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Showing posts with label cookies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cookies. Show all posts

November 12, 2010

Vegan MoFo #11: The Vegan Cookie Connoisseur


I set a goal to post at least 20 times in the month of November, so with this post I am officially past the halfway mark! Who knows, at this rate I may even surpass my goal. Participating in Vegan MoFo has been wonderfully challenging so far. I was pretty tired the first week, staying up too late to write every night, but I have gotten into my groove now. My writing process tends to be lengthy, but it seems that this is improving with daily practice. I plan to keep up the habit of frequent posting even when Vegan MoFo is over. The best part of this month of food by far has been connecting with so many vegan bloggers. You all inspire me, and I thank you for that!




I am not sure if I should credit MoFo or the cooler weather, but I have been on a major baking kick, first with Isa and Terry, then with Fran, now with Kelly. Kelly Peloza is the newest vegan dessert cookbook author to hit the scene. Her book, The Vegan Cookie Connoisseur, is loaded with over 140 cookie recipes, with gorgeous full color pictures throughout. Some of the sections found within are Cookies Inspired by Drinks, Blissfully Chocolate Cookies, DIY Versions of Mass-Produced Cookies, Bar Cookies, A Take on Tradition, and several more.



Bakery-Style Crispy Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies
Where to start when you are faced with over 140 choices? I figured the best way to get to know this author's style would be to start with something classic, and it doesn't get more classic than chocolate chip cookies. Then I discovered that she has FIVE chocolate chip cookie recipe options, and that doesn't even include the gluten-free chocolate chip cookies and the candy cane chocolate chip cookies! Crisp, chewy chocolate chip cookies are my preference, so the obvious choice was the Bakery-Style Crispy Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies. My batch were chewy, in a really awesome way, but not crisp. The recipe doesn't call for any non-dairy milk at all, but it does suggest to add some if the dough is too dry. I had to add some and was careful to only add enough to get the dough to hold together. I am thinking that the texture of the finished cookie could have benefited from a little more soy milk. This recipe is definitely good, but not the perfect chocolate chip cookie for me. I plan to try some of her other chocolate chip cookie recipes as I continue my quest to find the perfect chocolate chip cookie!


Peanut Butter Chocolate-Covered Pretzel Bars
My boyfriend's favorite sweet-salty snack is a toss up between chocolate-covered pretzels and chocolate-covered peanuts. Kelly came up with a bar cookie that involves these two very things, so of course I had to make these for Steve. The Peanut Butter Chocolate-Covered Pretzel Bars are made up of a peanut butter cookie base piled high with hand dipped chocolate-covered peanuts and pretzels. The base was my favorite part, reminding me of a peanut butter blondie. Hand-dipping the pretzels and peanuts in chocolate was a lot of fun, and I appreciated the awesome makeshift double boiler tips for melting the chocolate (up until now I've been a microwave-melter)! If your fresh-dipped peanuts and pretzels behave like mine and don't want to harden all the way at room temperature, just toss them in the fridge for 10 minutes to finish the hardening process. I also opted to chop my chocolate dipped goodies rather than breaking apart by hand. Steve's reaction to this bar cookie was exactly what I hoped for! Rich peanut-buttery base, with a chocolate-covered salty/sweet crunchy top, this is the perfect cookie for him.


Almond Cloud Kisses
My favorite cookies so far are the Almond Cloud Kisses. Mine turned out pretty clumsy looking in comparison to Kelly's, but that didn't take away from the taste. Dense, not too sweet, shortbread-like almond cookies come together with a smear of melted chocolate, for a (potentially) adorable cookie. I had the same issue that I did with the chocolate chip cookies, needing to add more soy milk than the recipe calls for in order for the dough to hold together. This time I was a little bit more generous with the additional soy milk, and the result was great.


Autumn Cloud Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies
For the last cookie that I sampled I went for the Autumn Cloud Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies. This was the first time pumpkin and chocolate crossed paths in my kitchen, and I was very pleased with the flavor combination. The cookie itself was an odd texture, more fluffy and spongy like a muffin. I would be very curious to see how the dough would behave in a muffin pan. If you have been searching for the perfect cookie-muffin hybrid (muffin tops anyone?), this cookie is for you!


Whew, that's a lot of cookies, and I have barely scratched the surface of the cookie options in The Vegan Cookie Connoisseur! Sooner than later I plan to try several more (I am looking at you Puppy Chow Cookies).

So, what will you be baking this weekend?

November 3, 2010

Vegan MoFo #3: More Great Good Dairy-Free Desserts Naturally


One of the newest cookbooks to grace my book shelf is Fran Costigan's More Great Good Dairy-Free Desserts Naturally. I have spent the last month baking through several recipes, and this cookbook is rapidly becoming my favorite dessert cookbook. Fran uses natural, organic, minimally processed ingredients in her baking, and that is something I feel good about. Her recipes are healthier than the average dessert, but they certainly don't taste like health food. There is absolutely no sacrifice in taste in these delicious desserts.






Banana Walnut Bread
The first recipe that I tried is the Banana Walnut Bread. It grabbed my attention because it is 100% maple sweetened and there is only 3 tablespoons of oil in a loaf. The results were fantastic, this bread certainly isn't missing anything without the sugar and extra fat. I have tried other vegan banana breads, but this is the first one I really love.


Pumpkin Pecan Bread
After the pleasing results with the Banana Walnut Bread, I decided to try another bread. My next choice was the very season-appropriate, Pumpkin Pecan Bread. This recipe again is low on oil and sugar. There is a bit of natural cane sugar in this recipe, but it is mostly sweetened by maple. This bread is over the top delicious. I shared this loaf with friends and everyone was totally gaga over it. As far as I am concerned the search for my favorite vegan pumpkin bread is over.


Famous Jam Dots and Peanut Butter Cookies
Trying out a few of Fran's cookie recipes was definitely in order, seeing that I am a cookie monster addict and all. Her low-fat Peanut Butter Cookies were up first. The typical peanut butter cookie recipe has a couple of sticks of butter in it, but Fran realized that with the fat content of peanut butter there is actually very little added fat needed. I was skeptical, but the proof is in the cookie! This cookie has the perfect chewy texture and great rich flavor, all without that kick-in-the-gut feeling that often comes from eating super buttery cookies. I am starting to feel like a broken record by saying so, but this is now my go-to recipe for peanut butter cookies, another winner!

Next up, Famous Jam Dots. These cookies are Fran's adaptation of the recipe made famous by the Natural Gourmet Institute of Food and Health. Apparently people have been known to enroll for classes there after one taste of this cookie! How about that for an endorsement? I noticed right away that this recipe is yet another that is 100% maple sweetened. It is a bit heavier on oil than the rest of her cookie recipes, but even still they are not overly rich. The cookie is nutty and oatty with a nice firm bite, finished off with a sweet 100% fruit jam center. I chose apricot and raspberry for this batch, which were both excellent. Now for the best part, by permission of the publisher I am able to share this awesome recipe with you. I hope you try these soon!


Famous Jam dots
Famous Jam Dots
from More Great Good Dairy Free Desserts Naturally by Fran Costigan
(published by permission of BookPubCo.)

1 cup rolled oats
1 cup pecans
1-1/4 cups whole wheat pastry flour
1/4 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground nutmeg
1/8 tsp salt
1/2 cup canola oil
1/2 cup maple syrup
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/2 tsp almond extract
1/3 cup all-fruit jam (any flavor)

Position a rack in the middle of the oven and another rack above it. Preheat to 325 degrees. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.

Spread the oats on one of the prepared sheets and the pecans on the other. Toast each pan in the oven for 6 minutes. Cool completely, leaving the parchment on the baking sheets for baking the cookies. Raise the oven temperature to 350 degrees.

Put the oats in a blender or food processor, and process until fine. Add the pecans and process until the mixture resembles coarse meal. Pour into a medium bowl and add the pastry flour, baking powder, cinnamon, nutmeg, and salt.

Whisk the oil, maple syrup, and vanilla and almond extracts in a small bowl until well blended. Pour into the dry mixture and stir with a rubber spatula until the dough holds together when squeezed.

Shape the dough into 1-inch balls and place 1 inch apart on prepared sheets. Use your little finger to make an indentation in the center of each cookie. Spoon 1/2 teaspoon jam in each indentation.

Bake for 15 to 16 minutes, or until the cookies are light brown on the bottom. Set the baking sheets on racks and cool for 3 minutes, until the cookies are firm enough to move. Transfer the cookies to a rack to cool. Keep the cookies at room temperature in a covered container or a zipper-lock plastic bag for two days.




What are your favorite More Great Good Dairy Free Desserts Naturally recipes? I have loved everything I have made, and I'm having a hard time deciding what to make next!

BookPubCo is giving away vegan dessert cookbooks during the month of November, click the logo below to enter!

October 31, 2010

Vegan Cookies Invade My Halloween

Happy Halloween! I hope that you had a fun-filled weekend of tricks and treats, we surely did! Steve and I decked out in full costumes and made the rounds to a few costume parties. I dressed up as my favorite monster and Steve was his favorite 80's movie character. What do you think?

C is for Cookie... 1.21 GIGAWATTS!!

I took my role as Cookie Monster very seriously, well, not serious enough to do any singing, however I was armed with homemade vegan cookies at all times. When I was deciding what cookies to make, I turned to the vegan cookie authorities, Isa and Terry, authors of Vegan Cookies Invade Your Cookie Jar. I picked out four recipes and split up the baking over two days. My selections were varied carefully so that there would be something for everyone, vegan cookies for the masses!



The cookies in my cookie jar were the chocolate fudgy oatmeal cookies, sell your soul pumpkin cookies, lazy samoas, and the peanut apple pretzel drops. Needless to say, I was one popular monster! Everyone had a favorite, and mine were a tie between the fudgy oatmeal cookies and the lazy samoas.

It was my first time baking from Vegan Cookies Invade Your Cookie Jar, and the recipes were fun and easy to work with. I am excited to have this cookbook on hand for the upcoming holiday season, the cookiest time of year.

Your turn now, I'd love to hear how you celebrated Halloween!



With less than an hour left in October, I am looking forward to the start of November, the Vegan Month of Food! I am very excited to be participating in Vegan MoFo this year for the first time. Last I heard there are over 500 bloggers signed up to blog about their vegan eats all month long. The goal is to post as often as possible, ideally every weekday for a total of about 20 posts in the month of November. If you are a regular reader of mine, you know that I don't post nearly this frequently, but I am up for the challenge! Come back tomorrow for my kickoff MoFo post. I promise you there are many many delicious things to come.

July 27, 2009

No Bake Oatmeal Cookie Balls


I love sweets, but I'm no baker. When I saw the recipe on Taste and Tell for No Bake Oatmeal Cookie Balls, it was a no brainer. Oats, chocolate, peanut butter, and no oven involved?! Yes please!

No Bake Oatmeal Cookie Balls

2 cups rolled oats
3/4 cup white sugar
3 tbsp unsweetened cocoa powder
1 tbsp water
1/2 tsp vanilla
1/2 cup butter, softened
2 tbsp peanut butter
1 cup confectioners' sugar

In a large bowl, combine oats, sugar, and cocoa. With clean hands, mix in the water, vanilla, butter, and peanut butter to form a dough.

Wash hands, then roll the dough into balls 1 to 2 inches in diameter. Roll balls in confectioners' sugar until thickly coated.

Chill 20 minutes before serving.