Katie here (the baker of duo). Always looking for an excuse to bake, I thought I'd make some cookies for the students in the MCAT class I taught over the Christmas break. Being a firm believer that all things baked should never come from a box with a pretty picture on the front, I decided to make a unique chocolate chunk cookie from scratch.
Recently I compiled a cookbook of favorite family recipes. In the process my Aunt Rita sent me an awesome chocolate chip cookie recipe (with oatmeal & peanut butter!!) so I decided to give it a whirl.
Starting off, I beat:
1 stick of softened butter
1/2 cup of shortening
1 cup sugar
1 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup crunchy peanut butter
I only had about 1/3 cup so I upped the shortening a little so my consistency wouldn't be compromised. Word to the wise - never substitute low fat margarine for butter or shortening. I did this once and ended up with burnt, paper-thin cookie crisps....not what grandma use to make. Be extremely cautious with substitutions in baking.
To round out the wet ingredients, I added 2 eggs & 1 tsp of vanilla extract
Now here's the trick, to get the flavor of oatmeal without the appearance, I processed 2 1/2 cups of oats.
Throw the oats in a separate bowl and mix with:
2 cups flour
1 tsp salt
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp baking powder
Little by little (about 3 portions), add the dry ingredients to the wet ones. Try not to over beat your dough, this will make your cookies tough.
After mixing, the dough was pretty dry so I was a bit worried.
Now for the chocolate! I used one 12 oz bag of semi-sweet chocolate chunks (Wal-Mart ran out of 12 oz chocolate chips). I ended up liking the chunks better anyway.
I dropped the cookies in palm-size globs about 1 inch apart on an ungreased, foil-lined baking sheet (for easy cleaning). I was able to do this by hand since the dough was dry.
Finally, I baked the goodies at 350 degrees for 10 minutes. The recipe made about 4 dozen cookies.
They were a little crunchier than I would have liked (I like mine chewy), next time I may try adding another stick of butter. But it didn't seem to bother my MCAT class, they ate all of them.
Aunt Rita informs me that the cookies should not have been dry. Her recipe calls for 2 sticks of butter (instead of 1 stick & 1/2 cup shortening - which i used due to a lack of butter). She suggests mixing the dough longer after adding the flour as well.
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