paper and aluminum foil. The logs
can be refrigerated for a week or frozen for months. When you are ready
to bake, remove the logs from the refrigerator to unthaw. It's easier
to slice a log that is not completely thawed and the cookies bake fine-though
you may need to add another minute or so.
Refrigerator cookies are also attractive cookies. Nothing beats the
uniform slices and consistent shape of refrigerator cookies. They can
also be quickly and easily embossed, as were the cookies shown here,
using dies from your cookie press.
To illustrate how to make refrigerator cookies, we have included a recipe
for chocolate yoyo cookies. Yoyos are sandwich cookies, a pair of uniform
cookies sandwiched with frosting or filling. These are rich, shortbread-type
chocolate cookies with a vanilla cream filling.
Chocolate Yoyo Sandwich Cookies
For a frosted cookie, this recipe goes together quickly. It is a refrigerator
cookie that you will probably not need to refrigerate if the butter
is firm before mixing.
1 1/2 cups butter
1 1/3 cups powdered sugar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 2/3 cups pastry flour
1/2 cup cocoa
1 teaspoon baking powder
For the filling:
1 1/3 cups powdered sugar
1/2 cup butter
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 egg white or 1/4 cup meringue powder
water
With the paddle attachment of your mixer, cream together the butter,
1 1/3 cups powdered sugar, and salt until light. Add the vanilla.
Whisk the pastry flour, cocoa, and baking powder together in another
bowl.
Add the flour mixture to the butter mixture and beat until combined
(you may wish to remove the dough to a clean counter and work the last
of the flour in with your hands). The dough should have a clay-like
consistency.
As you mix the dough, it will first be very crumbly. As the butter softens,
the dough moistens and comes together into a firm dough that can be
molded with your hands.
Form the dough into a long round log 1 1/2 by 20-inches by rolling it
on the counter with your hands. To make neat, uniform cookies, make
the logs uniform and round. If the dough is too soft to form and cut,
chill the dough in the refrigerator.
Slice the dough while it is still cold and firm into 1/4 inch slices.
Turn the log after every few cookies to keep the log round. If the cookies
have a flat edge, mold them back to shape with the curl of your finger
before baking.
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Place slices on a lightly buttered
baking sheet and bake for 12 to 13 minutes or until they are puffed
and no longer glossy. Cool on a wire rack.
For uniform thickness, use a ruler. So that the pressure of the knife
does not flatten the log, roll it a quarter turn after several cuts.
A serrated knife works best for slicing cookies. Use your fingers to
round any flat sides before placing them on the pan.
If you would like to emboss the cookies, use a coin, medallion, or die
to press a pattern into the dough, as shown. Lightly dust the counter
with flour and, occasionally, the die or coin to keep the cookie dough
from sticking. The top picture shows finished, embossed cookies. Traces
of flour will disappear while baking.
Dough logs can be kept in the refrigerator, well wrapped, for a couple
weeks or frozen for several months. With refrigerator cookies, you can
always bake only what you need.
Beat the butter in a small bowl until soft and smooth. Add the powdered
sugar, vanilla, and egg white or meringue powder. (The egg white or
meringue powder makes the frosting firmer.) Beat until smooth. Place
a small amount of frosting on the back of a cookie. Press another cookie
to the frosting, back to back, to form a sandwich. Repeat with the remaining
cookies. Allow the frosting to set before serving. Store where cool.
Why it Works- Understanding Baking
This is a very tender, melt-in-your-mouth cookie. Three factors make
it so. First, it uses soft, unbleached pastry flour. This is a low protein
flour. (It is the combining of proteins that creates the gluten and
the chewiness that we enjoy in bread.) Second, it has a lot of butter.
Butter acts as a shortening, lubricating and relaxing the gluten strands.
Third, the powdered sugar contains cornstarch. Cornstarch, with no gluten,
acts as a tenderizer.
The frosting firms up better than you might expect from an uncooked
frosting. The secret ingredient is the egg white or meringue powder
which is made of egg whites. The egg whites set up to make firmer frosting.
Frostings used in decorating, such as royal icing, are usually high
in egg whites. You can do the same thing with meringue powder available
on our web site.
Tips for success
Because the dough is dry, it will take some effort on the part of your
mixer to work the dry ingredients into the butter. Be patient. As the
dough works, the movement will create friction that will soften the
butter. If the resulting dough is too soft, refrigerate it until it
is firm enough to slice cleanly.
Don’t over bake. As with most cookies, a slightly under-baked cookie
is a better cookie.
Don’t add too much water to the frosting. You can always add more if
it is too stiff. If you add too much water, add powdered sugar to thicken
it up again.
This article was excerpted from “A Baker’s Cookie Guide” which is
free at The Prepared Pantry.
Dennis Weaver is the author of “How to Bake”, a free 250-page e-book.
The Prepared Pantry sells cookie mixes and other baking mixes and offers
a free “Cookie Information Center” with recipes and techniques.
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