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Monday, August 31, 2020

Recipe: Sarah Kieffer’s Neapolitan Cookies - San mateo county times

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Vanilla Bean Blogger and cookbook author Sarah Kieffer is known for creative pastry techniques, from her famous #panbanging ripples to this tri-colored sugar cookie. The recipe, featured in her new cookbook, “100 Cookies: The Baking Book for Every Kitchen with Classic Cookies, Novel Treats, Bars and More” (Chronicle Books; $20), was inspired by a similar cookie from pastry chef Matthew Rice.

In this version, Kieffer use her sugar cookie as the base and colors it in three sections using freeze-dried strawberries and Dutch process cocoa. For more intense color, she suggests adding pink food coloring and using black cocoa powder.

Sarah Kieffer’s Neapolitan Cookies

Makes about 20 cookies

Ingredients

2½ cups plus 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour

¾ teaspoon baking soda

¾ teaspoon salt

½ cup freeze-dried strawberries

1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature

1¾ cups granulated sugar

1 large egg plus 1 large yolk

2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

2 or 3 drops red food coloring (optional)

2 tablespoons Dutch process cocoa powder

White, pink, and brown sprinkles, for rolling (optional)

Directions

Adjust an oven rack to the middle of the oven. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Line three sheet pans with parchment paper.

Sarah Kieffer’s second cookbook unveils her cookie canon, including more than 10 new #panbanging recipes. 

In a medium bowl, combine the flour, baking soda and salt.

In the bowl of a food processor fitted with a blade, pulverize the strawberries into a powder.

In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle, beat the butter on medium speed until creamy, about 1 minute. Add the sugar and beat on medium speed until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the egg, yolk and vanilla, and beat on medium speed until combined. Add the flour mixture and beat on low speed until just combined.

Dump the dough out onto a work surface and divide it into three equal portions. Put one-third of the dough back into the mixer and add the powdered strawberries and food coloring, if using. Mix on low speed until totally combined, then remove the dough and quickly wipe out the bowl of the mixer.

Add another third of dough to the mixer. Add the cocoa powder and mix on low speed until totally combined.

Pinch a small portion (about ½ ounce) of each of the three doughs, and press them gently together, so they adhere to each other, but keep their unique colors. Press the piece into a cookie scoop or roll it into a ball, then roll the ball into sprinkles (if using). Place 6 or 7 cookies on each sheet pan. Bake the cookies one pan at a time, rotating halfway through baking. Bake until the sides are set and the cookies are puffed, 10 to 11 minutes.

Transfer the sheet pan to a wire rack and let the cookies cool for 5 to 10 minutes on the pan, then transfer the cookies to a wire rack to cool completely. Cookies can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 days.

Recipe from Sarah Kieffer’s “100 Cookies” (Chronicle Books, 2020)

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 08:50PM
https://ift.tt/3gI5YAV

Recipe: Sarah Kieffer’s Neapolitan Cookies - San mateo county times

https://ift.tt/2CkeA2e
Butter Cookies

Recipe: Sarah Kieffer’s Neapolitan Cookies - San mateo county times

cookies.indah.link

Vanilla Bean Blogger and cookbook author Sarah Kieffer is known for creative pastry techniques, from her famous #panbanging ripples to this tri-colored sugar cookie. The recipe, featured in her new cookbook, “100 Cookies: The Baking Book for Every Kitchen with Classic Cookies, Novel Treats, Bars and More” (Chronicle Books; $20), was inspired by a similar cookie from pastry chef Matthew Rice.

In this version, Kieffer use her sugar cookie as the base and colors it in three sections using freeze-dried strawberries and Dutch process cocoa. For more intense color, she suggests adding pink food coloring and using black cocoa powder.

Sarah Kieffer’s Neapolitan Cookies

Makes about 20 cookies

Ingredients

2½ cups plus 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour

¾ teaspoon baking soda

¾ teaspoon salt

½ cup freeze-dried strawberries

1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature

1¾ cups granulated sugar

1 large egg plus 1 large yolk

2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

2 or 3 drops red food coloring (optional)

2 tablespoons Dutch process cocoa powder

White, pink, and brown sprinkles, for rolling (optional)

Directions

Adjust an oven rack to the middle of the oven. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Line three sheet pans with parchment paper.

Sarah Kieffer’s second cookbook unveils her cookie canon, including more than 10 new #panbanging recipes. 

In a medium bowl, combine the flour, baking soda and salt.

In the bowl of a food processor fitted with a blade, pulverize the strawberries into a powder.

In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle, beat the butter on medium speed until creamy, about 1 minute. Add the sugar and beat on medium speed until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the egg, yolk and vanilla, and beat on medium speed until combined. Add the flour mixture and beat on low speed until just combined.

Dump the dough out onto a work surface and divide it into three equal portions. Put one-third of the dough back into the mixer and add the powdered strawberries and food coloring, if using. Mix on low speed until totally combined, then remove the dough and quickly wipe out the bowl of the mixer.

Add another third of dough to the mixer. Add the cocoa powder and mix on low speed until totally combined.

Pinch a small portion (about ½ ounce) of each of the three doughs, and press them gently together, so they adhere to each other, but keep their unique colors. Press the piece into a cookie scoop or roll it into a ball, then roll the ball into sprinkles (if using). Place 6 or 7 cookies on each sheet pan. Bake the cookies one pan at a time, rotating halfway through baking. Bake until the sides are set and the cookies are puffed, 10 to 11 minutes.

Transfer the sheet pan to a wire rack and let the cookies cool for 5 to 10 minutes on the pan, then transfer the cookies to a wire rack to cool completely. Cookies can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 days.

Recipe from Sarah Kieffer’s “100 Cookies” (Chronicle Books, 2020)

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 08:50PM
https://ift.tt/3hQlso4

Recipe: Sarah Kieffer’s Neapolitan Cookies - San mateo county times

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

No More Third Party Cookies—Good Or Bad News? - Forbes

cookies.indah.link

Much has been made about Google doing away with third party (3P) cookies in an upcoming release of their Chrome browser (estimated in 2022) which represents 2/3rd share of the browser market. Apple’s Safari browser and Mozilla’s Firefox browser already block third party tracking cookies. Third party cookies are typically the ones set by “third party” ad tech companies whose tracking code is found on millions of sites. This differs from first party (1P) cookies, which are set typically by the sites themselves. Consumers visiting nytimes.com know they are interacting with the New York Times; but most are unaware of the dozens, if not hundreds, of ad tech trackers that are collecting their information, without their knowledge, and certainly without their consent. The ad tech companies sell their data for profit or make money by using it to help marketers improve the targeting of ads — i.e. behavioral targeting. 

Third Party Adtech Tracking is Out of Control

Note the following example of a celebrity news website. The FouAnalytics Page X-ray ( https://pagexray.fouanalytics.com/q/hollywoodlife.com ) shows all of the ads and trackers loaded by a single webpage, in a tree graph. It shows “what called what.” Some third party trackers are loaded on the page directly while others are called in by the ads and trackers themselves, leading to over a thousand calls for ads and trackers  from a single webpage - no wonder user experience suffers (long page load times) and users’ privacy is compromised.  

Adtech Companies Harvest User Data Without Their Knowledge or Consent

When hundreds of adtech companies are harvesting data on users from millions of sites, consumers’ privacy is practically non-existent. Over the years, consumers have started to protect themselves by using ad blockers, that not only block ads but also block the trackers that come along with those ads. Further, because of the Facebook/Cambridge Analytica scandal, more consumers are now aware that their data is not only being collected by social media networks, but they are actively selling their data or allowing others to collect and sell it. After years of outcry, some regulations like GDPR (General Data Protection Regulations) and CCPA (California Consumer Privacy Act) have been passed to help protect users’ privacy. But it remains to be seen how strictly and aggressively regulators enforce these rules and how ad tech companies respond. 

Doing away with third party cookies has been touted as “privacy enhancing” for consumers. However, years of research have shown that doing away with cookies, both 1P and 3P, does not necessarily increase privacy. This is because ad tech companies have found “work arounds” to continue to uniquely identify users, even without using any cookies. 


Recommended For You

Adtech Companies Can Still Uniquely Identify Users Without Cookies

Browser Parameters - Since 2010, when the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) published the first version of Panoptoclick, privacy advocates and researchers have shown that consumers could be uniquely identified without using cookies, simply by gathering javascript parameters about their browsers. This is called “fingerprinting.” Just like fingerprints are unique to each individual, digital fingerprints can be made from combinations of browser variables. For example, by gathering variables like the browser name and version, screen resolution, list of fonts and plugins, and IP address and location, companies can identify unique users with 99% accuracy. Even though ad tech companies have promised the data used for these fingerprints don’t contain any PII (personally identifiable information like name, email address, or phone numbers), the fingerprints remain privacy-invasive nonetheless. 

Demographic Attributes - Adtech companies also claim that users’ privacy is already protected because no PII is collected or used. However, privacy researchers spotlight the lie of ‘anonymous’ data. “Researchers from two universities in Europe have published a method they say is able to correctly re-identify 99.98% of individuals in anonymized data sets with just 15 demographic attributes.” Even if no personally identifiable information is collected, ad tech companies can re-identify users using data from other data sets, collected or purchased. “Even heavily sampled anonymized datasets are unlikely to satisfy the modern standards for anonymization set forth by GDPR [Europe’s General Data Protection Regulation] and seriously challenge the technical and legal adequacy of the de-identification release-and-forget model.” In a related study, “[with] smartphone location data, researchers were able to uniquely identify 95% of the individuals in a data set with just four spatio-temporal (geolocation) points.”

Browsing Histories - In addition to being able to uniquely identify or re-identify users with browser variables or demographic attributes, new research from Mozilla [PDF] shows that browsing histories can also be used to uniquely identify individual users. “This work replicates and extends the 2012 paper ‘Why Johnny Can’t Browse in Peace: On the Uniqueness of Web Browsing History Patterns.’ Browsing profiles are highly distinctive and stable. Our dataset consists of two weeks of browsing data from ~52,000 Firefox users. Our work replicates the original paper’s core findings by identifying 48,919 distinct browsing profiles, of which 99% are unique. High uniqueness holds even when histories are truncated to just 100 top sites.” This means that ad tech tracking code on millions of websites can easily re-identify unique users with high accuracy. 


Doing Away with Third Party Cookies Won’t Improve Consumers’ Privacy

Because adtech companies can identify or re-identify users with high accuracy, using browser parameters, demographic attributes, and even browsing histories, doing away with third party cookies will not increase consumers’ privacy. As long as ad tech companies are allowed to track users with their third party tracking code across millions of sites, users’ privacy will remain compromised, even if those ad tech companies cannot set 3P cookies. Many companies, like Criteo, have been preparing for years for the upcoming “cookie-pocalypse” by turning to fingerprinting. These fingerprints are stored on the ad tech companies’ servers, instead of in consumers’ browsers, so they cannot be seen, controlled or deleted by the users, or privacy researchers. 


Doing Away with Third Party Cookies Won’t Hurt Marketers’ Outcomes

Consumers’ privacy is not increased; and ad tech companies can carry on their data collection and monetization without consumers’ consent or recourse. But is all this privacy-invasive data collection even worth it? Studies have shown that it is not. Having hundreds of additional data points to use for targeting ads did not yield a measurable increase in business outcomes. Combined with supply chain costs, data quality issues, ad fraud, and viewability issues, dollars spent in programmatic ad tech channels often yield negative ROI. In other words, the incremental business outcomes do not even offset the additional costs of using behavioral targeting in programmatic ad tech channels. 

See:  The Cost-Performance Paradox Of Modern Digital Marketing

So when 3P cookies are finally outlawed by the largest browser, marketers may not experience any decrease in business outcomes. This is because the use of privacy-invasive 3P cookies, and the adtech tracking that came along with it, was not driving any incremental business outcomes anyway. What will happen, instead, is many of the adtech companies whose entire business models rely on 3P cookies and tracking will die and go away. This would actually be better for consumer privacy overall; the corresponding reduction of adtech middlemen in the programmatic supply chain will be better for marketers too.

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 06:37PM
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No More Third Party Cookies—Good Or Bad News? - Forbes

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

NY 3-year-old bakes and delivers more than 1,000 cookies for frontline and essential workers - Wink News

cookies.indah.link

(CBS News)

A 3-year-old from Stillwater, New York, has used her passion for baking to help bring joy to others during the coronavirus pandemic. Mia Villa and her mom, Devin Villa, have baked over 1,000 cookies since the start of the pandemic and delivered them to frontline and essential workers, her mom told CBS news via email.

“Mia has been helping me in the kitchen since she could stand up at the counter,” Villa said. “I have pictures back as far as 18 months old. That was roughly when I started helping my mom as a kid and the same time she began to show interest in what I was doing so I let her jump right in!”

“We’ve made a lot of messes but that is the fun in learning,” Villa continued, adding that Mia has mastered her chocolate chip cookies.

Villa said she recognized the pressure on essential workers and first responders during the pandemic and wanted to do something to help.

“I was trying to think of something fun to do with Mia that would allow me to teach her valuable lessons in being kind, grateful, and generous,” Villa said. She decided to use baking – something they were already doing about twice a week – to help teach Mia that lesson.

Mia and her mom call their little operation “cookie kindness,” because they deliver the cookies to people who could use kindness and a smile, Villa said. “Smiles and kindness are contagious, I truly believe that, and the world needs more of it,” she said.

They still bake at least twice a week – sometimes three – and bring batches of cookies to places where frontline employees work. “So far we have been to fire stations, hospitals, primary care doctors, EMT’s, police stations, an animal hospital, and a supermarket,” Villa said.

Villa created a Facebook page, Mia’s Cookie Jar, where she updates followers on their cookie deliveries.

Mia has delivered cookies to a supermarket, animal hospital, doctors offices, fire stations and other places were frontline employees work. (Credit: Devin Villa via CBS News)

“We started out locally, going to places around home and then started getting suggestions from Mia’s ‘cookie followers,” she continued. “I love when we go somewhere that has personally impacted a cookie follower, it makes the deliveries even more special.”

“Something that seems so simple [like] delivering cookies truly can make someone’s day,” the mom said.

Villa said everyone who has received their cookies has been welcoming, showing Mia how an ambulance works, letting her inside fire trucks, and letting her meet police K9s and horses.

She said Mia has loved baking for essential workers and they have no plans of stopping.

“The opportunities for lessons in kindness are endless, and expands so far beyond the places she is going right now and who doesn’t love a homemade chocolate chip cookie!” Villa said.

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 09:11PM
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NY 3-year-old bakes and delivers more than 1,000 cookies for frontline and essential workers - Wink News

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

Students presents cookies to CRMC residents - Pine and Lakes Echo Journal

cookies.indah.link

Lily Habighorst (right) of Deerwood presented numerous boxes of Girl Scout cookies and notes of encouragement to Charitable Fund Coordinator Jennifer Podsiadly for the residents of Cuyuna Regional Medical Center’s Care Center, Heartwood and Hallett Cottages.

The Girls Scout Troop 16 leader also donated several boxes of cookies and thank you posters for CRMC’s medical staff.

In total, Habighorst collected and donated 165 boxes of cookies for CRMC, the Crosby Police Department and Cuyuna Food Shelf. The 17-year-old is a senior at Crosby-Ironton High School.

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 05:09PM
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Students presents cookies to CRMC residents - Pine and Lakes Echo Journal

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Cookies

One of Austin’s Favorite Cookies Is Now an Ice Cream - Eater Austin

cookies.indah.link

Henbit Unveils Cookie Ice Cream

Henbit’s popular — and massive — monster cookies are now available in ice cream form: pints of “Monster Cookie Dough” ice cream launched at Emmer & Rye over the weekend. This frozen treat from pastry chef Tavel Bristol-Joseph involves a base of salted cream ice cream studded with Monster Cookie cookie dough including dark chocolate, Texas pecans, and lemon zest. The $9 pints are available for takeout only on Saturdays from 5:30 to 10 p.m. Preorder is available via the website. Be quick, because pints sold out this weekend.

Register for “Run to Brunch”

This year’s 5.12K Run to Brunch presented by Karbach Brewing will benefit Southern Smoke Foundation’s Austin Relief Fund, helping local workers in the food and beverage industry who’ve been affected by the pandemic. Instead of a traditional running race, participants can run or walk through three different Austin routes from September 20 to October 18. The $45 registration includes a race day T-shirt and benefits like the Keep Austin Weird Restaurant Card, which grants 20% off purchases for two months at 20 Austin restaurants.

P. Terry’s Burger Stand’s New Outpost

Austin’s burger drive-thru chain P. Terry’s is adding a new location, according to the Austin Business Journal. A double-drive thru without a dining room is in the works at 8601 S. Congress Avenue near the new H-E-B location located off Slaughter Lane. The burger business already operates 19 locations.

Famous Austin Brand Beginnings

Before Whole Foods and Alamo Drafthouse Cinema went nationwide, these household names got started in Austin. Towers tracks down the original locations of local businesses that started small and made it big, from Torchy’s Tacos to Schlotzsky’s.

Party for the Parks Goes Virtual

Austin Parks Foundation’s big fundraiser Party for the Parks is coming up next month on Wednesday, September 30, and this year, the event will be live-streamed with a to-go meal prepared by Emmer & Rye chefs Kevin Fink and Tavel Bristol-Joseph. Purchase $125 general admission tickets or $175 tickets for general admission-plus at party.austinparks.org. The celebration features a box with a three-course meal (including short ribs or summer squash and zucchini cake) and drinks like Zilker Brewing’s Parks & Rec Pale Ale. Live entertainment and a Yeti raffle will be on the schedule too.

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 09:55PM
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One of Austin’s Favorite Cookies Is Now an Ice Cream - Eater Austin

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Cookies

Dairy Queen Spins New Pumpkin Cookie Butter Shake - Chew Boom

cookies.indah.link
Dairy Queen Unveils New Pumpkin Cookie Butter Shake
Dairy Queen Unveils New Pumpkin Cookie Butter Shake

Dairy Queen kicks off the 2020 pumpkin spice season with the debut of the new Pumpkin Cookie Butter Shake.

The new seasonal shake combines cookie butter made from ground cinnamon spice cookies, pumpkin, the brand’s signature vanilla soft serve and milk, topped with whipped cream and nutmeg for a classic autumn taste experience.

The Pumpkin Cookie Butter Shake will be available a participating locations nationwide for a limited time.

Image – Dairy Queen/Chew Boom Mashup

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 05:48PM
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Dairy Queen Spins New Pumpkin Cookie Butter Shake - Chew Boom

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Butter Cookies

Jefferson County Recipe of the Day: Sugar Cookie Fruit Pizzas - GANT News

cookies.indah.link

ADVERTISEMENT

Serve on one large “crust” or as individual cookies! Ingredients 1/2 cup sugar 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1/2 cup unsweetened pineapple juice 1/4 cup water 2 tablespoons lemon juice 4 ounces cream cheese, softened 1/4 cup confectioners’ sugar 1-3/4 cups whipped topping 12 sugar cookies (3 inches) 1 cup fresh blueberries 1 cup chopped peeled kiwifruit 1/2 cup chopped fresh strawberries […]

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 02:05PM
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Jefferson County Recipe of the Day: Sugar Cookie Fruit Pizzas - GANT News

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Cookies

Sunday, August 30, 2020

Have Surplus Milk? Make Butter Cookies - BloombergQuint

cookies.indah.link

Bloomberg

Bloomberg | Quint is a multiplatform, Indian business and financial news company. We combine Bloomberg’s global leadership in business and financial news and data, with Quintillion Media’s deep expertise in the Indian market and digital news delivery, to provide high quality business news, insights and trends for India’s sophisticated audiences.

Customer Support

+1 212 318 2000

+44 20 7330 7500

+65 6212 1000

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 09:15AM
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Have Surplus Milk? Make Butter Cookies - BloombergQuint

https://ift.tt/2CkeA2e
Butter Cookies

Make this colorful Neapolitan cookie, along with that famous pan-banging recipe from "100 Cookies" - Salon

cookies.indah.link

If you've spent any time on Instagram since 2017, you've seen baker and blogger Sarah Kieffer's cookies — or, at least, people attempting to recreate her cookies. They're incredibly distinct. Round and flat, ringed like a tree trunk and layered with chunks of chocolate that rippled out from the soft center to the crispy edges. 

Kieffer called them the Pan-banging Cookie because, as the name suggests, it requires bakers to pull half-risen cookies from a hot oven, bang them on the counter so they fall, then stick back in and repeat. This results in the cookies' trademark sugary crinkles. And they went absolutely viral. Search #panbang and you'll find thousands of recreations, from homecooks to Martha Stewart's test kitchen. (The cookies also have the seal of approval from domestic goddess Ina Garten). 

Advertisement:

Now, Kieffer is back with 99 more cookie recipes for home bakers to try in her new cookbook "100 Cookies: The Baking Book for Every Kitchen, with Classic Cookies, Novel Treats, Brownies, Bars, and More," which is now available for purchase. 

Kieffer spoke with Salon about what it was like creating a viral cookie, where she looks for baking inspiration and shared a recipe from "100 Cookies" — a colorful Neapolitan cookie (no pan-banging required). 

I think a lot of people know you from your pan-banging chocolate chip cookies. I feel like for several months, they just dominated Instagram. How did it feel to be the creator of a viral cookie? 

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I still can't believe it – both that the recipe went viral, and that people are still baking them and posting about them on a daily basis. I hesitated to put the Pan-Banging Cookie recipe in my first book; the recipe involves a little more attention than most chocolate chip cookie recipes, and I assumed people would pass by it because it is more time-consuming. But a lot of people ended up loving it, and I am so grateful they did!

In your view, what makes the "perfect" cookie? 

I love crisp edges and a tender center, and the salt and sugar balanced just right so you don't notice either; it's not too sweet, it's not too salty  — it's just a delicious cookie. 

Advertisement:

Where were some of the places you gained inspiration for the cookies in this book? 

When I started writing this cookbook, I ordered every cookie book I could find and went through them all, making notes on what was the same in all the books, and what was uniquely different. Books that highly inspired me were "Cookie Love" by Mindy Segal and "Dorie's Cookies" by Dorie Greenspan; they are both very unique and different from each other, but capture the author's personal cookie preferences perfectly. I wanted my book to have recipes for everyone, but also highlight my favorites in a unique way.

Advertisement:

Did putting together this book of 100 cookies change how you think about them as a food item, or how you think of yourself as a baker? 

I have been making cookies for decades, both leisurely at home and also by the hundreds for various bakeries I worked in, so I knew going in that I could bake more cookies per day, for recipe testing, than I could with other baked goods: cakes, pies, et cetera. But I had a lot of work cut out for me because all the cookies would need to be different from each other. For example, in regards to cake, you could have a few solid cake recipes that you build off of for each chapter — the same base but different buttercreams and fillings and whatnot, but I couldn't really do that in the same way with cookies.

If you were tasked with making another book of 100 baked goods, what would you choose? 

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Swirl buns. My second favorite thing to make — after cookies, of course — is cinnamon rolls, and I think I could fill a whole book with different kinds of yeasted swirly bun treats.

Sarah Kieffer's Neapolitan Cookie

Makes about 20 cookies 

2½ cups plus 1 tablespoon [364 g] all-purpose flour

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¾ teaspoon baking soda

¾ teaspoon salt

½ cup [8 g] freeze-dried strawberries

1 cup [2 sticks or 227 g] unsalted butter, at room temperature

1¾ cups [350 g] granulated sugar

1 large egg plus

1 large yolk

2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

2 or 3 drops red food coloring (optional)

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2 tablespoons Dutch process cocoa powder

White, pink, and brown sprinkles, for rolling (optional)

1) Adjust an oven rack to the middle of the oven. Preheat the oven to 350°F [180°C]. Line three sheet pans with parchment paper.

2) In a medium bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, and salt.

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3) In the bowl of a food processor fitted with a blade, pulverize the strawberries into a powder. 

4) In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle, beat the butter on medium speed until creamy, about 1 minute. Add the sugar and beat on medium speed until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the egg, yolk, and vanilla, and beat on medium speed until combined. Add the flour mixture and beat on low speed until just combined.

5) Dump the dough out onto a work surface and divide it into three equal portions. Put one-third of the dough back into the mixer and add the powdered strawberries and food coloring, if using. Mix on low speed until totally combined, then remove the dough and quickly wipe out the bowl of the mixer. 

6) Add another third of dough to the mixer. Add the cocoa powder and mix on low speed until totally combined.

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7) Pinch a small portion (about ½ oz [15 g]) of each of the three doughs, and press them gently together, so they adhere to each other, but keep their unique colors. Press the piece into a cookie scoop or roll it into a ball, then roll the ball into sprinkles (if using). Place 6 or 7 cookies on each sheet pan. Bake the cookies one pan at a time, rotating halfway through baking. Bake until the sides are set and the cookies are puffed, 10 to 11 minutes.

8) Transfer the sheet pan to a wire rack and let the cookies cool for 5 to 10 minutes on the pan, then remove them and let them cool completely on the wire rack. Cookies can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to two days.

NOTES Use black cocoa powder for a darker color. The powdered strawberries on their own won't give a bright pink hue, so I like to add a little food coloring. I also like to roll each individual color of dough into the same color of sprinkles, but you can mix and match however your heart desires.

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 04:30AM
https://ift.tt/2QAzLAY

Make this colorful Neapolitan cookie, along with that famous pan-banging recipe from "100 Cookies" - Salon

https://ift.tt/2CkeA2e
Butter Cookies

Make this colorful Neapolitan cookie, along with that famous pan-banging recipe from "100 Cookies" - Salon

cookies.indah.link

If you've spent any time on Instagram since 2017, you've seen baker and blogger Sarah Kieffer's cookies — or, at least, people attempting to recreate her cookies. They're incredibly distinct. Round and flat, ringed like a tree trunk and layered with chunks of chocolate that rippled out from the soft center to the crispy edges. 

Kieffer called them the Pan-banging Cookie because, as the name suggests, it requires bakers to pull half-risen cookies from a hot oven, bang them on the counter so they fall, then stick back in and repeat. This results in the cookies' trademark sugary crinkles. And they went absolutely viral. Search #panbang and you'll find thousands of recreations, from homecooks to Martha Stewart's test kitchen. (The cookies also have the seal of approval from domestic goddess Ina Garten). 

Advertisement:

Now, Kieffer is back with 99 more cookie recipes for home bakers to try in her new cookbook "100 Cookies: The Baking Book for Every Kitchen, with Classic Cookies, Novel Treats, Brownies, Bars, and More," which is now available for purchase. 

Kieffer spoke with Salon about what it was like creating a viral cookie, where she looks for baking inspiration and shared a recipe from "100 Cookies" — a colorful Neapolitan cookie (no pan-banging required). 

I think a lot of people know you from your pan-banging chocolate chip cookies. I feel like for several months, they just dominated Instagram. How did it feel to be the creator of a viral cookie? 

Advertisement:

I still can't believe it – both that the recipe went viral, and that people are still baking them and posting about them on a daily basis. I hesitated to put the Pan-Banging Cookie recipe in my first book; the recipe involves a little more attention than most chocolate chip cookie recipes, and I assumed people would pass by it because it is more time-consuming. But a lot of people ended up loving it, and I am so grateful they did!

In your view, what makes the "perfect" cookie? 

I love crisp edges and a tender center, and the salt and sugar balanced just right so you don't notice either; it's not too sweet, it's not too salty  — it's just a delicious cookie. 

Advertisement:

Where were some of the places you gained inspiration for the cookies in this book? 

When I started writing this cookbook, I ordered every cookie book I could find and went through them all, making notes on what was the same in all the books, and what was uniquely different. Books that highly inspired me were "Cookie Love" by Mindy Segal and "Dorie's Cookies" by Dorie Greenspan; they are both very unique and different from each other, but capture the author's personal cookie preferences perfectly. I wanted my book to have recipes for everyone, but also highlight my favorites in a unique way.

Advertisement:

Did putting together this book of 100 cookies change how you think about them as a food item, or how you think of yourself as a baker? 

I have been making cookies for decades, both leisurely at home and also by the hundreds for various bakeries I worked in, so I knew going in that I could bake more cookies per day, for recipe testing, than I could with other baked goods: cakes, pies, et cetera. But I had a lot of work cut out for me because all the cookies would need to be different from each other. For example, in regards to cake, you could have a few solid cake recipes that you build off of for each chapter — the same base but different buttercreams and fillings and whatnot, but I couldn't really do that in the same way with cookies.

If you were tasked with making another book of 100 baked goods, what would you choose? 

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Swirl buns. My second favorite thing to make — after cookies, of course — is cinnamon rolls, and I think I could fill a whole book with different kinds of yeasted swirly bun treats.

Sarah Kieffer's Neapolitan Cookie

Makes about 20 cookies 

2½ cups plus 1 tablespoon [364 g] all-purpose flour

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¾ teaspoon baking soda

¾ teaspoon salt

½ cup [8 g] freeze-dried strawberries

1 cup [2 sticks or 227 g] unsalted butter, at room temperature

1¾ cups [350 g] granulated sugar

1 large egg plus

1 large yolk

2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

2 or 3 drops red food coloring (optional)

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2 tablespoons Dutch process cocoa powder

White, pink, and brown sprinkles, for rolling (optional)

1) Adjust an oven rack to the middle of the oven. Preheat the oven to 350°F [180°C]. Line three sheet pans with parchment paper.

2) In a medium bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, and salt.

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3) In the bowl of a food processor fitted with a blade, pulverize the strawberries into a powder. 

4) In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle, beat the butter on medium speed until creamy, about 1 minute. Add the sugar and beat on medium speed until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the egg, yolk, and vanilla, and beat on medium speed until combined. Add the flour mixture and beat on low speed until just combined.

5) Dump the dough out onto a work surface and divide it into three equal portions. Put one-third of the dough back into the mixer and add the powdered strawberries and food coloring, if using. Mix on low speed until totally combined, then remove the dough and quickly wipe out the bowl of the mixer. 

6) Add another third of dough to the mixer. Add the cocoa powder and mix on low speed until totally combined.

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7) Pinch a small portion (about ½ oz [15 g]) of each of the three doughs, and press them gently together, so they adhere to each other, but keep their unique colors. Press the piece into a cookie scoop or roll it into a ball, then roll the ball into sprinkles (if using). Place 6 or 7 cookies on each sheet pan. Bake the cookies one pan at a time, rotating halfway through baking. Bake until the sides are set and the cookies are puffed, 10 to 11 minutes.

8) Transfer the sheet pan to a wire rack and let the cookies cool for 5 to 10 minutes on the pan, then remove them and let them cool completely on the wire rack. Cookies can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to two days.

NOTES Use black cocoa powder for a darker color. The powdered strawberries on their own won't give a bright pink hue, so I like to add a little food coloring. I also like to roll each individual color of dough into the same color of sprinkles, but you can mix and match however your heart desires.

The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 04:30AM
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Make this colorful Neapolitan cookie, along with that famous pan-banging recipe from "100 Cookies" - Salon

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Cookies

3-year-old bakes, delivers more than 1,000 cookies for frontline and essential workers - RochesterFirst

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Posted: Updated:

STILLWATER, N.Y. (CBS) – A 3-year-old from Stillwater, New York, has used her passion for baking to help bring joy to others during the coronavirus pandemic. Mia Villa and her mom, Devin Villa, have baked over 1,000 cookies since the start of the pandemic and delivered them to frontline and essential workers, her mom said.

“Mia has been helping me in the kitchen since she could stand up at the counter,” Villa said. “I have pictures back as far as 18 months old. That was roughly when I started helping my mom as a kid and the same time she began to show interest in what I was doing so I let her jump right in!”

“We’ve made a lot of messes but that is the fun in learning,” Villa continued, adding that Mia has mastered her chocolate chip cookies.

Villa said she recognized the pressure on essential workers and first responders during the pandemic and wanted to do something to help. 

“I was trying to think of something fun to do with Mia that would allow me to teach her valuable lessons in being kind, grateful, and generous,” Villa said. She decided to use baking – something they were already doing about twice a week – to help teach Mia that lesson.

Mia and her mom call their little operation “cookie kindness,” because they deliver the cookies to people who could use kindness and a smile, Villa said. “Smiles and kindness are contagious, I truly believe that, and the world needs more of it,” she said.

They still bake at least twice a week – sometimes three – and bring batches of cookies to places where frontline employees work. “So far we have been to fire stations, hospitals, primary care doctors, EMT’s, police stations, an animal hospital, and a supermarket,” Villa said.

Villa created a Facebook page, Mia’s Cookie Jar, where she updates followers on their cookie deliveries. 

“We started out locally, going to places around home and then started getting suggestions from Mia’s ‘cookie followers,” she continued. “I love when we go somewhere that has personally impacted a cookie follower, it makes the deliveries even more special.”

“Something that seems so simple [like] delivering cookies truly can make someone’s day,” the mom said. 

Villa said everyone who has received their cookies has been welcoming, showing Mia how an ambulance works, letting her inside fire trucks, and letting her meet police K9s and horses. 

She said Mia has loved baking for essential workers and they have no plans of stopping.

“The opportunities for lessons in kindness are endless, and expands so far beyond the places she is going right now and who doesn’t love a homemade chocolate chip cookie!” Villa said. 

The Link Lonk


August 30, 2020 at 11:26PM
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3-year-old bakes, delivers more than 1,000 cookies for frontline and essential workers - RochesterFirst

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Cookies

Girl Scouts use money they earned selling cookies to make PPE for their elementary school - Yahoo News

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Emma Bangertner, 10, makes PPE with her Girl Scout troop. (Photo: Randi Bangertner)
Emma Bangertner, 10, makes PPE with her Girl Scout troop. (Photo: Randi Bangertner)

When the pandemic hit, the 15 young women from Girl Scout Troop 65430 in Highlands Ranch, Colo. didn’t know how to make personal protective equipment that would keep teachers and students safe. But that didn’t stop them.

“My troop and I came up with the idea because we had a Zoom meeting with our principal Ms. Milley, and we needed things that would create safer environment for staff and students at Wildcat Mountain Elementary School,” Emma Bangertner, 10, tells Yahoo Life. “We didn’t exactly think of it right away, but we needed things that would ease the tension for going back to school for everyone. We landed on making masks, mask lanyards and sneeze guards.”

Members of Girl Scout Troop 65430 make PPE. (Photo: Randi Bangertner)
Members of Girl Scout Troop 65430 make PPE. (Photo: Randi Bangertner)

The scouts watched videos they found online that taught them how to construct the necessary PPE. But first, they had to fund their endeavor. Because the Girl Scouts are girl-led, each troop gets to determine what they do with a portion of the funds they raise through cookie sales. That’s when they realized they could use some of the money they’d raised this past winter to buy the materials to make PPE for classrooms.

“It was a really cool experience. Not only did I learn how to help my community, but I also learned how to become a better leader, and how to use a drill,” says Bangertner, who has been a Girl Scout for six years and aspires to become a naval aviator.

Members of Girl Scout Troop 65430 used money from their cookie sales to make PPE. (Photo: Randi Bangertner)
Members of Girl Scout Troop 65430 used money from their cookie sales to make PPE. (Photo: Randi Bangertner)
Members of Girl Scout Troop 65430 deliver PPE to their school. (Photo: Randi Bangertner)
Members of Girl Scout Troop 65430 deliver PPE to their school. (Photo: Randi Bangertner)

Meanwhile, classes are already back in session at the troop’s school, albeit on a reduced, hybrid system. But the PPE that Troop 65430 created has already been put to use.

“Ms. Milley, our principal, was so proud and happy we had made a difference in our community that she cried,” says Bangertner.

The troop was so successful making PPE, they even scored the coveted Girl Scout Bronze Award, known as the highest award for Girl Scouts in the 4th or 5th grade. In order to qualify, a troop must identify a problem in their community and do their best to solve it, while also spending 20 hours on the project.

“I’m so incredibly proud of these girls. They really stepped up and made a difference, and the amount of leadership they have exhibited in the last couple of months has just been inspirational,” says Emma’s mom, Randi Bangertner, who also serves as troop leader. “I think the best part of this project for me was seeing how well they came together and worked as a team.”  

Members of Girl Scout Troop 65430, which was awarded the Bronze Award for their PPE project. (Photo: Randi Bangertner)
Members of Girl Scout Troop 65430, which was awarded the Bronze Award for their PPE project. (Photo: Randi Bangertner)

Troop 65430 aren’t the only Girl Scouts making waves to help those dealing with the effects of COVID-19. In New Mexico and Texas, cookies were donated to essential workers and the elderly, while Skyla Marroquin, a rising 7th grader from McAllen, Texas, created a gift bag program for nurses at the hospital where her great-grandma recovered from COVID-19.

For the latest coronavirus news and updates, follow along at https://news.yahoo.com/coronavirus. According to experts, people over 60 and those who are immunocompromised continue to be the most at risk. If you have questions, please reference the CDC’s and WHO’s resource guides.

Read more from Yahoo Life:

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The Link Lonk


August 31, 2020 at 02:39AM
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Girl Scouts use money they earned selling cookies to make PPE for their elementary school - Yahoo News

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Cookies

How a Box of Girl Scout Cookies Inspired a Business Dedicated to Helping Food Allergy Sufferers Stay Safe While Snacking - Thehour.com

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In this ongoing series, we are sharing advice, tips and insights from real entrepreneurs who are out there doing business battle on a daily basis. (Answers have been edited and condensed for clarity.)

Who are you and what’s your business?

I’m Susie Hultquist, a food allergy mom and the founder and CEO of Spokin. I left my multi-decade career as an investor on Wall Street to start a modern lifestyle platform for the 32 million people with food allergies.

Spokin helps consumers discover allergy-friendly resources including food, restaurants, bakeries, hotels—even baseball stadiums. We are also uniquely positioned to help brands market directly to this large consumer base to raise awareness, trust, and sales. Food allergies are one of the most common chronic conditions. If you’re lucky enough to not have food allergies, chances are you know someone who does.

What inspired you to create this business? 

My assistant asked me to buy Girl Scout cookies. I needed to figure out if they were safe because we don’t bring any food into our home that isn’t safe for my daughter. With limited information on the package, I checked their website for facility information and texted a few trusted friends. This process took 15 minutes. I could rent a villa in Tuscany on Airbnb faster than I could figure out if cookies are safe for my daughter. If everyone in the food allergy community did the same thing, not only are we reinventing the wheel, we all just spent 8 million hours on a cookie! My next thought was as my daughter entered her teen years that this burden would soon become hers—those 15 minutes a day would add up to a full year of her life. I couldn’t cure her food allergies, but I could make it easier and give her that time back — enough to at least call me every day!

Related: Entrepreneurs, Need a Mental Break? The 'Meet Cute' Podcast Delivers Rom-Com Escape in 15-Minute Burst

What advice would you give entrepreneurs looking for funding?

As a first time entrepreneur, it’s more about the founder than the idea and you’re asking people to bet on you. Turn to people who you already know professionally and have seen what you've accomplished in another field.

In preparing to pitch an institutional advisor, it’s critical to do your homework and know your audience. For example, research their portfolio companies ahead of time and be prepared to explain how your company could work with or help one of their current investments.

How did it feel the first day you opened for business?

It felt like giving birth — Spokin is my fourth child! I vividly remember when our team hit send to submit our first app version to the App Store. We started with our first user in our hometown of Chicago and we were national within the month. We've grown to 50,000 reviews in 79 countries which is remarkable but we always feel like we are at the starting line and every day feels like the first day.

Have you had any correspondences with users of your app that were especially meaningful to you?

We launched direct messaging almost a year ago. The first thing I do every morning and the last thing I do every night is to check my Spokin app DMs. Startups are hard and as a founder, it's natural to question: is this working, are we going to make it? Receiving these heartfelt messages from parents whose children got to have ice cream or a bagel for the first time because of Spokin—that tells me this is already working! Hearing that a family took their first trip because of Spokin…It’s the most rewarding part of my job. We even have a couple who are dating in part thanks to Spokin!

Related: The Entrepreneur Who Took Streetwear Culture to the Dogs

What was your toughest challenge and how did you overcome it?

Like most startups, fundraising is challenging and we believe being based in Chicago has been a factor. The funds on the West Coast understand our business instantly but are not active investors in the Midwest and Chicago-based funds focus primarily on B2B or companies that make a sell a product. Spokin is building a direct-to-consumer network and the data on our platform is where the value is, so we are outside the sweet spot of our local market.

With the challenges of fundraising, we decided to launch a paid partnership program earlier than planned for the food industry called Verified Brands. In this case, our location is an advantage as so many food companies are based in our own backyard. These companies are quickly understanding our unique positioning and we can hardly keep up with onboarding brands. These aren’t just allergy-focused brands, it’s also some of the fastest-growing companies who are committed to label transparency, like Oatly, Sweet Loren’s and Chomps.

What does the word "entrepreneur" mean to you?

I think it’s a title you have to earn your way into and I’m frankly not that comfortable with the term. I’m not an entrepreneur simply because I started a company. Being an entrepreneur means being so passionate about seeing an idea come to life and believing so strongly that the world will be a better place for it that it’s all-consuming. I’m not an entrepreneur for the sake of the term, I’m the Founder of Spokin.

Is there a particular quote that you use as personal motivation?

“Winners get up faster,” is my favorite quote from Olympian Bonnie St. John’s TED Talk. A startup is a rollercoaster: you have the lowest lows and highest highs each and every day. You need to be comfortable with falling and accept that failure is part of the ride. The key is to get back up and do it fast.

Related:
How a Box of Girl Scout Cookies Inspired a Business Dedicated to Helping Food Allergy Sufferers Stay Safe While Snacking
Streetwear Culture Goes to the Dogs
How a Doctor's Visit Resulted in This Family's Big Idea: The Bioscarf

Copyright 2020 Entrepreneur.com Inc., All rights reserved

This article originally appeared on entrepreneur.com

The Link Lonk


August 30, 2020 at 08:30PM
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How a Box of Girl Scout Cookies Inspired a Business Dedicated to Helping Food Allergy Sufferers Stay Safe While Snacking - Thehour.com

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Cookies

Almond flour substitutes in healthier chocolate chip cookie - TribLIVE

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It can be tough to maintain healthful eating habits in stressful times, when the snack you hanker for probably begins with “chocolate” and ends with “cookie.”

Chef Nicole Burgess offers some help through a recipe she developed for National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day, observed Aug. 4. Burgess, the pastry chef at Pechanga Resort Casino in Temecula, Calif., wanted a recipe for those who may be working to shed so-called quarantine weight.

But these definitely don’t taste like diet cookies.

“I originally made these ‘healthy’ chocolate chip cookies on accident at home,” said Burgess, who decided to substitute almond flour on a day when she was out of regular flour. The almond-flour version, lower in carbohydrates and higher in healthy fats and fiber, was a pleasant surprise.

Comparing the new version with the original, “They tasted the same to me,” she said. “So I incorporated this into the special events we baked for at Pechanga before covid-19 hit, and added on more and more healthy substitutions as we went to make them healthier and healthier.”

“So far, we’ve had great feedback,” Burgess added. “Personally, I love them. They’re the same decadent cookie taste, but without the guilt.”

Although the cookies are not on the regular menu at Pechanga, they have been served for special events, she said.

“Oftentimes, we receive requests for specific dietary restrictions — low carb, vegan, keto, etc., and we can almost always accommodate them. From what I’ve been told, guests who have had these as part of a special event say that they taste the same as regular, calorie and fat-ridden cookies — just guilt-free.”

Quarantine Choco-Chip Cookie

Makes 14 to 20 small, 2-ounce cookies or 10 to 15 large, 4-ounce cookies

Ingredients

cup plus ½ cup almond flour

Pinch of Himalayan salt

½ teaspoon baking soda

4 tablespoons brown sugar

2 tablespoons regular sugar

2 tablespoons agave or honey (whichever natural sweetener you prefer)

1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

1 ½ tablespoons melted coconut oil

4 tablespoons oat milk (more can be used if needed)

½ cup dark chocolate chips

^

Directions

Heat oven to 375 degrees.

Combine dry ingredients and mix well. In separate bowl, mix wet ingredients.

Combine wet and dry mixtures and stir until all of the dry mixture has absorbed. If using an electric mixer, mix enough to incorporate everything (roughly 2 minutes). Stir in the chocolate chips. Remember to never over-mix cookie dough.

Make tight dollops of dough and separate on the cookie sheet. Tip: Use an ice cream scooper!

Bake 7-9 minutes and take out before the outsides get slightly browned.

Let sit 10-15 minutes to allow the dough to finish cooking, then enjoy.

Cooking note: If you like your cookie a little more crispy, leave it in the oven for a minute or two extra. Check every minute to make sure you don’t end up burning them. If you like that gooey chewy cookie, always use the shorter recommended time.

Storage note: The baked cookies can be frozen, and if you’re short on prep time, Burgess says it’s best to freeze the cookie dough balls and bake them when you need them.

Shirley McMarlin is a Tribune-Review staff writer. You can contact Shirley at 724-836-5750, smcmarlin@triblive.com or via Twitter .

Categories: Food & Drink | Lifestyles

The Link Lonk


August 30, 2020 at 11:01AM
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Almond flour substitutes in healthier chocolate chip cookie - TribLIVE

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Cookies

Saturday, August 29, 2020

3-year-old bakes and delivers more than 1,000 cookies for frontline and essential workers - WIVB.com - News 4

cookies.indah.link

Posted: Updated:

(CBS News)–A 3-year-old from Stillwater, New York, has used her passion for baking to help bring joy to others during the coronavirus pandemic. Mia Villa and her mom, Devin Villa, have baked over 1,000 cookies since the start of the pandemic and delivered them to frontline and essential workers, her mom told CBS news via email.

“Mia has been helping me in the kitchen since she could stand up at the counter,” Villa said. “I have pictures back as far as 18 months old. That was roughly when I started helping my mom as a kid and the same time she began to show interest in what I was doing so I let her jump right in!”

chef-mia.jpg
Mia Villa has been baking since she was 18 months old, and has mastered her chocolate chip cookie recipe, her mom says. DEVIN VILLA

“We’ve made a lot of messes but that is the fun in learning,” Villa continued, adding that Mia has mastered her chocolate chip cookies.

Villa said she recognized the pressure on essential workers and first responders during the pandemic and wanted to do something to help. 

“I was trying to think of something fun to do with Mia that would allow me to teach her valuable lessons in being kind, grateful, and generous,” Villa said. She decided to use baking – something they were already doing about twice a week – to help teach Mia that lesson.

Mia and her mom call their little operation “cookie kindness,” because they deliver the cookies to people who could use kindness and a smile, Villa said. “Smiles and kindness are contagious, I truly believe that, and the world needs more of it,” she said.

They still bake at least twice a week – sometimes three – and bring batches of cookies to places where frontline employees work. “So far we have been to fire stations, hospitals, primary care doctors, EMT’s, police stations, an animal hospital, and a supermarket,” Villa said.

Villa created a Facebook page, Mia’s Cookie Jar, where she updates followers on their cookie deliveries. 

“We started out locally, going to places around home and then started getting suggestions from Mia’s ‘cookie followers,” she continued. “I love when we go somewhere that has personally impacted a cookie follower, it makes the deliveries even more special.”

mia-grocery.jpg
Mia has delivered cookies to a supermarket, animal hospital, doctors offices, fire stations and other places were frontline employees work. DEVIN VILLA

“Something that seems so simple [like] delivering cookies truly can make someone’s day,” the mom said. 

Villa said everyone who has received their cookies has been welcoming, showing Mia how an ambulance works, letting her inside fire trucks, and letting her meet police K9s and horses. 

She said Mia has loved baking for essential workers and they have no plans of stopping.

“The opportunities for lessons in kindness are endless, and expands so far beyond the places she is going right now and who doesn’t love a homemade chocolate chip cookie!” Villa said. 

First published on August 28, 2020 / 9:27 AM

© 2020 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved.

The Link Lonk


August 30, 2020 at 04:54AM
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3-year-old bakes and delivers more than 1,000 cookies for frontline and essential workers - WIVB.com - News 4

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Cookies

GR man dubbed 'Cookie Monster' baking thousands of cookies for front line workers - Fox17

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GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. — Scott Kuderick has been quietly supplying sweet treats to workers on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic for months. It's earned him the nickname "Cookie Monster".

Kuderick told FOX 17 he was inspired to "whip up" his own way to give back after watching his good friend, Chef Jenna of Amore Trattoria Italiana, in action.

"Mid-March she started making meals for hundreds of front liners," he explained. "It just kind of made me get inspired, like what can I do?"

He started baking two days a week, making cookies from scratch.

"It started out slow, maybe half a dozen to a dozen," Kuderick said. "It just kept on growing and growing and growing."

Kuderick estimates that he's now baked and donated well over 5,000 cookies.

They are bagged and delivered to nearby first responders on Fridays.

"I go to the emergency room, for everybody that works in the emergency room, give them cookies, local doctor's offices, small businesses around here," he said. "Saint Mary's, several of their medical buildings, Saint Mary's Hospital."

Kuderick isn't sure how much he's spent on baking supplies so far, but joked that he "should own stock in Betty Crocker".

He adds that some members of the community have also started pitching in, dropping off supplies.

"It's nice to be appreciated, but I don't want to take a lot of the credit, because the credit due, is for everybody out there that [is] working more than 8, 12, 16 hours a day to keep us healthy and keep us safe," he said. "This is my way of just showing appreciation."

He added that he plans to continue making cookies. He said "until we find a cure, and we're going to be maskless and be safe to be in society. It's always going to be needed, it always brings a smile to somebody."

Kuderick emphasized the whole process is very sanitary, as he wears rubber gloves to bake and bag up all the treats.

As the FOX 17 and Lake Michigan Credit Union Pay it Forward Person of the Month, Kuderick is receiving a $300 prize.

Know someone who should be featured next month? Nominate them here.

Meet Tanya Henry, our July Pay it Forward Person of the Month.

The Link Lonk


August 29, 2020 at 02:47AM
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GR man dubbed 'Cookie Monster' baking thousands of cookies for front line workers - Fox17

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