Okay, not really. It’s just that I’ve been researching oatmeal raisin cookie recipes for a week or two. I started craving them. And if you google “soft chewy oatmeal raisin cookies,” you’ll get about a thousand hits, each recipe claiming to be the BEST. Odd thing is, there isn’t much that separates the recipes. Brown sugar and granulated sugar creamed into butter, eggs and vanilla, and flour, baking soda, a bit of salt and some cinnamon. And of course rolled oats and raisins.
I settled on this recipe, which is adapted from a Cook’s Illustrated recipe. The source was one point in its favor, the other was that it uses baking powder instead of baking soda, the reason being that baking powder creates a chewier cookie.
I tweaked it, of course. The recipe is oddly lacking vanilla, so I added two tsps. I cut out a 1/4 cup of the granulated sugar and added two tbsps of molasses. Along with the cinnamon, I added 1/4 tsp ground cardamom, 1/4 tsp ground nutmeg, and 1/8 tsp ground clove. I plumped the raisins in a bit of whiskey mixed with water and honey. And in half the batch I added milk chocolate Raisinettes, just because. (Mark doesn’t like chocolate in his cookies, so just half a batch.) The best tweak, though, was that before I put them in the oven, I sprinkled each cookie with a few grains of course sea salt (Real Salt was what I had on hand). WOW! What a punch! It really made them truly the BEST oatmeal raisin cookies ever!
What special things do you do to make your oatmeal cookies pop? Do you like chewy, crispy, or both? Share with me, please!
I settled on this recipe, which is adapted from a Cook’s Illustrated recipe. The source was one point in its favor, the other was that it uses baking powder instead of baking soda, the reason being that baking powder creates a chewier cookie.
I tweaked it, of course. The recipe is oddly lacking vanilla, so I added two tsps. I cut out a 1/4 cup of the granulated sugar and added two tbsps of molasses. Along with the cinnamon, I added 1/4 tsp ground cardamom, 1/4 tsp ground nutmeg, and 1/8 tsp ground clove. I plumped the raisins in a bit of whiskey mixed with water and honey. And in half the batch I added milk chocolate Raisinettes, just because. (Mark doesn’t like chocolate in his cookies, so just half a batch.) The best tweak, though, was that before I put them in the oven, I sprinkled each cookie with a few grains of course sea salt (Real Salt was what I had on hand). WOW! What a punch! It really made them truly the BEST oatmeal raisin cookies ever!
What special things do you do to make your oatmeal cookies pop? Do you like chewy, crispy, or both? Share with me, please!