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Sunday, February 28, 2021

IOWA: Homeless girl scout troop sells 5,000 boxes of cookies - kwwl.com

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COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa (CNN) --An Iowa Girl Scout troop has shattered its cookie sales goal for 2021, selling an impressive five thousand boxes. 

The girls are even more amazing themselves because they had to overcome a major obstacle, they are homeless. 

All of the girls in Troop 64224 in Council Bluffs live in Micah house, an emergency homeless shelter. 

Despite COVID-19 and the inability of going door to door this year because of the pandemic, the girls put on their sashes and went to work. 

Their original goal was one thousand boxes of cookies and to sell a box in all fifty states. 

Members of the community also pitched in to help, ordering cookies online and even picking them up or having them delivered. 

Through social media, the girl scouts were able to sell cookies and even have them shipped to all fifty states, as they had hoped. 

The Child Program Specialist of the house Kayla Terrillion said "All of our girls are brand new to the troop because of COVID-19. So, it's brand new eyes, brand new ideas, brand new needs and wants that they want to accomplish from Girl Scouts." 

The money raised from cookie sales will help pay for the Girl's Scouts' field trips later this year. 

The Link Lonk


February 28, 2021 at 11:04PM
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IOWA: Homeless girl scout troop sells 5,000 boxes of cookies - kwwl.com

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Cookies

Local girl scout troop sells cookies at Forest Hills Lodge - WIFR

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ROCKFORD, Ill. (WIFR) - One of the best parts of wintertime is knowing you can stock up on your favorite girl scout cookies once again and as the pandemic impacted the selling season last year local troop are hard at work making up for it.

Northern Illinois Girl Scout Troop 22-9 set- up shop in the parking lot of the Forest Hills Lodge selling 264 boxes Saturday and hoping to sell even more Sunday. The money will allow the girls to bring a butterfly garden to the Stateline to help save some endangered butterfly. Troop leader Sarah Nelson says all girl scout activities are on Zoom which has made it hard to keep some members active in the troop.

“It’s been kind of slow, some troops have had people drop out so it has been kind of mixed depending on where you are at. It’s been hard for us troop leaders to try and keep it going virtually but we are,” Nelson said.

Girl scout sales end March 21. You can get yours at the Forest City Lodge during the next few weekends or go online enter your zip code and support a local troop that way.

Copyright 2021 WIFR. All rights reserved.

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March 01, 2021 at 10:37AM
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Local girl scout troop sells cookies at Forest Hills Lodge - WIFR

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Cookies

Popular Dutch 'Jew cookies' get new name, but Jews were sweet on the old one - The Times of Israel

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AMSTERDAM (JTA) — In Dutch supermarkets, no cookie aisle is fully stocked without a national treat called jodenkoeken, shortbread discs whose Dutch name means “Jew cookies.”

Exactly how jodenkoeken (also spelled jodekoeken) got their name is unclear, but they have been a feature of Dutch teatime since at least the 19th century.

Whatever the etymology, Dutch Jews don’t seem to mind having a cookie named after them. Many even buy them as a joke to bring to relatives abroad or even give to each other.

“I know it sounds strange to Americans, but there’s never been an issue around jodenkoeken,” said Ronny Naftaniel, who led Dutch Jewry’s watchdog group on anti-Semitism for 37 years before becoming vice chair of the Central Jewish Board of the Netherlands a decade ago.

Things changed on Friday: The company behind the Netherlands’ oldest and best-known jodenkoeken brands announced that it was changing the cookie’s name in a bid to “help create a more inclusive society.”

Patisserie Pater wrote on its website that the Davelaar-brand jodenkoeken will be called “odekoeken” — Dutch for “ode cookies.”

The jodekoeken of the Dutch brand Sondey bearing the tagline ‘a cookie to savor.’ (Cnaan Liphshiz/ JTA)

Meanwhile, several other companies also manufacture jodenkoeken, and one, Lotus Bakeries, said on Saturday that it was considering changing the name, too, as “currently [the name] can lead to sensitivities.”

The name change comes at a time when companies the world over are assessing their product lines to ensure that they are culturally appropriate — a reckoning that is hitting the food world hard. And the Netherlands, where the Dutch Christmastime tradition of wearing blackface is a matter of open debate, does feature a few desserts with names that have drawn criticism for being insensitive.

But Dutch Jews say they didn’t see any reason for jodenkoeken to get a new name.

“Davelaar can of course name their products as they please, but jodenkoeken really is not something I’m offended by, and I don’t know of anyone who is,” said Ronit Palache, a 36-year-old Dutch-Jewish journalist and author who said she detected “woke overzealousness” in Patisserie Pater’s decision.

She added, “When you start making corrections no one needs or asks for, you’re just creating resistance and friction over nothing.”

Eddo Verdoner, the chairman of the Central Jewish Board of the Netherlands, praised Patisserie Pater for “thinking of others in times of polarization.” But he told the news site NU that Jewish organizations “never had any issue with jodenkoeken, which never had negative connotations.”

How the cookies got their name is not known, but there are several theories, according to Jonah Freud, who published a book in 2012 about Dutch-Jewish cuisine.

Under one theory, the jodenkoeken’s simple recipe — they require only butter, flour and sugar – was created by a non-Jewish baker whose last name was de Jode. But that man, if he existed, has never been identified.

Another theory, Freud said, holds that an unnamed Amsterdam Jew sold the original recipe to Lotus Bakeries, which made it famous.

Ronit Palache holds the Sondey brand of jodekoeken in Amsterdam, February 22, 2021. (Courtesy of Palache/ via JTA)

According to a third theory, the biscuits were named jodenkoeken because of their simplicity at a time when many Amsterdam Jews were poor.

“But then they have lots and lots of sugar, more than other cookies, which would have been a luxury product in the 19th century, so they weren’t your typical poor people’s food at all,” Freud said.

A fourth hypothesis is that the cookies were introduced by Sephardic Jews who traveled on shipping lines that connected Northern Europe with the Iberian Peninsula’s Bay of Biscay. Advocates for this theory point to the fact that some parts of Norway and Denmark also have a very similar pastry called jodekaker in Norwegian and Danish, while Iceland has a sugarless variant called gyðingakökur — all of which are far less popular and well known than jodenkoeken are in the Netherlands.

Whatever their origins, Freud said, “Everybody likes jodenkoek, in the Netherlands and beyond. So why would we Jews want to distance ourselves from such a tasty treat?”

Many Dutch Jews have jodenkoeken stories. Palache recalled laughing when a former boyfriend, who wasn’t Jewish, brought home jodenkoeken. It was the first time she had them in her home.

Barry Mehler rehearses at the Royal Concert Hall of Amsterdam, January 20, 2020. (Cnaan Liphshiz/ JTA)

Barry Mehler, a New York-born Jewish Amsterdammer and organizer of the city’s main annual Hanukkah concert, also bought jodenkoeken for laughs once to give as a gift to a Jewish colleague from abroad. Asked to explain the joke, Mehler said, “What’s to analyze? It’s just comical. A Jew giving Jew cookies to another Jew.”

He called the name change “ridiculous — unless it’s a marketing strategy that they’re just using to get recognition for their new brand, the ode cookies.”

“They’re cookie-washing the jodenkoeken is what they’re doing,” Mehler said.

Roland Vos, who heads the food and drink department at the Jewish Cultural Quarter, a collection of cultural institutions, lamented the name change.

“I had hoped this was only a prank for Purim,” he wrote on Facebook, referring to the festive Jewish holiday being celebrated this week.

Dutch Jews haven’t always been so nonchalant about desserts named for them.

Naftaniel said he received dozens of complaints in 2005, when he was heading the anti-Semitism watchdog group, from Jews about the reintroduction of a discontinued candy called jodenvet, or “Jew fat.” The name is offensive because it “makes people think about grilling Jews,” Naftaniel said at the time; he said then that jodenkoeken did not carry any problematic connotations. The candy was renamed “chest honey” following the protest.

More recently, Dutch confectioners changed other desserts’ names. One product, a marshmallow-cream cake coated with chocolate, was called negerzoen, or “Negro kiss.” It now goes by just Kisses. (The cookie is a lot like an Israeli Krembo.) And the chain store HEMA, something of a Dutch Target, last year renamed moorkopen, or “Moors’ heads,” as chocolate balls.

Illustrative photo of
Jodenkoeken. (Wikimedia commons/ CC-BY-SA-3.0/ Stuiterballetje)

Black Dutch advocates pressed for changing the negerzoen’s name. Many Dutch Jews, including Palache and Mehler, also found that name inappropriate.

“The difference between jodenkoeken and negerzoenen is that the latter did offend a lot of Black people,” Palache said.

Patisserie Pater, which makes Davelaar, said it was not responding to any outside pressure around jodenkoeken when it changed the name.

“What a shame, we always enjoyed it,” Birgitta van Blitterswijk, a Dutch-Jewish art historian, wrote on Facebook about the company’s decision. “The people who decided this should have spoken to the Jewish community instead of deciding for them.”

Max Moszkowicz, a Dutch-Jewish filmmaker and radio presenter, said he appreciated Patisserie Pater’s attempt to support Jews.

“But it’s both unnecessary and unfortunate,” Moszkowicz, 39, said. “Because finally there’s something named for the Jews that’s nice and that everyone likes — and they take it away from us to be politically correct.”

The Link Lonk


March 01, 2021 at 11:23AM
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Popular Dutch 'Jew cookies' get new name, but Jews were sweet on the old one - The Times of Israel

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Cookies

Ian North of Milk N' Cookies has died - Brooklyn Vegan

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Ian North, who founded '70s glam / power-pop band Milk N' Cookies, has died after suffering a heart attack last week. He was 68. The was shared via longtime friend, musician and photographer Paul Zone, who wrote, "It's with great sadness I share the news that Ian North (Milk 'n Cookies) died this morning. I have been on the phone with Ian’s wife all week, he had a massive heart attack last Saturday."

North formed Milk N' Cookies in 1973, and the band included Justin Strauss (who'd go on to be a major electronic artist and DJ), Michael Ruiz (also of Paul Collins' Beat) and Sal Maida (who also played in Sparks). The band's self-titled 1975 debut album is a classic that you can listen to below. When Milk N' Cookies broke up, Ian North went on to form punk band Ian North's Radio and also was an early synthpop adopter with his solo albums, like 1979's Neo.

"He was the first person who believed in me," Justin Strauss wrote on Instagram in a lovely tribute. "We bonded over the music we loved and would spend endless hours dreaming and scheming up our plans to be pop stars. Like me Ian lived for it 24/7. It was all he wanted, to be respected as a great songwriter in the coolest band. He wrote all the songs in Milk n’ Cookies and they are timeless perfect pop masterpieces." Sal Maida simply wrote, "I don't even know what to say."

Rest in peace, Ian.

Read Justin Strauss' full tribute and listen to some of Ian's music, below.

The Link Lonk


March 01, 2021 at 06:24AM
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Ian North of Milk N' Cookies has died - Brooklyn Vegan

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Cookies

Local Girl Scouts get creative online to sell famous cookies - WHAS11.com

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The organization has encouraged online sales as a result of the pandemic. This way of selling has helped scouts surpass their goals and reach a wider customer base.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Girl Scout cookie season is upon us.

The flavors are the same – but how you get your cookies might be different this year.

In a COVID world, Girl Scouts in Kentuckiana are no longer going door-to -door to sell cookies.

These young entrepreneurs are instead reaching customers with videos online.

“I had to reach a lot more through videos and not go out and ask people in my church or my neighborhood,” 14-year-old Girl Scout Macy Casner said.

Girl Scouts are relying on their Digital Cookie pages to bring in sales. Digital Cookie isn’t new – but this year it’s become more important.

“In the past it was nice to have,” Girl Scouts of Kentuckiana CEO Maggie Elder said. “Today it’s an essential opportunity for us to sell cookies and to help the girls build their business skills and entrepreneurial experience.”

Seven-year-old Girl Scout Janeecia Johns has made her own Facebook page to sell cookies. She makes videos thanking her customers and playing piano to celebrate when she hits her goals. She relies on her online platform and word of mouth for her sales.

“I tell my family to tell their friends,” Johns said.

Eight-year-old Caroline Huelsman is also getting creative online. She’s made a cookie spoof on the popular show “Bridgerton” and a TikTok using the Justin Bieber song “Yummy” to make sales. The videos are new, but the Girl Scout tradition in her family isn’t.

“My mom was a Girl Scout, and my mom’s mom was a Girl Scout, and my mom’s mom’s mom was a Girl Scout leader,” Huelsman said.

By using this platform – Girl Scouts have been able to reach customers all over the country, and make some major sales. Each of these girls has hit their goal, and gone beyond that to make new goals.

“My original goal was 400 and when I topped that I went overboard and wanted 500,” 11-year-old Girl Scout Alyssa Fields said. She has now sold nearly 600 boxes.

If you’d like to buy some cookies, you can check out the Digital Cookies pages of Macy, Janeecia, Caroline, and Alyssa.

►Contact reporter Rose McBride at rmcbride@whas11.com or on Facebook or Twitter. 

►Make it easy to keep up-to-date with more stories like this. Download the WHAS11 News app now. For Apple or Android users.  

Have a news tip? Email assign@whas11.com, visit our Facebook page or Twitter feed.  

The Link Lonk


February 28, 2021 at 06:18PM
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Local Girl Scouts get creative online to sell famous cookies - WHAS11.com

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Cookies

In Photos: It's Girl Scouts cookie time in Stamford - The Advocate

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Tyler Sizemore / Hearst Connecticut Media

North Stamford Girl Scouts Troop 50948 members, from left, Adela Perez, 9, Ella Broggi, 8, Maya Hughes, 9, Emma Podlastina, 8, and Victoria Shaw, 9, sell cookies at High Ridge Center in Stamford, Conn. Sunday, Feb. 28, 2021. Sunday's sale was the first cookie booth of the year in Stamford.

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March 01, 2021 at 01:39AM
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In Photos: It's Girl Scouts cookie time in Stamford - The Advocate

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Girl Scouts Cookies 2021: Iowa troop on mission to shatter sales goal despite homelessness - WLS-TV

cookies.indah.link
COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa -- When one troop of Girl Scouts in Iowa was given the goal of selling more than 1,000 boxes of cookies, the girls put on their signature sashes and got to work, flexing their entrepreneurial skills.

As of Feb. 26, the girls in Troop 64224 of Council Bluffs, Iowa, have sold over 5,000 boxes of cookies, shattering its sales goal for the 2021 cookie selling season. And it's all in spite of one large obstacle.


The girls in the troop live in an emergency homeless shelter known as Micah House.

"You can really see when they've got their sash or their vest on there is a sense of pride and belonging to something that is so respected," Beth Shelton, CEO of Girl Scouts of Greater Iowa said. "That's always sacred and important for kids, but I think particularly during this pandemic."

RELATED: North suburban pair become some of 1st female Eagle Scouts: 'an opportunity for young women to feel empowered'

They also met another goal of selling to customers in all 50 states, and Washington, DC, Kayla Terrillion, a child program specialist at Micah House, told CNN.

Even amid the Covid-19 pandemic, no challenge has proved too big for the troop. In fact, the push to online sales has been a boon for the troop. Terrillion said moving sales primarily online because of the virus helped get the word out for cookie sales. Members of the community -- and beyond -- have been able to order cookies online and pick them up or have them delivered, helping Troop 64224 reach its goal of selling cookies nationwide.

"Having everything on social media this year is completely different, especially for the girls," Terrillion with Micah House said.

RELATED: Buy Girl Scout cookies in new way this year


The troop size fluctuates depending on the number of families living at the shelter. The young girls ranging in from ages five to eight years old are not only thrilled about being Girl Scouts, but surpassing their goals is something the troop takes pride in.

These scouts are described as not only enthusiastic, but entrepreneurial. With about a month left to go on cookie season, this troop will keep selling.

"Like any smart businesswomen, they're going to be taking a look at those goals and reassessing," Shelton said. "They've got it figured out."

RELATED: Girl Scouts debut new French toast-inspired cookie

Micah House's Girl Scout troop began in 2018. About 30% of the 11,000 girls who are members of the Girl Scouts of Greater Iowa are a part of the free or reduced lunch program. Despite any financial issues girls living there face, they are given a free Girl Scout membership, Shelton said. The money from their cookie sales stays local and goes toward activities for the scouts such as field trips.

(The-CNN-Wire & 2021 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.)

The Link Lonk


February 28, 2021 at 10:15AM
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Girl Scouts Cookies 2021: Iowa troop on mission to shatter sales goal despite homelessness - WLS-TV

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Cookies

Making cookies and memories in comfort of home - Elizabethtown News Enterprise

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Like most of Hardin County, I was pretty much snowed in during the recent bad weather. Ice, sleet, snow and cold covered Hardin County and most of the state.

My mom and I hibernated together with the dogs at my house and while it may have been cold and snowy outside we ate pretty well inside.

But we both got the craving for something sweet.

A common thing to do while being snowed in is to bake. Like when bears forage in the forest before hibernating, it seems humans tend to bake.

I don’t know what it is about baking during a snowy day but it makes things feel more warm and toasty.

With limited ingredients in the pantry, I realized I had just the right supplies for a favorite cookie, Snickerdoodles.

For that, I turned to an old cookbook. Old cookbooks often have the best cookie recipes. This one was from the Stephensburg Homemakers Club where my mom was a member of when I was a child.

The recipe calls for shortening, but if you don’t have any on hand, you can substitute butter.

When I make cookies, I like to make big cookies. To do that, I usually use a medium scoop which makes a nice size cookie.

For some reason, Snicker­doodles remind me of school. I think they were often served with school lunches.

What made this even more special is being able to cook up a sweet treat for my mom. It truly was a fun week with mom. I would work from home and she got to spend the day reading, resting and hanging out with the dogs.

After work we cooked great meals, worked puzzles and just hung out. And one night after the road was cleared we did something she can’t do at home – ordered a pizza to be delivered.

On the weekend, we just vegetated and watched movies.

In other words, we made a fun week out of a bad weather week. By Saturday my driveway was cleared and Sunday she went home. Then my dog Lucy sadly laid about the house because she missed her grandma.

Food often is about making memories and we will remember the snow of 2021 as a week where we got to hang out together, eat well and snack on Snickerdoodles.

It was cold outside but the warmth of family was indoors.

The Link Lonk


February 28, 2021 at 12:00PM
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Making cookies and memories in comfort of home - Elizabethtown News Enterprise

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Cookies

Saturday, February 27, 2021

A troop made up of homeless girls is on a mission to sell Girl Scout cookies in all 50 states - CNN

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[unable to retrieve full-text content]
  1. A troop made up of homeless girls is on a mission to sell Girl Scout cookies in all 50 states  CNN
  2. Hungry For Cookies? Head to the Girl Scout Troop 20340 Drive-Thru Cookie Booth  TAPinto.net
  3. Girl Scout cookies in the time of COVID: How CNY troops are getting creative with their sales  syracuse.com
  4. Plymouth Girl Scout sells cookies in all 50 states  WMUR Manchester
  5. Girl Scout offers new ways to buy cookies this year  Mankato Free Press
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News
The Link Lonk


February 28, 2021 at 12:43AM
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A troop made up of homeless girls is on a mission to sell Girl Scout cookies in all 50 states - CNN

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Cookies

Blue Bell Introduces Cookies 'n Cream Cone Ice Cream, Brings 2 Flavors Back - All On Georgia

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Source: Blue Bell Creameries

Last week, Blue Bell Creameries announced the debut of a new flavor, Cookies ‘n Cream Cone, inspired by an old favorite, Cookie Cone. The sweet treat hit stores Thursday and is available in half gallon and pint sizes for a limited time.

Blue Bell says the flavor is a creamy vanilla ice cream combined with chocolate crème filled cookie crumbles, chocolate cone pieces coated in dark chocolate and a chocolate fudge sauce.

From Blue Bell’s press release: “Some of you will remember our Cookie Cone, which inspired this flavor,” said Joe Robertson, executive director of advertising & marketing for Blue Bell. “Imagine our Cookies ’n Cream Ice Cream, then add in cone pieces and a fudgy swirl. It’s an ice cream with all of the delicious ingredients of a Cookie Cone. It’s your favorite cone, but in a carton.”

Blue Bell introduced the Cookie Cone in 1997, and it was mostly sold in school cafeterias. The product has not been available since 2015. “We have heard from many of our fans on social media that the Cookie Cone was a popular lunchtime treat in school,” Robertson added. “Cookies ’n Cream Cone is a new twist on an old favorite that we know Cookie Cone fans will enjoy!”

Also, two pint-sized flavors are back for a limited time, Cotton Candy and Orange Swirl. Cotton Candy is a delicious cotton candy flavored ice cream in shades of pink and blue. Orange Swirl is a refreshing swirl of orange sherbet and vanilla ice cream.

AllOnGeorgia
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February 28, 2021 at 06:27AM
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Blue Bell Introduces Cookies 'n Cream Cone Ice Cream, Brings 2 Flavors Back - All On Georgia

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Cookies

Hungry For Cookies? Head to the Girl Scout Troop 20340 Drive-Thru Cookie Booth - TAPinto.net

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BLOOMFIELD, NJ-- Girl Scout Troop 20340 will be having their First Ever Drive-Thru Cookie Booth on March 6th & 7th 12-4pm.

Location is The Municipal Parking Lot (1 Municipal Plaza, entrance on Bloomfield Ave.)

Contactless credit cards are preferred, but cash is also accepted.  Please remain in your vehicle and remember to wear a mask.

It's a great opportunity to satisfy your sweet tooth while helping a great organization (without leaving your car!).

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 09:23PM
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Hungry For Cookies? Head to the Girl Scout Troop 20340 Drive-Thru Cookie Booth - TAPinto.net

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Cookies

Chef Magnus Nilsson Jam Shortbread Cookie Recipe From Faviken Breakfast - Bloomberg

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[unable to retrieve full-text content]Chef Magnus Nilsson Jam Shortbread Cookie Recipe From Faviken Breakfast  Bloomberg The Link Lonk


February 26, 2021 at 07:40PM
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Chef Magnus Nilsson Jam Shortbread Cookie Recipe From Faviken Breakfast - Bloomberg

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Cookies

Perfectly Dunkable Store-Bought Vegan Cookies - PETA

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Published by Rebecca Maness.

Once you’ve filled your grocery cart with all the essentials—like fruit, veggies, tofu, and pasta—you might find yourself wandering down the snack aisle. To make your browsing a bit easier, we’ve compiled a handy list of all the vegan cookies that you might find in your local grocery store. These pre-made treats make it easy to enjoy a midday pick-me-up or just a quick dessert to end your day on a sweet note. And the best thing is that they don’t contain any animal-derived ingredients.

Other store-bought cookies might contain milk from cows whose babies are stolen from them. Cows are curious, gentle animals who form strong bonds with each other. In the dairy industry, all cows who are used for their milk are eventually killed—and they usually only live to a quarter of their natural life expectancy because of the stress of being constantly kept pregnant or lactating. Other ingredients you should look out for are eggs and honey, which harm chickens and bees.

Refer to this list to find your new favorite store-bought vegan cookies:

365 Sandwich Cremes

All three flavors of these sandwich cookies—the Chocolate, Vanilla, and Mismatched varieties—are vegan. You also might find seasonal varieties in stores, including Chocolate Candy Cane during the holidays.

Trader Joe’s Soft-Baked Snickerdoodles

There are tons of great vegan finds at Trader Joe’s, including these soft-baked snickerdoodles.

Annie’s Organic Grabbits Chocolate Sandwich Cookies

The mint version is vegan, too.

Trader Joe’s Trail Mix Cookies

Peanuts, raisins, and oats give these soft cookies the perfect texture. Take them on a hike, or enjoy them on the couch.

Uncle Eddie’s Vegan Cookies

These chewy cookies come in eight delicious flavors: Chocolate Chip, Chocolate Chip Walnut, Molasses, Oatmeal Chocolate Chip, Oatmeal Raisin, Peanut Butter, Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip, and Trail Mix.

Newman-O’s Sandwich Crèmes

When you purchase these dunkable sandwich cookies, the profits are donated to charity.

Partake

Crunchy flavors include Chocolate Chip, Birthday Cake, Ginger Snap, Double Chocolate Chip, and Carrot Cake. Soft flavors include Cookie Butter, Chocolate Chip, and Triple Chocolate.

Back to Nature

Vegan cookie flavors include California Lemon, Chocolate Chunk, Chocolate Delight, and Classic Crème.


Why Choose Vegan Cookies?

When you choose vegan cookies and other vegan foods at the grocery store, you’re using your power as a consumer to show companies that you want products that don’t hurt animals. You can make a powerful statement against speciesism and help save nearly 200 animals per year just by going vegan:

Order Your Free Starter Kit

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 06:10AM
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Perfectly Dunkable Store-Bought Vegan Cookies - PETA

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Cookies

Italian Almond Cookies Recipe - NYT Cooking - The New York Times

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These delectable almond cookies are made with just a few ingredients. Though they’re typically Sicilian, similar versions are found all over Italy. A bit like macaroons, they are crisp on the outside, with a perfumed chewy interior. They may be baked plain, decorated with candied fruit or whole almonds, or made into thumbprint cookies, filled with a spoonful of good jam. Ideal to bake in advance, these cookies keep well for several days, ready to serve at a moment’s notice.

Featured in: Chef’s Choice: A Dreamy Menu, Inspired By Italy

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 07:49AM
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Italian Almond Cookies Recipe - NYT Cooking - The New York Times

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Shooting reported in Theodore early Saturday morning - WKRG News 5

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AXIS, Ala. (WKRG) -- There's a proposal on the table to expand the Axis Landfill. The change would increase the maximum daily waste volume from 1,500 cubic yards a day to 5,000 tons each day.

People living nearby who are desperately trying to stop the expansion. Phyllis Woods said, "I don't want this within two miles from my house! Nobody does. With all the other issues, we don't need it, it's just not necessary. We have the Chastang Landfill, the Eight Mile Landfill, we don't need it!"

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 04:46PM
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Shooting reported in Theodore early Saturday morning - WKRG News 5

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Cookies

Friday, February 26, 2021

The Best Way to Enjoy Your Girl Scout Cookies? Pair Them With Rum Cocktails! - Augusta

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Toast-Yay! cookies + Breakfast in Bed Old Fashioned cocktail (photo and recipe by @theroguebrusselsprout)

By Jennifer McKee

It’s Girl Scout Cookie season! And we’ve got the ultimate way to enjoy your cookie haul—with cocktail pairings from Kōloa Rum; their products come in flavors you may not have heard of before, making for delightful desserts. But more about that below. On to the pairings!

Toast-Yay! cookies + Breakfast in Bed Old Fashioned cocktail

New for 2021, Girl Scouts’ Toast-Yay! cookies taste like a piece of French Toast dipped in icing. Kōloa’s coffee rum is intensely rich, with flavors of espresso and white cane sugar. Together, the two created the perfect morning cocktail—although you’ll want to drink it morning, noon and night.

1.5 oz. bourbon
1 oz. Kōloa Coffee Rum
0.25 oz. maple syrup
Few dashes coffee bitters (or other bitters)
Squeeze of orange bitters

Mix ingredients in a cocktail stirring glass with ice, then strain into a highball glass with a few large ice cubes. Garnish with an orange slice and a sliver of toasted waffle.

Samoas cookies + Chocolate Milk and Honey cocktail (photo and recipe by Shanna Schad of Pineapple and Coconut)

Samoas cookies + Chocolate Milk and Honey cocktail

Samoas are a dreamy combination of caramel, coconut and chocolate. Kōloa’s cacao is a chocolate-flavored rum with mocha notes and a buttery-smooth taste. Together, they make for a simple, unforgettable duo.

2 oz. Kōloa Cacao Rum
1 oz. cream, milk or non-dairy milk of your choice
0.5 oz. honey cinnamon simple syrup*

Combine all ingredients in a cocktail shaker tin filled with ice. Shake well then strain into martini or coupe glass.

*For the honey simple syrup, combine a 1:1 ratio of honey to water in a sauce pan. Add in 1-2 whole cinnamon sticks. Bring to a boil while stirring to dissolve the honey. Turn off heat and let cool for an hour.

Lemon-Ups cookies + Meyer Lemon Rum Sour cocktail (photo and recipe by Shanna Schad of Pineapple and Coconut)

Lemon-Ups cookies + Meyer Lemon Rum Sour cocktail

Lemon-Ups are bold, crispy cookies with motivational messages, inspired by Girl Scout entrepreneurs, carved into them. Kōloa’s Reserve Aged Rum is aged in White Oak barrels and has fragrant notes of cinnamon, orange, roasted almond and charred oak. Delight in a fresh, zesty pairing.

1.5 oz. Kōloa Reserve Aged Rum
0.5 oz. maraschino liqueur
1 oz. fresh Meyer lemon juice
0.5 oz. simple syrup
0.25 oz. (bar spoon) juice from maraschino cherry jar
Few dashes of Crude Bitters “Rizzo” bitters (rosemary, grapefruit, peppercorn)

Fill a rocks glass with ice and set aside. Pour in the bar spoon of juice from the jar of maraschino cherries. Add the rest of the cocktail ingredients to a cocktail shaker tin and shake well. Strain into the glass, top with a lemon wedge and two maraschino cherries.

Thin Mints cookies + Cocoa-Nut Mint Julep cocktail (courtesy Kōloa Rum Company)

Thin Mints cookies + Cocoa-Nut Mint Julep cocktail

The iconic Thin Mints are a minty, chocolate breath of fresh air (especially when stored in the freezer). Kōloa’s coconut finishes with light toasted coconut, hints of lime zest and a bit of caramelized pineapple. Combined with Kōloa’s cacao, t’s a spirited twist on the traditional julep.

1.5 oz. Kōloa Coconut Rum
0.25 oz. coconut sugar (or 1 bar spoon)
0.25 oz. orgeat
0.5 oz Kōloa Cacao Rum, to float
1 large mint sprig

Gently muddle the mint sprig with the coconut sugar. Add the Kōloa Coconut Rum, orgeat and a scoop of crushed ice. Gently stir to integrate ingredients. Float the Kōloa Cacao Rum on top, finish with more crushed ice and top with toasted coconut flakes and mint sprig.

Find Kōloa rum online at these national retailers: Drizly, Mel & Rose, Blackwell’s Wine & Spirits and Hi Time Wine Cellars.

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 04:38AM
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The Best Way to Enjoy Your Girl Scout Cookies? Pair Them With Rum Cocktails! - Augusta

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Cookies

Maine teen's love of baking cookies raises hundreds of dollars for children's hospital - WMTW Portland

cookies.indah.link

A teenage girl from Maine is using her love of baking chocolate chip cookies to help raise money for charity."It's just a good idea and with COVID happing and stuff. There's a lot of people who need money right now,” Maggie Cook said.Cook, who is a freshman at Bonny Eagle High School, created Cookie Love 207. She spends much of her at-home time in the kitchen baking nine-inch chocolate chip cookies, which she offers in exchange for a donation.“I thought it would only be my mom's Facebook friends, or whatever, but they kept sharing our page and stuff. A lot of people started to donate,” Cook said.Through Facebook, Cook takes individual orders. She delivered her first batch of nearly five-dozen cookies in early February through a drive-thru at a local church.She asked people to donate whatever they can and raised $1,000 for the Barbara Bush Children’s Hospital."When people are picking up their cookies, they might donate even more. We had that happen to us. We got $100 from one lady,” Cook said.She is raising money while having fun with her family.“It's good because my parents are always there helping me, and we have like music playing and it's fun because we're just making cookies,” Cook said.Cook said she plans to continue baking her cookies until at least spring when she hopes to get back to after-school sports.She said she is proud to have spent the winter spreading love and helping her community with her cookies.“It feels good that I did something to help people this winter,” Cook said.She is preparing a second batch of cookies that will be delivered on Sunday. She can’t take any more orders but hopes to offer a third batch in March through her Facebook page.

A teenage girl from Maine is using her love of baking chocolate chip cookies to help raise money for charity.

"It's just a good idea and with COVID happing and stuff. There's a lot of people who need money right now,” Maggie Cook said.

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Cook, who is a freshman at Bonny Eagle High School, created Cookie Love 207. She spends much of her at-home time in the kitchen baking nine-inch chocolate chip cookies, which she offers in exchange for a donation.

“I thought it would only be my mom's Facebook friends, or whatever, but they kept sharing our page and stuff. A lot of people started to donate,” Cook said.

Through Facebook, Cook takes individual orders. She delivered her first batch of nearly five-dozen cookies in early February through a drive-thru at a local church.

She asked people to donate whatever they can and raised $1,000 for the Barbara Bush Children’s Hospital.

"When people are picking up their cookies, they might donate even more. We had that happen to us. We got $100 from one lady,” Cook said.

She is raising money while having fun with her family.

“It's good because my parents are always there helping me, and we have like music playing and it's fun because we're just making cookies,” Cook said.

Cook said she plans to continue baking her cookies until at least spring when she hopes to get back to after-school sports.

She said she is proud to have spent the winter spreading love and helping her community with her cookies.

“It feels good that I did something to help people this winter,” Cook said.

She is preparing a second batch of cookies that will be delivered on Sunday. She can’t take any more orders but hopes to offer a third batch in March through her Facebook page.

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 07:26AM
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Maine teen's love of baking cookies raises hundreds of dollars for children's hospital - WMTW Portland

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

When it Comes to Cookies, Do Consumers Want Less Choices? - The National Law Review

cookies.indah.link

David Zetoony, Co-Chair of the firm's U.S. Data, Privacy and Cybersecurity Practice, focuses on helping businesses navigate data privacy and cyber security laws from a practical standpoint. David has helped hundreds of companies establish and maintain ongoing privacy and security programs, and he has defended corporate privacy and security practices in investigations initiated by the Federal Trade Commission, and other data privacy and security regulatory agencies around the world, as well as in class action litigation. 

David receives regular recognitions from clients and peers for...

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 02:37AM
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When it Comes to Cookies, Do Consumers Want Less Choices? - The National Law Review

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Cookies

Two local men start nationwide movement by spreading kindness with cookies - WTAJ - www.wearecentralpa.com

cookies.indah.link

HUNTINGDON COUNTY, Pa. (WTAJ) — What are the ingredients for the perfect cookie?

You may need some sugar, eggs and butter, but if you ask Scott McKenzie and Jeremy Uhrich, the founders of the organization “Cookies for Caregivers,” a treat will always taste a little sweeter if you mix it with kindness.

“We’re baking cookies and we are making other people’s days better,” McKenzie said. “What is not fun about that?”

McKenzie had never even baked a cookie before the pandemic. When he got furloughed from his job he got thinking.

“I told myself I was going to do something I had never done before every week that I was on furlough,” he explained. “So the first thing I did was realize I was hungry!”

McKenzie decided to pull out the Betty Crocker cookbook and the baking began.

The cookies turned out pretty good so McKenzie wanted to brag and posted a picture to Facebook.

“I thought it was very ironic when I saw his post,” Uhrich explained. “I responded back immediately and said, ‘you may have baked chocolate chip cookies for the first time, but I guarantee mine are better!’ So I put him up to the challenge and he responded back immediately.”

“It was on like Donkey Kong,” McKenzie continued.

In stepped the Huntingdon Borough mayor who judged the cookies on Fabebook live. When it was over they delivered the extras to those working on the frontlines as a way to say thank you and realized they had a good thing.

“We knew that we had something and it wasn’t difficult,” Uhrich said. “It was baking a few dozen cookies and doing something good by giving them out and delivering them to people who in our eyes at the time were our heroes going out and working each day.”

McKenzie then did something else he had never done before. He created a Facebook group called “Cookies for Caregivers” and it took off.

Each week volunteer bakers from the community help make dozens of cookies. McKenzie and Uhrich then hand them out to the people who put their lives on the line every day.

The freshly baked cookies are for everyone who cares for the community. The group recognizes the importance each job has on keeping our world moving during the toughest times.

“Who isn’t essential,” McKenzie said. “Everybody is essential. For communities to work it takes everybody. We want to not rest until we thank everybody who is out there.”

Cookies are not only being delivered in Central Pennsylvania, but from coast to coast. Right now there are more than 100 chapters across the country and in some major cities.

“Being able to help somebody understand that they are visible, that they do matter, that they are a crucial part of your environment and your community, what’s wrong with that,” McKenzie said. “There’s nothing wrong with that.”

For any baked good you of course need the sugar, eggs and butter, but sometimes the best ingredients may not be something you can buy. If you sprinkle in a little kindness you will always have the recipe for the perfect cookie. A recipe we should all try and follow.

“We don’t want to take a week off,” Uhrich said. “Giving kindness and spreading kindness and cheer to people, there is no taking that off.”

Even when the pandemic is behind us McKenzie and Uhrich plan to keep going. They said there is no expiration date on kindness.

If you know someone or an organization that’s making it matter in our community, send an email to msmolka@wtajtv.com or reach out on Facebook.

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 04:40AM
https://ift.tt/3bBjoy0

Two local men start nationwide movement by spreading kindness with cookies - WTAJ - www.wearecentralpa.com

https://ift.tt/2CmfU4u
Cookies

Two local men start nationwide movement by spreading kindness with cookies - WTAJ - www.wearecentralpa.com

cookies.indah.link

HUNTINGDON COUNTY, Pa. (WTAJ) — What are the ingredients for the perfect cookie?

You may need some sugar, eggs and butter, but if you ask Scott McKenzie and Jeremy Uhrich, the founders of the organization “Cookies for Caregivers,” a treat will always taste a little sweeter if you mix it with kindness.

“We’re baking cookies and we are making other people’s days better,” McKenzie said. “What is not fun about that?”

McKenzie had never even baked a cookie before the pandemic. When he got furloughed from his job he got thinking.

“I told myself I was going to do something I had never done before every week that I was on furlough,” he explained. “So the first thing I did was realize I was hungry!”

McKenzie decided to pull out the Betty Crocker cookbook and the baking began.

The cookies turned out pretty good so McKenzie wanted to brag and posted a picture to Facebook.

“I thought it was very ironic when I saw his post,” Uhrich explained. “I responded back immediately and said, ‘you may have baked chocolate chip cookies for the first time, but I guarantee mine are better!’ So I put him up to the challenge and he responded back immediately.”

“It was on like Donkey Kong,” McKenzie continued.

In stepped the Huntingdon Borough mayor who judged the cookies on Fabebook live. When it was over they delivered the extras to those working on the frontlines as a way to say thank you and realized they had a good thing.

“We knew that we had something and it wasn’t difficult,” Uhrich said. “It was baking a few dozen cookies and doing something good by giving them out and delivering them to people who in our eyes at the time were our heroes going out and working each day.”

McKenzie then did something else he had never done before. He created a Facebook group called “Cookies for Caregivers” and it took off.

Each week volunteer bakers from the community help make dozens of cookies. McKenzie and Uhrich then hand them out to the people who put their lives on the line every day.

The freshly baked cookies are for everyone who cares for the community. The group recognizes the importance each job has on keeping our world moving during the toughest times.

“Who isn’t essential,” McKenzie said. “Everybody is essential. For communities to work it takes everybody. We want to not rest until we thank everybody who is out there.”

Cookies are not only being delivered in Central Pennsylvania, but from coast to coast. Right now there are more than 100 chapters across the country and in some major cities.

“Being able to help somebody understand that they are visible, that they do matter, that they are a crucial part of your environment and your community, what’s wrong with that,” McKenzie said. “There’s nothing wrong with that.”

For any baked good you of course need the sugar, eggs and butter, but sometimes the best ingredients may not be something you can buy. If you sprinkle in a little kindness you will always have the recipe for the perfect cookie. A recipe we should all try and follow.

“We don’t want to take a week off,” Uhrich said. “Giving kindness and spreading kindness and cheer to people, there is no taking that off.”

Even when the pandemic is behind us McKenzie and Uhrich plan to keep going. They said there is no expiration date on kindness.

If you know someone or an organization that’s making it matter in our community, send an email to msmolka@wtajtv.com or reach out on Facebook.

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 04:40AM
https://ift.tt/3bBjoy0

Two local men start nationwide movement by spreading kindness with cookies - WTAJ - www.wearecentralpa.com

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

Atlanta Edgewood community to welcome Insomnia Cookies - Atlanta Journal Constitution

cookies.indah.link

The shop will be open as late as 2 a.m. three days a week and will offer delivery beginning at noon most days, with late-night delivery until 1 a.m. or later. Delivery will be available in the Edgewood neighborhood and adjacent east side communities. Visit the website for details on retail and delivery hours. And when you’re eager for a taste of the shop’s, gooey, sweet cookies or decadent ice cream sandwiches you can order online.

Exploreirthday cake, chocolate chunk and double chocolate chunk

Insomnia Cookies began in 2003 in the dorm room of then-college student Seth Berkowitz at the University of Pennsylvania. It now has more than 100 locations and offers a variety of cookies, brownies and ice cream combinations.

The classic cookie assortment includes chocolate chunk, snickerdoodle, double chocolate chunk, sugar, M&M, double chocolate mint, oatmeal raisin, peanut butter chip and white chocolate macadamia.

Patrons who want a bigger indulgence can enjoy six deluxe cookie options: s’mores, peanut butter cup, triple chocolate chunk, confetti, salted caramel and oatmeal chocolate walnut.

There are also gluten-free and vegan options, including vegan cookies in the flavors chocolate chip, birthday cake, chocolate chunk and double chocolate chunk.

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 01:38AM
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Atlanta Edgewood community to welcome Insomnia Cookies - Atlanta Journal Constitution

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Cookies

Hydrox Cookies vs. Oreos: How the Lookalike Competitor Cookies Actually Differ - POPSUGAR

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tmp_f98FKE_942bdde0c8ee83ad_StockSnap_MSKF90JOSH.jpg

Many versions of cream-filled cookies can be found on grocery store shelves around the country, but the most popular and recognizable brand has to be Oreos. While no one can compete with the famed chocolate sandwich cookie today, Oreo used to have major competition with rival brand Hydrox cookies. In 1912 when Oreos hit grocery store shelves, they were actually the second chocolate sandwich cookie to do so, because Hydrox cookies debuted in 1908. The latter was manufactured by Sunshine Biscuits, while Oreos were and still are manufactured by Nabisco.

When Sunshine Biscuits closed, Hydrox cookies were eventually taken over by Keebler, who renamed the cookies Droxies. The new name stuck when Kellogg bought the brand in 2001, but the cookies didn't last much longer, being discontinued just two years later. Now Amazon has started selling Hydrox cookies made by Leaf Brands. The new company uses real cane sugar in their cookies as opposed to the high-fructose corn syrup in Oreos, and doesn't used any hydrogenated oils, artificial flavors, or GMOs in their cookie-making.

As far as looks, each cookie features a fun design, but they are different. Oreos feature flowers with the brand name stamped right onto each cookie, while Hydrox features swirls with no name embossed on the cookie. Both cookies are chocolate with creamy white centers, but apparently taste completely different.

According to taste testers and fans of both cookies, the difference can be found in both the cookie and the cream. The Hydrox cookie is more crunchy with a stronger chocolate taste, while Oreo cookies are a little more crumbly but with more sweetness. The cream filling on Hydrox cookies is smoother and not overly sweet, while the Oreo cream is thick and ultra sweet.

If you haven't picked a side in this old-yet-growing cookie war then you're going to want to pick up or order both Hydrox cookies and Oreo cookies for a taste test of your own. Just don't forget to pour yourself a glass of milk to go with it.

The Link Lonk


February 27, 2021 at 01:25AM
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Hydrox Cookies vs. Oreos: How the Lookalike Competitor Cookies Actually Differ - POPSUGAR

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Cookies

Chef Magnus Nilsson Jam Shortbread Cookie Recipe From Faviken Breakfast - Bloomberg

cookies.indah.link
Shortbread cookies that were integral to the experience at Faviken. 

Photographer: Kate Krader/Boomberg

Editor’s Note: As more people are working from home, Bloomberg Pursuits is running a weekly Lunch Break column that highlights a notable recipe from a favorite cookbook and the hack that makes it genius.

The doors to Fäviken, the legendary and remote restaurant in Jämtland, Sweden, closed permanently on Dec. 14, 2019. The end had been announced months ahead by chef Magnus Nilsson, who wanted to focus on other projects. Still the news was a crashing disappointment for culinary tourists in search of the meal of a lifetime. The 24-seat Fäviken revolved around ingredients from the surrounding wilderness, with dishes like his signature scallops cooked over burning juniper branches—it was also one of the toughest reservations in the world to score. 

relates to The Simplest Cookie Recipe From One of the World’s Best Chefs

Nilsson at Fäviken before it closed.

Photographer: Erik Olsson

For anyone who never made it there, and everyone who did, Nilsson recently produced one of the most singular chefs’ cookbooks to come out in a while. Fäviken: 4015 Days, Beginning to End (Phaidon, $60) chronicles the life of the restaurant through recipes, images, and long, conversational observations about the culinary subjects that have dominated conversations over the last decade at the highest of profile restaurants. Ever wondered about what chefs think about culinary plagiarism and the DNA of a dish? Nilsson has.

It’s easy to write a bad restaurant cookbook. But a great one is satisfying in a way that complements and might even exceed visiting that dining spot, with stories of the place echoing around recipes that might captivate you.

relates to The Simplest Cookie Recipe From One of the World’s Best Chefs

Source: Phaidon

As per the title, the book takes readers through the 4,000-plus days that Nilsson commandeered his remote restaurant, which required hours of travel from Stockholm, via plane and then car over small backroads.

Not many of the 100-plus recipes in his book will be accessible to home cooks that keep a standard pantry, for instance wild trout roe served in a warm crust of dried pig’s blood. Or pig’s head dipped in sourdough and then deep fried (despite the dramatic image evoked by the title, these are small snacks, served on twig skewers).

Nilsson’s tome is more like a compelling podcast with recipes thrown in. He speaks to subjects like Why Fäviken Had to Close, Really—it’s worth buying the book just to read the compelling chronicle of a very intense case of burn out. There’s a treatise on the hypocrisy of sustainability in restaurants. An index of standout dishes listed by date in chronological order make compelling history of Fäviken all by itself.

relates to The Simplest Cookie Recipe From One of the World’s Best Chefs

The breakfast extravaganza at Fäviken.

Photographer: Erik Olsson

One recipe stands out in the mix for its stark simplicity: shortbread cookies with jam. They represent something powerful for Nilsson, who is now academy director at the forward thinking hospitality-focused MAD Academy in Copenhagen, as well as the owner of a 44-acre apple farm.

“These cookies were the dish we served the longest at Fäviken,” says Nilsson via a video call. The recipe came from the grandmother of his first employee, Douglas Tjärnhammar-Alm. They were a featured part of one of the world’s great breakfasts: a packed table of warm, dark-crusted rye bread; fresh butter, cheeses, and hot-smoked breakfast charcuterie; soft boiled, very fresh eggs; and dense bowls of grain and seed porridge with salty butter. The cookies, topped with bright jam, made with fruits on hand like cloudberry, animated the meal with a dessert-for-breakfast playfulness.

“It is a true Swedish recipe: the grain we used was milled locally, the jam is made with local fruit. They were integral to the experience of Fäviken,” says Nilsson. “Also the cookies are delicious.”

relates to The Simplest Cookie Recipe From One of the World’s Best Chefs

A chefs meeting with a view at Fäviken

Photographer: Erik Olsson

The shortbread is a standard mix of butter, sugar, flour and eggs, shaped into little balls, then pressed down with a thumbprint center to be filled whatever jam you like best (Nilsson prefers raspberry). Though there’s nothing revolutionary about them, the crumbly buttery cookie that melts in your mouth with a flash of fruity jam is delightful, especially when you eat them warm. Nilsson recommends savoring as soon as they’re reasonably cool enough.

He adds: “The cookies say a lot about Fäviken. Looking back, it was a courageous thing to do for an ambitious, contemporary chef, to serve cookies like that. They weren’t deconstructed. They were a grandmother’s recipe. And they never fail.”

The following recipe is adapted from Fäviken: 4015 Days, Beginning to End, by Magnus Nilsson.

Tester’s note: The original recipe doesn’t include salt, although I thought it highlights the buttery cookies even more.

Douglas Shortbread Cookies

relates to The Simplest Cookie Recipe From One of the World’s Best Chefs

The article’s author needs to perfect her cookie shaping skills to make them look more like the ones from Fäviken. But they’re still delicious.

Photographer: Kate Krader/Bloomberg

Makes about 36 cookies

3 ¾ cups flour (500 gm)
1 cup plus 1 tbsp. sugar (220 gm)
1 tbsp. baking powder
Large pinch of salt (optional)
2 ½ sticks unsalted butter (10 oz. or 300 gm), at room temperature
2 large fresh eggs, at room temperature, lightly beaten
Your favorite jam, preferably home made

relates to The Simplest Cookie Recipe From One of the World’s Best Chefs

The cookie’s ingredient list is extremely short.

Photographer: Kate Krader/Bloomberg

Preheat the oven to 400°F. Line 2 or 3 large baking sheets with parchment paper.

Combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, salt, if using, with the butter. Knead with your hands or beat at low speed with an electric mixer until thoroughly combined. Add the eggs and mix just until combined.

Shape dough into small balls, around 1 inch wide, and arrange on prepared baking sheets; if necessary, you can bake the cookies in batches.. Flatten the balls slightly, then make an indentation in each one with your finger. Fill the indentation with jam and bake for about 12 minutes, until golden brown. Eat them when they’re warm.

The Link Lonk


February 26, 2021 at 07:40PM
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Chef Magnus Nilsson Jam Shortbread Cookie Recipe From Faviken Breakfast - Bloomberg

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Butter Cookies

Looking for a late-night snack? Let's Get Baked cookie delivery launches in New Bedford - SouthCoastToday.com

cookies.indah.link
Seth Chitwood   | Standard-Times

NEW BEDFORD — Attention cookie lovers, there’s now a way to satisfy that evening confectionery craving while supporting a New Bedford bakery.

Let’s Get Baked Cookies is a newly launched cookie service available 5 to 10 p.m. on Fridays and Saturday, delivering warm from the over within a 30-mile radius, from its “ghost kitchen” location at On the Run Cinnabun on Rockdale Avenue.

The store then transforms into her exclusive cookie delivery service. "Cookies are a great all-American treat,” owner Mary Kelly-Zis said. “People love cookies and they’re good anytime.

Ghost kitchens: A new twist on delivery at some favorite haunts in New Bedford, Fall River

“I’ve wanted to do something like this for a while because there’s a need for this,” she said. According to Kelly-Zis, her cookie is unique. “They’re 4.5-5 ounces, almost a half a pound,” Kelly-Zis added. “And they have so much flavor.”

Mariah Carey cookies and more on the menu

The menu features 13 cookie flavors. Kelly-Zis says their best seller is the chocolate chip but the peanut butter one sounds just as yummy. “We have a peanut butter base, then crushed Reese’s peanut butter cups, then roll it in roasted peanuts, then add chocolate chips.”

Kelly-Zis noted any cookies containing nuts are baked separately from her other cookies to accommodate allergies. The shop also offers brownies, cookie dough and cereal milk such as fruity pebbles, cocoa puffs, cinnamon toast crunch, plain, coffee and chocolate.

Community: 4 reasons to support your local bakery this summer

And big news, Let’s Get Baked Cookies will be selling the Mariah Carey cookie line, Mariah’s Cookies, featuring eight flavors. Kelly-Zis says she has the exclusive rights, in a 35-mile radius and the singer’s treats will be available starting March 5.

How it all started

Born and raised in New Bedford, Kelly-Zis learned to bake from her Nan, but, would bake frequently with her sister and mom. “My mom is an awesome baker,” Kelly-Zis said. “I learned from who I consider to be the best in the business.”

A Voc-Tech (class of 1991) alum, Kelly-Zis first opened a little French bakery in 2015 called “Le Desserterie.” After only a year, she had to make the difficult decision to close. Then, in summer 2019, she made a triumphant return with her seasonal shop, Dough Fairhaven. It was the success of her dough (also available for pick-up and delivery) that led her to crossover into the cookie world.

In Summer 2020, Kelly-Zis opened On the Run Cinnabun. The 750 square-foot shop is located in the old Wallie’s Café, only a stone’s throw away from Buttonwood Park. “It’s a very homey kitchen, a cozy experience in there,” she said. “When you come into the shop, in the morning, you’re going to smell cinnamon.”

On a roll: A look at On The Run Cinnabun, one of New Bedford's newest businesses

Kelly-Zis runs the store with her 18-year-old daughter, Kat. “It was a great opportunity for her to do something so close with me, we’re almost a partnership… It’s helping to make money to pay for her college.”

The name, “Let’s Get Baked Cookies” was her daughter's idea. “She thought it would attract the younger crowd,” Kelly-Zis said. “They’re probably the ones looking for a late-night snack.”

Every 20 minutes we’re pumping cookies out of the oven,” she said.  “They’re warm, they’re fresh, they’re soft.” And rest-assured, Kelly-Zis says the cookies stay warm in the containers for up to 30-40 minutes when out for delivery.

“I love to bake and I love making people happy,” Kelly-Zis said. “Baking something delicious to make people smile or happy...that’s what this is all about.”

Let’s Get Baked Cookie is available to order online, pick up in person and curbside take-away at 218 Rockdale Avenue. Their menu is available on their website. Follow on their official Facebook for more information. Catering options are also available.

The Link Lonk


February 26, 2021 at 05:09PM
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Looking for a late-night snack? Let's Get Baked cookie delivery launches in New Bedford - SouthCoastToday.com

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Cookies

Thursday, February 25, 2021

Everyday Cookies living up to its name becoming one of the best Vancouver cookie delivery services - Yahoo Finance

cookies.indah.link

BURNABY, BC, Feb. 21, 2021 /CNW/ - Everyday Cookie is a swiftly growing cookie delivery service in Vancouver, Canada, and a symbol for traditional delicacy to its customers. The company is living up to its name by becoming one of the best Vancouver cookie delivery services with its countless delicious and unique cookies that is a blend of home style and gourmet recipes that create a warm and nostalgic sensation in the mouth. The company offers both offline and online services all over Vancouver.

Everyday Cookies' signature creation Chocolate Chip Cookie is always high on demand and going off the shelves in the blink of an eye. The soft and creamy cookie bedazzled with chunky chocolate chips melts in the mouth revealing the secret fountain of oozing chocolate inside with all the gooey goodness. The owners of the company follow traditional and authentic cookie baking formulas with a rich amount of the finest ingredients to make all their cookies. From plain old Short Bread Cookies to exquisite Chocolate Chip Cookies, and from some funky Funfetti Cookies to the healthier Oatmeal Apple Pie Cookie, the company has a wide variety of diversity to offer the cookie-lovers in the Lower mainland.

Baking has always been a lovely hobby to the owner being close to her heart. After gaining a repeated and tremendous amount of positive feedback and support from her friends and families who find her recipes irresistible, she finally decided to make it a fully-fledged business opening up her very own cookie delivery service. To try out different things and satisfy the craving of the clients, she experimented with her long-time recipes and embedded newer ingredients to come up with fresher and the most unique cookies that became a huge hit among foodies, adults and children alike. They explore newer possibilities regularly combining different flavors to stay innovative and please the changing taste buds of their consumers.

Everyday Cookies uses fresh and premium ingredients for their cookie making process. Every component used in their cookies is hand-picked carefully and only the finest constituents make the final cut. The company makes no compromises with the quality of the items used in their recipes and are very honest and strict about it. They take their work very seriously as the industry deals with products that people consume directly. The numerous positive reviews are an example of their quality and delivery service that has built them a noteworthy reputation in a short time.

Armed with their 40-year experience, the company is highly efficient in recreating classic cookies with a hint of their enriching twist. Baked with love and precise techniques, their cookies are never dry and rather soft and buttery that shoots a wave of pleasure in the mouth. These addictive cookies are perfect to devour, complimented with a cold glass of milk. They are the ideal gifts for friends and family members, especially for 2021 as they offer no-contact delivery. Everyone is welcome to order cookies online from their website.

Visit them at https://ift.tt/3su0ZtQ for more details.

SOURCE Everyday Cookies

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View original content: http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/February2021/25/c6951.html

The Link Lonk


February 26, 2021 at 07:58AM
https://ift.tt/3uBccKW

Everyday Cookies living up to its name becoming one of the best Vancouver cookie delivery services - Yahoo Finance

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