Frosted Red Velvet Cookies + 5 Holiday Cookie Links You Can’t Miss!

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Did you ever watch Steal Magnolias?  The Julia Roberts movie that came out in 1989? No? You should put it on your Netflix list.  My sister and I watched it over and over.  We were obsessed with the movie and with Julia Roberts.  If you did watch it you might remember the groom’s cake: a red velvet cake shaped like an armadillo, covered in gray frosting.  This was my first introduction to red velvet.  Many years later when the cupcake craze hit Boston, I ate my first red velvet cupcake.  After taking a single bite I understood the obsession and, well, I became obsessed.  I ordered red velvet anything whenever I got a chance.  At my brother’s wedding two years ago, I stood in my beautiful, pewter colored bridesmaid dress and devoured two red velvet cupcakes during the course of one song.  I’m not ashamed; they were best I ever had!

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The combination of the cream cheese frosting and the cocoa are amazing together, but the thing that gets me every time is the bright, red crumb.  It’s not magic, I know.  The cookies get their vibrant color from red food coloring and natural cocoa powder.  It’s just magical baking science.

Last December, I saw a recipe for frosted red velvet cookies in Cook’s Illustrated.  I dog-eared the page, but never made the cookies.  This year I made sure they were in my holiday cookie rotation.

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Bubba and kids went nuts for them.  C asked, just before she shoved a cookie into her mouth, “Umm, are they red velvet?” My girl is hooked.  I know this is the season of sharing, kindness and generosity, but we didn’t share these cookies.  We ate them as if they were about to vanish.  Before long one cookie and a few crumbs remained.

Frosted Red Velvet Cookies

Recipe barely adapted from Cook’s Illustrated Christmas Cookies

makes about 22 cookies

Ingredients:

1 + 3/4 cups unbleached, all-purpose flour

1 tablespoon natural unsweetened cocoa powder

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

1/4 teaspoon kosher salt

12 tablespoons of unsalted butter, at room temperature

1 cup sugar

1 large egg

1 tablespoon red food coloring

1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1/4 cup of 2% Greek yogurt

4 ounces of cream cheese, softened

11/4 cups confectioners’ sugar

holiday sprinkles for decorating, optional

Directions:

Pre-heat your oven to 350F and line two baking sheets with parchment paper.

In a small bowl, whisk together your flour, cocoa, baking soda and salt.  Set aside.  Using a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment cream 8 tablespoons (1 stick) of softened butter.  Add sugar and beat until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes or so.  Next add your egg, food coloring and 1 teaspoon of vanilla and beat until combined.

Lower the speed and add half of the flour mixture, then the Greek yogurt and ending with the rest of the flour mixture.

Scoop up 2 tablespoons of dough and drop on prepared baking sheets.  Leave about 2 inches in between each dough mound.  Bake each sheet, separately, for about 16 minutes or until the centers are set.  Be sure to rotate the pan halfway through baking.  Allow the cookies to cool on the sheet pans for about 5 minutes and then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

While the cookies cool, prepare the cream cheese frosting.  Use a clean, dry bowl!  With a paddle attachment, mix the cream cheese, 4 tablespoons of butter and 1/2 teaspoon of vanilla on medium speed for about a minute.  Lower the speed and add the confectioners’ sugar.  Mix for a minute.  Increase the speed to medium/high and beat until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes.  Spread a spoonful of frosting on each cookie and decorate with sprinkles, if desired.  The cookies taste best the day they are made, but taste great the next day too!  If you have any left over, store them in an air-tight container at room temperature.  Enjoy!

5 Can’t Miss Holiday Cookie Recipes

Love white chocolate? How about peppermint?  Check out Not Without Salt’s white chocolate peppermint cookies with vanilla salt.  That’s right, vanilla salt. Yum!

My kids love hot cocoa.  Hot cocoa with a handful of marshmallows floating on top is their favorite winter-time drink.  I think I will blow their minds when I make Laura’s, at Fork Knife Swoon, recipe for flourless hot cocoa cookies!

Chocolate, caramel and salt need to happen during the holidays.  Head to Bakers Royale for salted chocolate caramel snickers cookie recipe.  My mouth is watering.

If you love thumbprint cookies, check out mini chocolate thumbprint cookies at Pinch of Yum.  They look like just the dessert to serve at your next holiday gathering!

My most pinned recipe: lemon ricotta cookies.  They will make your family swoon this holiday season!

The Great American Milk Drive is taking place now.  Feeding America will donate a gallon for a gallon until December 31st.  Consider making a donation today!

 

The Best Chocolate Crinkle Cookies + 5 Crinkle Cookie Recipes for the Holidays!

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We got back from our Thanksgiving trip to Philly a day early, thinking we would take a day to recover from all the eating, drinking and socializing we enjoyed days before.  I woke up blurry eyed on Sunday, wanting and needing more sleep.  I walked downstairs to find the kids eating breakfast, full of energy, ready for the next…holiday.  Bubba poured me a giant cup of coffee.

“Want to get the tree today?” Today? Can I go back to bed instead? Can we enjoy the after glow of Thanksgiving for just a minute?

“We are getting our Christmas tree today!” the kids sang, as they did laps around the house.  What did they eat for breakfast? A doughnut and a glass of Red Bull.  Ugh, Dear Santa, all I want for Christmas is some of my kids’ energy.

“Sure.”  Bubba’s favorite thing about Christmas is getting the tree. How could I say no?

Two hours later we are on the road, again, heading to a Christmas tree farm.  We arrive at the farm only mildly annoyed with each other.  A man in jeans and a barn coat directs us to a hill.  “If you have 4 wheel drive, head up the hill.”  The hill is more like a small ski slope and we wonder if our Pilot can make it up.  Bubba guns it and before long we are looking down at a hill-side sporadically covered with Douglas and Fraser Firs.

“Is this it?” The kids.

“Yup.” We say unknowingly. Bubba steps out of the car and grabs the saw from the back.  The kids follow him. I grab the baby and we are on the hunt for the perfect tree.  I point to a sad little Charlie Brown tree. “What about this one?”

“No way Mama!”  I guess they don’t share my love for the unloved trees, yet.

The trees start to all look the same, my feet are cold and the baby has a giant snot sliding towards his lips.  I search my pockets for a tissue, but find nothing, so I use my fleece mitten. It’s laundry day.

I point to a tall, skinny tree not far from us.  We walk over to take closer look.

“Looks good!” Bubba.

Before I can record the cutting of the tree or even ceremoniously say timber, the tree is lying down in the snow.  I put the kids in the car and we hoist our skinny Douglas fir to the roof of the car.  Bubba realizes we don’t have any rope to tie the tree down, so with an Exacto knife, he slices an old bicycle tube in half and secures the tree.  I married MacGyver.

Excitement fills the car as we head home.  “My favorite thing about Christmas is unwrapping presents!” G. C nods and agrees.  “I like decorating too.”

“I love getting the tree.” Bubba. Ok my turn.

“I love making Christmas cookies.”  There it is: making Christmas cookies gets me through the holidays, especially when little hands help.  I’m not sure if it is the copious amounts of butter sugar that make me smile or taste testing each batch; either way I love it.

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ccc0012I am starting this season off with Chocolate Crinkle Cookies.  I found a recipe in the most recent addition of Cook’s Illustrated.  This recipe promised moist and tender cookies with a rich chocolate flavor and plenty of tiny, irregular cracks.  I adapted the recipe only slightly by adding both natural unsweetened cocoa and Dutch-processed cocoa powder.  Why? Because I didn’t have enough natural cocoa powder in the house.  I bet all of one powder or the other will taste just as good.  I like to think maybe the combination of cocoa added more depth of flavor to the cookies.  Maybe…

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The thing that excites me most about these cookies are the tiny powder sugar-coated fissures covering the surface.  Turns out it is all about science. Imagine that!  To learn more about the science behind crinkly cookies head here.  Enjoy the day they are made with a cold glass of milk!

Chocolate Crinkle Cookies

Makes about 22 cookies

Recipe slightly adapted from Cook’s Illustrated November & December 2014

Ingredients:

1 cup unbleached, all-purpose flour

1/4 cup unsweetened natural cocoa powder ( I used Hershey’s.)

1/4 cup unsweetened Dutch-processed cocoa ( I used Guittard.)

1 teaspoon baking powder

1/4 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon kosher salt

1 1/2 cups brown sugar

3 large eggs

4 teaspoons instant espresso powder (Optional but I used it.)

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

4 ounces unsweetened chocolate, coarsely chopped

4 tablespoons of unsalted butter

For Coating:

1/2 cup of sugar

1/2 cup confectioners’ sugar

Directions:

Pre-heat your oven to 325F.  Line two baking sheets with parchment paper and set aside.  In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, cocoas, baking powder, baking soda and salt.  Set aside.

In a large bowl whisk together the brown sugar, eggs, espresso powder and vanilla.  Make sure it is well combined!  Next, melt the chocolate and butter together in a microwave safe bowl.  (I checked and stirred the chocolate/butter mixture every minute for 3 minutes.  You could also melt the chocolate and butter using a double boiler.)

Allow the chocolate to cool a bit and then whisk into the egg mixture until combined.  Fold the flour mixture into the chocolate mixture until well combined and no flour streaks remain.

Now let the dough rest, alone, at room temperature for about 10 minutes.   While your dough is relaxing, pour the granulated sugar and confectioners’ sugar in two separate bowls.

Using a #30 scoop or 2 tablespoons of dough, roll into balls.  Place the dough ball in the granulated sugar, coat, and then drop it into the confectioners’ sugar; roll and coat evenly.  Place coated dough balls on prepared sheets and bake one sheet at time for about 12 minutes, rotating the sheet pan halfway through baking time.  **The cookies are done when they looked puffed, edges are set but centers are still soft.  The cookies will seem underdone between the cracks. That is a good thing!** Allow the cookies to cool completely on the baking sheet.  The cookies taste best the day they are made, but still taste great a couple of days later.  If you have any leftover, store in air-tight container at room temperature.

5 Must Make Crinkle Cookie Recipe Links!

If you love lemon flavored cookies, check out Cooking Classy’s lemon crinkle cookie recipe.  Red velvet nut? Cooking Classy also has a red velvet crinkle cookie recipe for you. Yum!

Looking for a decadent, fudgy yet flourless chocolate crinkle cookie? Head to Reclaiming Provincial for the recipe.  Sounds interesting and Carey’s photos are beautiful!

Molasses and ginger scream holidays to me. So wow your friends at your next cookie swap with Averie Cook’s Soft Molasses Coconut Oil Crinkle Cookies.  Amazing!

I made grapefruit crinkle cookies last year and Bubba’s co-workers went nuts for them.  Head to Cups + Spoonfuls for the recipe.