I’m very glad that my family and friends are so
open-minded about trying new foods. They
willingly taste my various mad-scientist kitchen experiments and, even more
importantly, they’re honest about the results.
I’ve learned over time that people’s food preferences
vary wildly. What tastes perfectly good
to one person may be really distasteful to another.
For example, I like my cookies soft, and slightly under baked. My brother likes his cookies soft, but
overcooked to the point of being slightly burnt. My step-dad likes his cookies crisp and won’t
eat any that contain chocolate. My
husband likes pretty nearly any cookie at all.
Naturally, when I get my friends and family to test my
recipes, their feedback is almost always wildly divergent too. I’m grateful for that. It turns out that their opinions form a
pretty accurate predictor of the response my recipes will get when I publish
them.
With so many wildly varying opinions available to me, how
do I decide which recipes I’ll share and which recipes I won’t? It’s pretty simple really: It’s my blog, so I share the recipes I
like.
That doesn’t mean I don’t take my tasters’ opinions into
consideration. I do. Often, the suggestions I receive from my friends
and family will cause me to go back, revisit a recipe, and make changes.
I remade this recipe (adapted from the Potato Chip Cookie
recipe in the July edition of Martha Stewart Living) four times, each time
changing it slightly based upon what my tasters told me. This is the final version, made with my favourite chips. I like it an awful lot. I hope you do too.
- 1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 3/4 cup brown sugar, packed
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 large eggs, at room temperature
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper (not pictured)
- 4 cups of coarsely crushed Kettle Brand sea salt and black pepper potato chips
Cream together the butter, brown sugar, and granulated
sugar. Add in the vanilla. Beat the eggs and add them in too. Mix until well combined.
In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, baking
soda, and pepper.
Add the dry ingredients to the wet mixture and stir them
together to make a fairly stiff dough.
Fold in 2 cups of the crushed potato chips.
Form the cookie dough into 2-inch balls, then roll the
cookies in the remaining potato chips to coat the outer surface of the dough. I had a little trouble making the chips stick
to the raw cookie dough. You’ll probably
have to use your hands to press them lightly into the surface of the cookies.
Place the coated cookies about 2 inches apart on
parchment lined cookie sheets.
Bake the cookies on the middle rack of a 350ºF oven for 12 to 15 minutes;
just until the bottom of the cookies brown and the edges begin to take on a little bit
of colour.
Let the baked cookies rest on the baking pans for about 5
minutes, then transfer them to a sheet of brown paper to cool completely. (The paper will soak up some of the excess
oil from the chips.)
You can store these cookies in an airtight container for up
to 5 days.
7 comments:
fun flavor for a cookie :_)
Thanks Rebecca. They certainly are out of the ordinary! ;)
These sound interesting... I think I will have to give them a try... Hope I can find Kettle Brand seasalt and pepper chips or I might have to make a trip to Canada to get some...
lol Marlys! I actually had trouble finding them here and, when I put a note about it on my FB page, my American friends came on line offering to send them to me! I found them in the "natural foods" section at Safeway but I know that Costco sells them too - and much less expensively!
Thanks for the note Johanna. Not much pie in my life these days, but I'll see what I can do. :)
What a great idea! Who would have thought of making cookies with potatoe chips. You just opened a whole new world of possibilites for me :-)
hugs
jutta
Thank you for stopping by to check it out Jutta. I'll be looking forward to seeing your posts about Germany. :)
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