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Wednesday, September 30, 2020

These 3-Ingredient Cookies Can Be Made With Any Nut Butter - Lifehacker

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Illustration for article titled These 3-Ingredient Cookies Can Be Made With Any Nut Butter
Photo: Claire Lower

“I should make a bust cake of Mick Jagger,” I told my boyfriend as we watched the latest episode of The Great British Baking Show. “I just have to make the lips really big. It would be easy.” “Okay, well I don’t want to be here for that,” he replied, no doubt recalling the very dramatic Cinnamon Roll Incident of 2017.

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Every time The Great British Baking Show (aka Bake Off aka GBBO) returns to Netflix, I get the baking bug and plan all sorts of GBBO-inspired projects that never come to fruition. I do not particularly enjoy baking (the effort-to-payoff ratio skews too heavily towards “effort”), but I do like eating cookies, cakes, and pies, and GBBO makes baking look like a pleasant activity.

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What usually happens is I’ll start with a very big baking plan (like a cake bust), then I’ll decide that one of the smaller projects from that week is more my speed, then spend an hour or so looking at recipes for said project before finally settling on something completely different and very easy (or nothing at all).

This week, while perusing recipes for Battenberg—one of those British cakes that sounds made up—I stumbled upon a recipe for three-ingredient peanut butter cookies. All you need to make them is a cup of peanut butter, a cup of sugar, and a single egg, and they bake up in 10 minutes. The next morning, while browsing Food52, I found an almond butter version. Aha.

As a woman of science, I immediately deduced that these cookies could probably be made with any nut butter. So I tried making them with peanut butter, then Nutella, then an almond-hazelnut-cocoa blend.

The Nutella experiment was unsuccessful, which was not surprising, but I had to try it (for science). The batter was too oily, and the cookies baked up into hard, sugary shards that fused to the pan. But the other two were fantastic: sweet, chewy, crisp around the edges, and honestly pretty astounding in relation to the amount of effort involved.

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You can add things to the batter if you want—chocolate chips, nuts—but a little salt is a must if you’re using a sweetened nut butter. Add a 1/4 teaspoon of fine salt into the batter or sprinkle some of the flakey stuff on top. These cookies are also fairly prone to spreading, so pop ‘em in the freezer (on the baking sheet) for five minutes before baking. Almond butter, sunflower seed butter, and even tahini would all work as a base—just make sure that any separated oil is completely incorporated into the nut butter before adding to the batter, or choose brands that do not separate.

3-Ingredient Nut Butter Cookies

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup nut butter
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 egg
  • Optional: 1/4 teaspoon fine salt of flakey salt to finish

Instructions:

Preheat your oven to 375℉. Mix all ingredients (except flakey salt) together in a bowl with a wooden spoon until you have a smooth batter with no visible streaks of egg. Using your hands, roll the dough into 1 1/2 tablespoon-sized balls and place on an ungreased cookie sheet.

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(If you want flatter, crispier cookies, make a criss-cross pattern on the tops of the cookies by pressing down with a fork; if you want them fudgier, leave them in little blobs.)

Sprinkle on the flakey salt if you’re using it, then pop the baking sheet in the freezer for five minutes. Once the cookies are chilled, bake them for 10 minutes (if they’re flat) or 14 minutes (if they’re blobs), then remove from the oven and let them cool on the baking sheet for two minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely. Enjoy with a tall glass of cold milk.

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The Link Lonk


October 01, 2020 at 12:15AM
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These 3-Ingredient Cookies Can Be Made With Any Nut Butter - Lifehacker

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Cookies

Not just a cookie business - Queen Anne News

cookies.indah.link
[unable to retrieve full-text content]Not just a cookie business  Queen Anne News The Link Lonk


October 01, 2020 at 03:00AM
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Not just a cookie business - Queen Anne News

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

These 3-Ingredient Cookies Can Be Made With Any Nut Butter - Lifehacker

cookies.indah.link
Illustration for article titled These 3-Ingredient Cookies Can Be Made With Any Nut Butter
Photo: Claire Lower

“I should make a bust cake of Mick Jagger,” I told my boyfriend as we watched the latest episode of The Great British Baking Show. “I just have to make the lips really big. It would be easy.” “Okay, well I don’t want to be here for that,” he replied, no doubt recalling the very dramatic Cinnamon Roll Incident of 2017.

Advertisement

Every time The Great British Baking Show (aka Bake Off aka GBBO) returns to Netflix, I get the baking bug and plan all sorts of GBBO-inspired projects that never come to fruition. I do not particularly enjoy baking (the effort-to-payoff ratio skews too heavily towards “effort”), but I do like eating cookies, cakes, and pies, and GBBO makes baking look like a pleasant activity.

Advertisement

What usually happens is I’ll start with a very big baking plan (like a cake bust), then I’ll decide that one of the smaller projects from that week is more my speed, then spend an hour or so looking at recipes for said project before finally settling on something completely different and very easy (or nothing at all).

This week, while perusing recipes for Battenberg—one of those British cakes that sounds made up—I stumbled upon a recipe for three-ingredient peanut butter cookies. All you need to make them is a cup of peanut butter, a cup of sugar, and a single egg, and they bake up in 10 minutes. The next morning, while browsing Food52, I found an almond butter version. Aha.

As a woman of science, I immediately deduced that these cookies could probably be made with any nut butter. So I tried making them with peanut butter, then Nutella, then an almond-hazelnut-cocoa blend.

The Nutella experiment was unsuccessful, which was not surprising, but I had to try it (for science). The batter was too oily, and the cookies baked up into hard, sugary shards that fused to the pan. But the other two were fantastic: sweet, chewy, crisp around the edges, and honestly pretty astounding in relation to the amount of effort involved.

Advertisement

You can add things to the batter if you want—chocolate chips, nuts—but a little salt is a must if you’re using a sweetened nut butter. Add a 1/4 teaspoon of fine salt into the batter or sprinkle some of the flakey stuff on top. These cookies are also fairly prone to spreading, so pop ‘em in the freezer (on the baking sheet) for five minutes before baking. Almond butter, sunflower seed butter, and even tahini would all work as a base—just make sure that any separated oil is completely incorporated into the nut butter before adding to the batter, or choose brands that do not separate.

3-Ingredient Nut Butter Cookies

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup nut butter
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 egg
  • Optional: 1/4 teaspoon fine salt of flakey salt to finish

Instructions:

Preheat your oven to 375℉. Mix all ingredients (except flakey salt) together in a bowl with a wooden spoon until you have a smooth batter with no visible streaks of egg. Using your hands, roll the dough into 1 1/2 tablespoon-sized balls and place on an ungreased cookie sheet.

Advertisement

(If you want flatter, crispier cookies, make a criss-cross pattern on the tops of the cookies by pressing down with a fork; if you want them fudgier, leave them in little blobs.)

Sprinkle on the flakey salt if you’re using it, then pop the baking sheet in the freezer for five minutes. Once the cookies are chilled, bake them for 10 minutes (if they’re flat) or 14 minutes (if they’re blobs), then remove from the oven and let them cool on the baking sheet for two minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely. Enjoy with a tall glass of cold milk.

Advertisement

The Link Lonk


October 01, 2020 at 12:15AM
https://ift.tt/2SahPxZ

These 3-Ingredient Cookies Can Be Made With Any Nut Butter - Lifehacker

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

In Oakland, Breaking Down Barriers With Cookies - The New York Times

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Image
Credit...Meiying Wu

Good morning.

Today, we have another dispatch from the University of California, Berkeley Graduate School of Journalism, written by Shuang Li.

OAKLAND — When Black Lives Matter protests erupted in downtown Oakland, Alicia Wong and her husband, Alex Issvoran, knew what they could do to support the protesters — make fortune cookies.

Their company, the Fortune Cookie Factory, is one of the oldest family-run businesses in Oakland’s Chinatown. They created new recipes and stenciled “BLM” in gold letters on each one. Next came new fortunes. Instead of Chinese proverbs, they searched classic texts and films of civil rights leaders. From Martin Luther King Jr. came: “Today we know with certainty that segregation is dead. The only question remaining is how costly will be the funeral.”

Ms. Wong, born in China but raised in the U.S., and Mr. Issvoran joined the protests and gave cookies away to marchers. Others they sold, donating half the proceeds to the NAACP and the Innocence Project, which works to free the wrongfully convicted. At the entrance to their business, they had a new mural painted beside one of a roaring panda. It depicts raised fists separated by a fortune cookie.

Their burst of activism is emblematic of new efforts to break down barriers that have long divided Oakland’s Black and Asian-American residents. In interviews, local leaders described how the combination of the pandemic and the Black Lives Matter movement is changing relations between the two groups.

Particularly for younger Asian-American residents, the rise in anti-Asian sentiment, fueled by President Trump’s inaccurate description of the coronavirus as the “Chinese virus,” has shattered the protective bubble of Oakland’s Chinatown. According to the Stop AAPI Hate reporting center, an initiative begun by Asian-American and Pacific Islander civil rights groups in March, more than 2,600 incidents of violence, bullying and other forms of anti-Asian discrimination have occurred across the U.S. since the start of the pandemic.

Kim Tran, an Oakland consultant who is writing a book on cross-racial solidarity, said the outpouring of hatred has brought home the realization “that we are people of color, and it is a vital interest to align with other communities of color.”

At the same time, the change has exposed new generational fault lines. When Ms. Wong and her husband started making the new fortune cookies, for example, her mother worried that such a public display might generate a backlash. “They don’t like bringing attention to themselves,” Ms. Wong, 25, said.

While Ms. Wong’s mother now supports her daughter’s activism, many older Asian-Americans are more tentative. It was only 10 years ago that a spate of attacks by Black teenagers on elderly Chinese residents in the Bay Area led to protest marches. Many get their news from WeChat, a popular Chinese app that is heavily censored and tends to focus more on scattered acts of violence by protesters rather than their calls for social justice. Meanwhile, The World Journal, a major Chinese-language newspaper in the United States, reported that scores of shops in Oakland’s Chinatown were vandalized during protests over George Floyd’s death.

Finnie Phung runs the Green Fish Seafood Market, just blocks from the Fortune Cookie Factory. When a drive-by car rally for Black Lives Matter passed her store this summer, Mrs. Phung stood on the sidewalk and cheered. Her employees, many of them older or recent immigrants, did not understand what was happening, or her enthusiastic support. “They think, ‘They’re Black, they’re Americans, they speak English. What’s the difference?’” Mrs. Phung explained.

She added: “They don’t understand the skin color is what causes the difference.”

For Ener Chiu, associate director of real estate at the Oakland-based East Bay Asian Local Development Corporation, the epiphany came when he watched the video of George Floyd being suffocated while an Asian-American police officer stood by. “I used to shave my head like that,” he said, referring to the Asian-American officer. “I looked at the image and thought that was me. I thought, ‘Oh my God, we’re just sitting here doing nothing.’” At a time when Asian-Americans are also being subjected to hatred, he added, “we need to be more vocal and more together with the African-American struggle.”

Throughout Oakland, Asian-American and Black leaders are reaching across generational and racial divides in new ways. In the wake of California’s pandemic shutdown, the African American, Chinatown, Vietnamese and Latino Chambers of Commerce in Oakland submitted their first joint proposal to the city to coordinate assistance across neighborhood lines as businesses try to survive and rebuild. In June, the Oakland City Council approved $500,000 to fund the effort.

“I’d always been saying there will be a time where we need to come together to advocate for each other, to support each other,” said Shonda Scott, chairwoman of the Oakland African American Chamber of Commerce. “Who knew it’d be Covid-19 and some pandemic that we would be fighting against? And the other pandemic is racism.”

Jennifer K. Tran, executive director of the Oakland Vietnamese Chamber of Commerce, has also noticed how the pandemic is prompting changes in the relationship between Asian and Black residents. “We need to rise above this Asians-against-Black, Black-against-Asians, this interracial tension, but rather look at how the systems have been designed for certain people to succeed and other people to flounder,” she said. “Second-generation immigrants are beginning to see that.”

Trinh Banh and Tommy Wong, two Chinatown community leaders, have been working since the start of the pandemic to help local businesses stay afloat. The pair are now using crowdsourced funding to supply free lunches to medical workers, homeless encampments and predominantly Black neighborhoods in East Oakland.

The inspiration for the free lunches, Mr. Wong said, came from the Black Panthers, who ran a free breakfast program that served tens of thousands of mostly Black children in the 1970s. Tarika Lewis, a veteran of the Panthers’ food program and a local Black activist, joined Mr. Wong and Ms. Banh at their first free food pickup in Chinatown, and continues to work with them.

Ms. Lewis, who is a graphic artist, and Mr. Wong together designed the T-shirt that some community leaders and protesters have been spotted wearing; against a black background, three words in yellow lettering circle a panther’s face: “Asian x Black x Unity.”

“In Oakland,” Mr. Wong said, “there’s a very strong sense of pride about what the Panthers accomplished and how that carried over into different communities. It’s both a nod to the past and an aspirational look towards our future together as Oakland.”

This article was written with financial support from the Asian American Journalists Association.


California Today goes live at 6:30 a.m. Pacific time weekdays. Tell us what you want to see: CAtoday@nytimes.com. Were you forwarded this email? Sign up for California Today here.

The Link Lonk


September 30, 2020 at 09:03PM
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In Oakland, Breaking Down Barriers With Cookies - The New York Times

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

Strain Profile: Blue Cookies — Greenway Magazine - Greenway

cookies.indah.link

Blue Cookies, a indica-dominant hybrid, has an unknown cross. Some claim it to be the offspring of Blueberry and Girl Scout Cookies, while others say it’s crossed between F1Durb and Florida OG. This strain holds a record of high THC levels (more than 28%) which makes it one of the strongest strains on the market. Blue Cookies has an orangy sweet taste, and the reminiscent aroma of cookies.

Many smokers of Blue Cookies will use this strain to help with anxiety, depression, headaches, insomnia, loss of appetite, migraines, chronic pain, gastrointestinal disorder, and PMS. Although this strain helps with many medical conditions, it is not recommended to those who are prone to seizures and other medical diseases that respond to CBD. Blue Cookies will bring feelings of happiness, hunger, and uplifted ness. 

This strain is highly recognizable by its dense bluish nuggets and thick layer of crystals covering the outside. Blue Cookies is common on the west coast, but can be more difficult to find in other areas.

Sativa/Indica: 10% sativa, 90% indica

 

  

Cannabinoids: 25-28% THC, 2% CBD

Terpenes: myrcene, limonene, caryophyllene, humulene, linalool

Flavors: berry, orange, sweet, candy

Grow Information:

  • Difficulty: moderate (experience is needed to grow)
  • Height: 3-5 ft.
  • Yield: 16 Oz / m2

● Flowering: 8-9 weeks

The Link Lonk


September 30, 2020 at 06:07PM
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Strain Profile: Blue Cookies — Greenway Magazine - Greenway

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

Mia Villa baked 1000 chocolate chip cookies. - Finance and Markets

cookies.indah.link

Share This On Social

Have you seen those kids baking shows where little kids run around baking recipes and pastries such as croquembouche and trifle? Mia Villa should be on one of those shows when you see what she’s been up to.

Mia Villa is a 3-year-old girl from Stillwater, NY. She’s been a baker since 18 months old by helping her mom in the kitchen. 18 months old! Some of us were still learning to walk at that age.

Well, Mia is now at the ripe old age of 3. And she has perfected her best chewy chocolate chip cookies recipe.

Now, she’s ready for her big debut. And she decided to use her amazing skill to bake chocolate chip cookies for first responders this year.

Mia has baked and delivered more than 1,000 cookies to police officers, doctors, nurses, and grocery workers during quarantine. She also includes her own art with each delivery.

Mia’s mom, Devin, was only there to help her get the ingredients and handle the oven. She “hope[s] it inspires other people to just be kind and grateful. Mia will bake the cookies […] We box them up, hop in the car, and off we go.”

They traveled as far as an hour away to reach as many frontline workers as possible.

Mia even has a Facebook page called “Mia’s Cookie Jar,” where her “cookie followers” can follow her journey sharing cookies with everyone. They can even suggest where Mia could reach next.

“Something that seems so simple [like] delivering cookies truly can make someone’s day,” Devin said. You can do the same just by being kind yourself. So go out there, and any kindness you give will be appreciated.

If you decided to do an act of kindness like what Mia Villa did, email [email protected] and let us know so we could feature you in our newsletter next week. We will always want to highlight the goodness in today’s world.

h/t: goodmorningamerica, winknews
Image: Google

The Link Lonk


September 30, 2020 at 08:42PM
https://ift.tt/36iNw07

Mia Villa baked 1000 chocolate chip cookies. - Finance and Markets

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

Mia Villa baked 1000 chocolate chip cookies. - Finance and Markets

cookies.indah.link

Share This On Social

Have you seen those kids baking shows where little kids run around baking recipes and pastries such as croquembouche and trifle? Mia Villa should be on one of those shows when you see what she’s been up to.

Mia Villa is a 3-year-old girl from Stillwater, NY. She’s been a baker since 18 months old by helping her mom in the kitchen. 18 months old! Some of us were still learning to walk at that age.

Well, Mia is now at the ripe old age of 3. And she has perfected her best chewy chocolate chip cookies recipe.

Now, she’s ready for her big debut. And she decided to use her amazing skill to bake chocolate chip cookies for first responders this year.

Mia has baked and delivered more than 1,000 cookies to police officers, doctors, nurses, and grocery workers during quarantine. She also includes her own art with each delivery.

Mia’s mom, Devin, was only there to help her get the ingredients and handle the oven. She “hope[s] it inspires other people to just be kind and grateful. Mia will bake the cookies […] We box them up, hop in the car, and off we go.”

They traveled as far as an hour away to reach as many frontline workers as possible.

Mia even has a Facebook page called “Mia’s Cookie Jar,” where her “cookie followers” can follow her journey sharing cookies with everyone. They can even suggest where Mia could reach next.

“Something that seems so simple [like] delivering cookies truly can make someone’s day,” Devin said. You can do the same just by being kind yourself. So go out there, and any kindness you give will be appreciated.

If you decided to do an act of kindness like what Mia Villa did, email [email protected] and let us know so we could feature you in our newsletter next week. We will always want to highlight the goodness in today’s world.

h/t: goodmorningamerica, winknews
Image: Google

The Link Lonk


September 30, 2020 at 08:42PM
https://ift.tt/36iNw07

Mia Villa baked 1000 chocolate chip cookies. - Finance and Markets

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

IDEA ALLEY: School day memories of Cornmeal Cookies - Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

cookies.indah.link

Recipes that appear in Idea Alley have not been tested by the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette.

This unusual cookie recipes comes from Steven Long.

"Many years ago, the cafeteria staff at Rogers High School used to make these cookies, and they were a favorite of mine. The cornmeal adds texture and cuts down on the sweetness of these cookies. I don't add the raisins when I make them (neither did the cafeteria staff)," Long writes.

Cornmeal Cookies

(Rogers High School cafeteria)

¾ cup softened butter

¾ cup sugar

1 egg

1 ½ cups flour

½ cup cornmeal

1 teaspoon baking powder

¼ teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon vanilla

½ cup raisins (optional)

Mix the butter and sugar in a large bowl. Add the egg and beat well. Add the rest of the ingredients (except the raisins, if using) and mix together. Stir in raisins, if desired.

Drop the dough from a teaspoon onto a greased cookie sheet. Bake at 350 degrees for about 15 minutes, or until the cookies are lightly browned.

Makes about 3 dozen cookies.

REQUESTS

■ Lemon Pecan Pie like that served years ago at E's Bistro on John F. Kennedy Boulevard in North Little Rock for Suzanne Kirchner.

"I ate there once and it was very good. She had a lemon pecan pie that absolutely would melt in your mouth," Kirchner writes. "The crust melted in your mouth. The lemon filling was just right and the half pecans on top were perfect."

■ Banana Bread like Trio's for AW. "It is dark, moist, and the best banana bread I have ever tasted," AW writes.

■ Gluten-free biscuits and pie crust recipes for Jo Ray.

Over the last several weeks, I've been asking for Alley Kats to share what you've been up to in the kitchen. To those of you who have sent in recipes, thank you!

As we transition to fall, I'd love for you to share some of your favorite fall recipes, and of course any recipes you think fellow Alley readers would enjoy.

The new ones, the old ones, the easy ones and the complicated ones. Did you improvise a new way to make a favorite dish without all the ingredients you usually use? Tell us about it. Did you teach yourself a new recipe? We'd love it if you'd share.

Do you have a question about a new-to-you term or ingredient? Just ask and I'll do my best to answer.

Email recipe contributions, requests and culinary questions to:

[email protected]

The Link Lonk


September 30, 2020 at 02:00PM
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IDEA ALLEY: School day memories of Cornmeal Cookies - Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

Banana Split Cookies - Yahoo Lifestyle

cookies.indah.link

An ice cream-flavored cookie? Be still our heart. These banana split cookies are the well-loved creation of Los Angeles, California bakery Milk Jar Cookies…and now you can make them at home, thanks to the Milk Jar Cookies Bakebook.

“Coming up with new cookie flavors is such a fun, creative outlet,” writes Milk Jar owner Courtney Cowan. “One period of experimentation found me inspired by ice cream, and I, of course, considered the banana split. Hmmm…could I make that into a cookie? I was sure going to try."

One tip when you make this one, according to Cowan: Dry the strawberry slices very well before placing them in and on top of the dough balls—this will keep them from sliding around.

For the full banana split experience, Cowan suggests pairing these with a scoop of vanilla ice cream. Heaven awaits.

RELATED: Rocky Road Cookies

Servings: Makes 18 cookies

Time:

10 fresh strawberries, quartered

¾ cup chopped walnut pieces

4 cups all-purpose flour

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon table salt

11 tablespoons unsalted butter, cold and cubed

11 tablespoons vegetable shortening, at room temperature

1 cup granulated sugar

1 cup packed light brown sugar

2 extra-large eggs, cold

1½ teaspoons pure vanilla extract

1½ teaspoons pure banana extract

⅔ cup (5 ounces) semisweet chocolate chips

⅔ cup (5 ounces) butterscotch chips

1. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper. Wash the strawberries and dry thoroughly with a paper towel. Quarter each strawberry and place on a plate or tray lined with paper towels to absorb excess juice. Set aside.

2. Using a knife, finely chop the walnuts into pieces. (Chopping them into smaller pieces releases their oil and also guarantees that you get walnut bits in every bite.) Set aside.

3. In a medium bowl, stir together the flour, baking soda and salt. Set aside.

4. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine the butter, shortening, sugar, brown sugar, eggs, vanilla extract and banana extract, and beat on medium-low speed until mixed with just small chunks of butter remaining, approximately 30 seconds. (Every time you mix, scrape down the sides of the bowl with a spatula to be sure everything is combined.) Add half of the dry ingredient mixture and mix on low speed until just incorporated and no flour is visible, about 30 seconds. Repeat with half of the remaining dry ingredients, and mix on low speed until the flour is incorporated and all butter chunks are gone, approximately 20 seconds. Add the remaining dry ingredients and mix until the dough pulls away from the sides of the bowl and is not sticky to the touch, about 20 seconds more. Be careful not to overmix. Stir in the chocolate chips, butterscotch chips and walnuts.

5. Scoop the dough into ⅓-cup scoops. Place a strawberry slice in the middle of each scoop, making sure the berry is fully encased in dough. Firmly roll into round balls approximately 1½ inches in diameter. While the dough ball is still in your hands, top each cookie with a strawberry slice, gently pushing it in to keep it in position while they bake. Place 6 cookies on each prepared baking sheet, spacing them out well. Bake on the middle and lower racks of the oven until the tops are a light golden brown and you notice hairline cracks forming on the sides, 12 to 14 minutes, spinning each pan 180 degrees and swapping their positions halfway through.

6. Cool the cookies on the baking sheets for 10 minutes, then use a wide spatula to transfer them to a wire rack or parchment paper on the counter to cool completely. Let the baking sheets cool before repeating with the remaining cookies.

7. Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 4 days or freeze for up to a month.

PureWow may receive a portion of sales from products purchased from this article, which was created independently from PureWow's editorial and sales departments.

The Link Lonk


September 30, 2020 at 05:00AM
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Banana Split Cookies - Yahoo Lifestyle

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Insomnia Cookies Adds Vegan and Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies - QSR magazine

cookies.indah.link

Insomnia Cookies is always there when that dessert craving hits, and now vegan and gluten-free Insomniacs everywhere can satisfy their sweet tooth with the Vegan and Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookie. Previously only available in select markets and for nationwide shipping, Insomnia’s delicious vegan and gluten-free cookie variety is now available in all stores for pick-up and delivery.

Get extra perks by signing up for the Cookie Dough Loyalty Program and earn points towards your next free $10 credit.

The Vegan and Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookie is made without animal products or by-products and without any ingredients that contain gluten. Insomnia’s gluten-free products are prepared in an environment where there is a risk of cross-contamination with gluten. Guests with Celiac or gluten sensitivities should know that Insomnia will do our best but cannot guarantee that orders will not touch gluten somewhere in the baking and service.

News and information presented in this release has not been corroborated by QSR, Food News Media, or Journalistic, Inc.

The Link Lonk


September 29, 2020 at 11:17PM
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Insomnia Cookies Adds Vegan and Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies - QSR magazine

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

Dolly Parton: A new Christmas movie, new music, cookies & an apron of many colors - 9News.com KUSA

cookies.indah.link

As usual, East Tennessee's favorite daughter has been very busy, even during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Netflix announced Tuesday that Dolly Parton would co-star in a new Christmas movie musical coming to the streaming network on Nov. 22.

Christmas on the Square sounds like a new take on A Christmas Carol. It starts Christine Baranski as a rich and nasty woman who returns to her small hometown after her father’s death to evict everyone and sell the land to a mall developer, right before Christmas.  

Of course, the holiday spirit and an angel played by Dolly will save the day and the town!

“Christmas on the Square'' is more than just a song...it’s also a musical! Watch my newest movie, directed by Debbie...

Posted by Dolly Parton on Tuesday, September 29, 2020

Dolly also debuted a new song from the movie on Tuesday, called Christmas on the Square. It will be included in her new Christmas album called A Holly Dolly Christmas. 

You can get a little listen below:

“Christmas on the Square” is out now! When I wrote this song it almost felt like a number from a musical, but on the...

Posted by Dolly Parton on Tuesday, September 29, 2020

And if all wasn't enough, how about Dolly's recipe for Christmas cookies?

She's teamed up with Williams Sonoma for her own line of baking materials, including an apron of many colors and her own cookie mix. There's even a Dolly-inspired gingerbread house!

In a video on the website, she says Christmas is her favorite holiday. For her, it's all about faith and family!

She says one of her favorite holiday traditions is getting together with her nieces and nephews for cookie baking night and she hopes others will share that tradition with their family.

I’m sharing some of my favorite Christmas traditions with a new holiday collection at Williams Sonoma! From my signature...

Posted by Dolly Parton on Monday, September 28, 2020
The Link Lonk


September 29, 2020 at 10:06PM
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Dolly Parton: A new Christmas movie, new music, cookies & an apron of many colors - 9News.com KUSA

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

Peanut butter cookies just in time for fall - The Hillsdale Daily News

cookies.indah.link

Dear Lynn,

With the weather turning colder it’s time for some good old fashioned comfort food. Please share with me your favorite Mac & Cheese recipes.

Todd from Adrian

Ruth from Archbold says when she makes her Peanut Butter Cookies her kitchen smells delicious. Judy from Lapeer sent in her recipe for Peanut Butter Cup Cookies. They taste just like the candy only better. Melissa from Quincy likes to bake and her one of her favorite cookies is Peanut Butter Drop Cookies.

PEANUT BUTTER COOKIES

1 c chunky peanut butter

1/2 c butter

2 t vanilla

1/2 c sugar

1 c honey

2 eggs

2 1/2 c flour

1 t baking soda

DIRECTIONS: Cream together peanut butter, butter and vanilla. Add sugar, honey and eggs, mixing thoroughly. Sift flour and baking soda together. Add to peanut butter mixture and mix well. Add a little more flour if dough is too sticky. Drop cookie dough by teaspoonfuls onto ungreased cookie sheets or sheets lined with parchment paper. Flatten slightly with the sugared bottom of a glass. Bake at 375 degrees for 10 to 15 minutes.

PEANUT BUTTER CUP COOKIES

Filling:

3/4 c creamy peanut butter

3 T butter at room temperature

3/4 t vanilla

1/2 c confectioners’ sugar

Cookie:

1 3/4 c flour

2/3 c unsweetened cocoa

1 t baking soda

1/2 t baking powder

1/2 t salt

1/2 c shortening at room temperature

6 T butter at room temperature

1 c sugar

1 egg

2 T milk

1/4 t almond extract

DIRECTIONS: Filling – Mix together peanut butter, butter, vanilla and confectioners’ sugar. Blend together until smooth and creamy. Set aside. Cookie – Sift together flour, cocoa, baking soda, baking powder and salt into a bowl. In a separate bowl, cream together shortening, butter and sugar. Add egg, milk and almond extract, mixing well. Add flour mixture and stir to mix until just incorporated. Using damp hands, form dough into 1 inch balls. Roll the dough-balls in sugar. Place on lightly greased baking sheets 2 inches apart. Make a dent in the center of each with your thumb. Bake for 12 minutes until puffed and slightly cracked. Remove from oven and mound 1 teaspoon of filling in the center of each cookie. Let cool for 1 minute then remove from cookie sheets. Makes about 4 dozen.

PEANUT BUTTER DROP COOKIES

1 1/2 c flour

1 t baking soda

1/2 t salt

1 t ground ginger

1/2 t ground cloves

3/4 c shortening

3/4 c chunky peanut butter

1 c brown sugar, packed

2 eggs

2 T milk

1 c salted Spanish peanuts

DIRECTIONS: Sift flour, baking soda, salt, ginger and cloves together into a bowl. In a large bowl, mix together shortening, peanut butter and brown sugar with an electric mixer at medium speed, until light and fluffy. Add eggs and milk. Beat until smooth. By hand, stir in flour mixture and Spanish peanuts until thoroughly combined. Drop dough by rounded teaspoonfuls onto ungreased baking sheets 2 inches apart. Bake at 375 degrees for 10 to 12 minutes until golden-brown.

Stop by Lynn’s blog, Lynn’s Musings From a Deep Well at https://ift.tt/1FessQQ. Send recipes and requests to The Recipe Exchange at lynneckerle@gmail.com.

The Link Lonk


September 29, 2020 at 09:38PM
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Peanut butter cookies just in time for fall - The Hillsdale Daily News

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Butter Cookies

It’s time for pumpkin: Cookies with brown butter frosting - Tampa Bay Times

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If you’ve been on the internet recently, you have probably been inundated with pumpkin recipes.

Well, here’s one more.

It’s a tradition here in the Sunshine State: Baking with seasonal ingredients is one of the ways Floridians convince themselves it’s fall.

Since it officially is the season of PSLs and light sweaters now, I couldn’t resist making a pumpkin-y dessert this week.

Unlike some of the other things manufacturers try to jam the seasonal flavors into, bright orange pumpkin puree and fall spices (cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, ginger) are naturals in baked goods. Pumpkin in particular (I always use canned, though make sure it’s plain with no added sugar) can add a creamy element and a fun color without being too overbearing, taste-wise.

These cookies are a cross between cake and cookie, soft and pillowy and a lovely orange color. I don’t always love a cakey cookie — I prefer some, like chocolate chip, to be crispy on the outside and soft on the inside. But sometimes, it works.

These cookies are paired with a brown butter frosting, a thick buttercream that gets slathered on after the cookies have cooled. I went ahead and smooshed two together and made cookie sandwiches, which is where the softness of the cookie really comes in handy. It’s a luscious bite.

I have not yet bought bags of Halloween candy, but when I do, I may try crushing up some Snickers or other chocolatey candy and rolling the edges of the sandwich in it, using the frosting as a glue.

Seems like a delightful way to ring in October, a seasonal comfort in these weird times.

Pumpkin Cookies with Brown Butter Frosting

For the cookies:

1 ½ cups butter, softened

2 cups packed brown sugar

1 cup canned pumpkin

2 large eggs, room temperature

5 cups all-purpose flour

2 teaspoons baking soda

2 teaspoons ground cinnamon

2 teaspoons ground ginger

½ teaspoon salt

For the frosting:

⅔ cup butter, cubed

4 cups confectioners' sugar

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

4 to 5 tablespoons 2 percent milk

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In a large bowl, cream butter and brown sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in pumpkin and egg. In another bowl, whisk flour, baking soda, cinnamon, ginger and salt; gradually beat into creamed mixture.

Drop dough by tablespoonfuls 2 inches apart onto ungreased baking sheets. Bake 6 to 8 minutes or until golden brown. Remove to wire racks to cool completely.

In a small heavy saucepan, melt butter over medium heat. Heat 5 to 7 minutes or until golden brown, stirring constantly. Transfer to a large bowl. Gradually beat in confectioners' sugar, vanilla and enough milk to achieve desired spreading consistency. Spread over cookies, or spread over one then top that with another cookie to make a sandwich.

Source: Adapted from Taste of Home

The Link Lonk


September 29, 2020 at 08:44AM
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It’s time for pumpkin: Cookies with brown butter frosting - Tampa Bay Times

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Cookies

Monday, September 28, 2020

The Chocolate Bar in Cleveland offering cookies featuring both President Donald Trump and Joe Biden ahead of first Presidential Debate - WKYC.com

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CLEVELAND — Northeast Ohio and the city of Cleveland are putting the finishing touches on preparations for the first Presidential Debate between Donald Trump and Joe Biden. 

One local restaurant and martini bar is celebrating the event already.

Taking to their official Twitter account on Monday, the Chocolate Bar in Cleveland announced with a photo included that it will be selling cookies in honor of both Trump and Biden. The cookies feature logos and even the candidates faces.

The Chocolate Bar is located at 347 Euclid Ave. in downtown Cleveland.

Tuesday night's first Presidential Debate is being held at Sheila and Eric Samson Pavilion at the Health Education Campus at Case Western Reserve.

At this time, it is unclear of how much the cookies cost, however The Chocolate Bar announced it will be selling them while supplies last.

The Chocolate Bar reached out to the public saying, "Show your support for your favorite candidate. #Decision2020 #BidenHarris2020 #Trump2020 

The debate will start at 9 p.m. on Tuesday and is expected to last around 90 minutes, with no commercial breaks.

The Link Lonk


September 29, 2020 at 11:08AM
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The Chocolate Bar in Cleveland offering cookies featuring both President Donald Trump and Joe Biden ahead of first Presidential Debate - WKYC.com

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Cookies

Oreo Cookies Go Head-to-Head With Ritz Crackers Over New Salted Caramel Flavor - HYPEBEAST

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Oreo is a sweet staple and there really isn’t any need to improve on the classic cookie formula. But experimental flavors are always welcome (nothing wrong with Peach Oolong or Sakura Matcha) and Oreo’s latest is as tempting as ever — interestingly, it’s facing off against Ritz as the two dual in a flavor faceoff over Salted Caramel.

Initially launched in South Korea, Oreo’s Salted Caramel stuffing was an immediate smash, blending salty and sweet flavors for a winning combination that won “young foodies,” according to the company overseeing the sandwich dual, Mondelēz International. Unlike the Western Caramel Coconut flavor, Salted Caramel promises a hybrid unusual to the sandwich cookie, which retains its classic chocolate biscuits.

Exclusive to Chinese consumers, Ritz is duking it out with Oreo by way of crispy salted crackers stacked atop its own salted caramel filling, offer a lighter and saltier counterpart to Oreo’s rich indulgence, purportedly an ideal counterpart to afternoon tea.

oreo cookies ritz crackers sandwich salted caramel flavor exclusive china hong kong fall autumn 2020 release buy package Mondelēz International

The limited edition Oreo flavor is already available in select regions of China, including Hong Kong, while the Salted Caramel Ritz crackers will roll out deeper into autumn.

To keep up with the regional treat discourse, get to know the man behind Kit Kat Japan’s diverse flavor selection.

Read Full Article
The Link Lonk


September 29, 2020 at 04:24AM
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Oreo Cookies Go Head-to-Head With Ritz Crackers Over New Salted Caramel Flavor - HYPEBEAST

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Cookies

Trader Joe's debuts new cookie butter-flavored BEER - Daily Mail

cookies.indah.link

Trader Joe's has debuted a new cookie butter flavored beer, which has just hit shelves.

The grocery store chain announced in June that it would be bringing Speculoos Cookie Butter Beer to stores, and tasty new concoction is officially available to buy.

An imperial golden ale, the beer is made with toasted coconut, vanilla beans, and other natural flavors, according to the label — and has an alcohol content of 9.5 per cent ABV.

Yum! Trader Joe's has debuted a new cookie butter flavored beer, which has just hit shelves

Yum! Trader Joe's has debuted a new cookie butter flavored beer, which has just hit shelves

Dessert brew: It's inspired by their beloved cookie butter and is said to pair great with cookie butter desserts

Dessert brew: It's inspired by their beloved cookie butter and is said to pair great with cookie butter desserts

The product description says the new beer is 'made with whole vanilla beans, milk, sugar, and toasted coconut.'

'This full-bodied ale pairs with just about any treat topped with your favorite deliciously unusual Cookie Butter spread from our friends at Trader Joe's.'

According to the Inside Trader Joe's podcast, the beer took two years to develop, with the final product being the 18th version of the brew.

'It originally started off as a porter base, but you really couldn't taste the cookie butter at all or really pick up on the aromatics,' said Trader Joe's Product Developer Catherine Rhodes. 'So we switched over to an Imperial ale and that was really the trick to making it work. It's 9.5% ABV and it tastes just as good as what we have in the jars.'

According to the podcasters, the beer isn't one most people would think to drink while mowing the lawn.

'I would have it as an after dinner dessert beer and you could pair it with anything with cookie butter on top of it,' Rhodes said. 

Sweet! The product description says the new beer is 'made with whole vanilla beans, milk, sugar, and toasted coconut'

Sweet! The product description says the new beer is 'made with whole vanilla beans, milk, sugar, and toasted coconut'

Behind the scenes: According to the Inside Trader Joe's podcast , the beer took two years to develop, with the final product being the 18th version of the brew
'The flavor is remarkably close to cookie butter,' said a shopper who tried it

Behind the scenes: According to the Inside Trader Joe's podcast , the beer took two years to develop, with the final product being the 18th version of the brew

'I might give it the Elvis treatment. I might have cookie butter with banana slices and the Cookie Butter Beer on the Speculoos Cookies,' added Trader Joe's Vice President of Marketing Matt Sloan. 

So far, a few shoppers have managed to get their hands on the new beverage. 

'At first, it tasted like drinking a cookie butter candle, but after a few sips it seems to mellow out,' wrote the Candy Hunting Instagram account. 

'The flavor is remarkably close to cookie butter. Also, this bad boy clocks in at 9.5% ABV, but doesn't taste like it at all. It's definitely worth trying if you're into beer and cookie butter. '

Also hitting shelves this fall are a Ginger Bread Spiced Stout and a Toasty Cookie Spice Cider. 

'They're using really warm winter spices, so cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice and clove. And the one thing that's really important to point out about the cider is it's a 100% fermented apple juice. It's not from concentrate,' added Rhodes.

A new Coffee Peanut Butter Cup Porter will also hit stores by Halloween.

The Link Lonk


September 29, 2020 at 03:47AM
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Trader Joe's debuts new cookie butter-flavored BEER - Daily Mail

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Butter Cookies

Zooies Oatmeal Raisin Cookies Recipe - Los Angeles Times

cookies.indah.link

Line a rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper. Using a 2-inch-diameter (1 ⅓-ounce) cookie scoop, gently scoop a heaping yet loose mound of dough; you don’t want to pack the dough into the scoop. Gently scrape the hump of the mound against the side of the bowl, then drop the dough onto the baking sheet. Continue scooping the dough, spacing the mounds an inch apart. Using the palm of your hand, gently press all the mounds flat to 2 ½-inch discs. Cover the pan tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 3 hours and up to 24 hours.

The Link Lonk


September 28, 2020 at 07:57PM
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Zooies Oatmeal Raisin Cookies Recipe - Los Angeles Times

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Cookies

The best oatmeal raisin cookie recipe from Zooies - Los Angeles Times

cookies.indah.link

Culinary SOS

I am baking your Salted Chunky Peanut Butter Cookies this weekend…which leads me to a Culinary SOS request: Zooies Oatmeal Raisin Cookies. I know they received an award for their Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies, but this variety is especially special!

— Carla Meyer
Cheviot Hills

It’s not easy to make something as humble as an oatmeal raisin cookie exceptional, but Arezou Appel, the founder and baker of Zooies Cookies, has managed to create the perfect one with a light twig-snap crackle at the edges and a tender yet chewy center that’s not too sweet. She devoted as much time and energy to nailing that classic as she does with her original creations, such as her panda cookie, which is striped black and white with hunks of Oreos baked into dough studded with white chocolate.

For her oatmeal raisin, Appel experimented to achieve her goal of “making something really good, something you feel in your heart and gut when you eat it.”

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A selection of Zooies cookies, with oatmeal raisin down the middle

Zooies offers a variety of creative cookies, but the oatmeal raisin (center) are “especially special.”

(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)

Since childhood, Appel has pursued her love of food by watching her mom and grandmother cook their family’s Persian dishes and devouring cookbooks like novels. When Appel stopped working as a chiropractor, she began baking at home for her family and her business grew from there.

“I tell my kids nothing has to be perfect,” Appel says, “but if we have to name one thing, that would be baking. The more exact you are, the better it will be and the better chance at success. When people eat my cookies, I want them to really enjoy and make that mmmmm sound. That is my reward and what pushes me to do what I do.”

Arezou Appel in front of her bakery, which is in a gas station in Cheviot Hills.

Arezou Appel in front of her bakery, which is in a gas station in Cheviot Hills.

(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)

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To achieve that primal pleasure with this recipe, Appel mixes old-fashioned and quick oats for a soft cookie that still has a chew to it. A bit of whole wheat flour adds a deeper flavor to the dough, as do cinnamon, nutmeg and vanilla.

Mixing the ingredients properly is just as important as getting the proportions right. Appel starts by thoroughly beating room-temperature butter with the sugars to ensure no pockets of butter create craters in the cookies. She then whisks the eggs lightly before streaming them into the blend so they’ll incorporate quickly. Overbeating the eggs after adding them results in a cakier texture.

For the dry ingredients, Appel always tells her bakers to undermix when they’re added, so there are still visible streaks of flour, which will disappear once the oats and raisins go in. This prevents the flour from being overmixed, which can result in tough cookies. Packing the dough too tightly can do that too, so Appel scoops the dough lightly and handles it delicately. Scooping and shaping the soft dough is easier at room temperature, so she forms rounds and flattens them before popping the discs in the fridge; this improves the cookies’ final taste and texture.

Appel scoops the dough with a light touch.

Appel scoops the dough with a light touch.

(Mariah Tauger / Los Angeles Times)

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The last two steps of baking and cooling are crucial to Appel’s formula. She says, “Make sure you don’t bake the dough all the way through because you don’t want all the moisture to evaporate. As soon as you see the golden brown ring around the edges and a crust on top, take them out.”

She also emphasizes the importance of transferring them to a wire rack to cool after a short stint of settling on the hot pan. That detail keeps the outside crisp and the inside moist. As Appel says, “That’s a big part of finishing off your cookie in the right way. If you don’t do it right, you don’t get that glorious end product.”

Time 1 hour, plus chilling

Yields Makes about 3 dozen

The Link Lonk


September 28, 2020 at 08:00PM
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The best oatmeal raisin cookie recipe from Zooies - Los Angeles Times

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Cookies

When Not To Accept Cookies | Avast - Security Boulevard

cookies.indah.link

Nearly any website you visit asks you to accept cookies, and most of us don’t even think about this choice — we just click “yes” to rid ourselves from the pain of the pop-up. But what are we really agreeing to? What is a cookie, anyway? 

These small text files were first used in browsers back in 1994 and soon became ubiquitous. The problem was that the web wasn’t designed to preserve a particular state, so when you went from one website to another, the site wouldn’t know what content you had already consumed without using cookies. By sending you a cookie, a website could recognize you if you returned and present you with a better browsing experience. For example, if you abandoned your shopping cart on an e-commerce site, a cookie could save you time and not have to re-select these items when you return a few days later. Cookies also helped website operators remember your individual settings, such as language preference, your login name, and other values.

Beware of bad cookies

Over the years, cookies came to be used for other purposes, such as to ensure that you are indeed the person you claim to be and to limit ads from showing pop-ups and other settings. There are now several different kinds of cookies, as explained in this post: cookies that can be used to track you, cookies that persist for a specific time period, and cookies that are generated not by the website directly, but from third parties, such as advertisers or marketing companies.

Back in the early days of the mid-1990s, I wrote: “Why get all worked up about cookies? Well, privacy advocates feel that cookies can tell too much information about you and don’t want this information broadcast all over the net. The only problem is that there is lots more information outside of your cookie available to web servers, such as your IP address and email address.” Since those early days, we have better technologies that can track your browsing activity, such as canvas fingerprinting.  

In 2011, the EU decided that cookies were potentially a privacy problem and mandated that website owners obtain visitors’ permissions and place those annoying pop-up requests. The resulting law has been completely toothless: No European site owner has ever been fined for cookie violations.

Under what circumstances should you accept a cookie request?

“Over 95 percent of websites use cookies, mostly for boring things that never cross our minds, like ensuring a website responds quickly, or counting visitors,” says one security researcher quoted in this extensive history of cookies post. Certainly, if you want to see more targeted ads (either on banners or in pop-ups), you should continue to accept them.

Tips for protecting your privacy

If you are concerned about your privacy, here are a few ways to protect yourself and watch out for the bad kinds of cookies.

  1. Don’t automatically accept every cookie. You could even try to deny all cookies and see if it has adverse consequences, such as wasting time to fill in your personal details on a shopping site.
  2. Adopt a more cautious browsing lifestyle. Use private browsing mode whenever possible, and clear your cookies periodically. Substitute DuckDuckGo (which doesn’t track you) for search tasks rather than using Google or Bing. Make modifications to your browser settings to make yourself more private. This post gives into more detail.
  3. Use a different browser that gives you more control over your privacy, such as Brave, or even Tor. In that linked post I mention the usability tradeoffs of using a different browser and you will have to expend some effort to tune it to your particular needs. (A personal note: I tolerated Brave for about two days before I went back to using Chrome. It just broke too many things to be useful.)
  4. Install a browser extension or run additional security software. For example, there are tools such as Avast Secure Browser (which eliminates ads, blocks third-party cookies and stops phishing), Avast AntiTrack (which eliminates canvas fingerprinting and stops ad targeting) or Avast BreachGuard (which checks to see if your email identity has been part of any data breaches).
  5. Only run your browser in a virtual machine. This is cumbersome at best, and almost unusable for ordinary humans. Still, it can be a good solution for some circumstances for the ultra-paranoid.
  6. Use a VPN, even when you’re at home. Be aware that a VPN only protects your IP address and geolocation data from being transmitted to a website.
  7. Finally, limit your web browsing on your mobile devices as much as possible. Your mobile is a treasure trove of all sorts of information about you, and even if you are using any of the more private browsers, you still can leak some of this information to third parties.

*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Blog | Avast EN authored by Avast Blog. Read the original post at: https://blog.avast.com/when-not-to-accept-cookies-avast

The Link Lonk


September 28, 2020 at 06:29PM
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When Not To Accept Cookies | Avast - Security Boulevard

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Cookies

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