Finally! A new recipe! The delay in posting was caused by a few things. First, the power cord for my laptop decided to break in half. My laptop sadly does not operate on magic and needs electrons to function. Second, I picked up the textbooks that I will be using for teaching, so I've been busy over-preparing for the fall semester. The one book is just weird which makes the scheduling of what to teach when complicated.
Anyway...
These cookies aren't my grandma's sugar cookies, that is just the title of the recipe in the one cookbook. These cookies are very soft and they retain their softness. The sugary-ness isn't overwhelming, which is nice. You can frost these or just sprinkle them with sugar. I would try using a large crystal sugar and not a fine sugar like I used.
The recipe suggested rolling the dough out and cutting out cookies, but I just rolled the dough into balls and smushed them with a sugared glass. This recipe made around 5 dozen cookies. It will make more or less depending on what shape and size you want your cookies to be. The recipe was also lacking directions, so I'm not sure if I was supposed to let the milk mixture get sour before using it or not.
Grandma's Old Fashioned Sugar Cookies
2 C sugar
1 C shortening
2 eggs
1 t baking soda
1 t vinegar
Milk (almost 1 cup)
2 t baking powder
4-5 C flour
Cream together the shortening and sugar. I did this with a wooden spoon. Wooden spoons are the best kitchen utensil.
Add the eggs and mix until blended.
In a measuring cup, combine the baking soda and vinegar. Add enough milk to make 1 cup. Stir together. Slowly stir this into the sugar mixture. This will make it very thin.
Add 1 cup of flour to the mixture and stir. Add the baking powder and slowly add more flour, mixing between each addition. Add enough flour to make a soft dough. Near the end, you may need to mix by hand.
Roll the cookie dough into balls and press with a sugared glass. Or roll out the dough on a floured surface, sprinkle generously with sugar, lightly press in the sugar, and cut into shapes. Or anything else you can think of doing to make a cookie shape.
Bake at 400 degrees Fahrenheit for 6-10 minutes, depending on the size of the cookies. The bottoms will start to brown, but the tops will not.
Cool for a minute and then remove to a cooling rack to cool completely.
Enjoy!
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Things Neniell Made by Barbara Miller is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
An adventure in cooking and cell phone photography
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
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Things Neniell Made by Barbara Miller is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
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