“Truly, at her core, she (Gesine) like Dorie Greenspan or Rose Levy Beranbaum, is a dessert evangelist.” —Examiner.com

Friday, April 10, 2009

Sowing My Salty Oats

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I’m such a turd sometimes. I’ll go around for years saying things like, “Yech, I’ll forgo the free spa pass. I loathe massages.” It’s a fundamental flaw in my character, one that needs complete and permanent eradication. I’ll declare definitive and detailed partialities. When in fact, I’m really just talking out of my ass. So maybe I never enjoyed the creepy guy in German class giving me an impromptu shoulder rub. Why that translated into a lifetime of turning down professional, aromatherapy infused deep-tissue goodness I’ll never know.

Here’s a humdinger that I spouted for a decade, “Nah, I don’t like oatmeal/raisin cookies. But thanks for offering.” On what occasion did an oatmeal/raisin cookie ever offend me? I don’t recall ever having had a bite of one and spitting it out in rank disgust. Maybe it wasn’t my all time favorite but still. That’s no reason to get all uppity and snooty about it. And when I played with a few recipes, I discovered that Oatmeal/Raisin cookies are pretty much my favorite cookie. Ever.

Will I ever learn?

Salty Oats

6 oz (1 and ½ sticks) butter (slightly colder than room temp)
1 cup brown sugar
½ cup sugar
2 eggs
1 t. vanilla
1 t. baking powder
¼ t. baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
½ t. cinnamon
1 ¾ cups AP
2 cups oats
1 cup raisins

Extra coarse grain salt to sprinkle on top

Preheat oven to 350

Combine flour, cinnamon, 1 teaspoon salt, baking powder and soda into a bowl and whisk together. Set aside.

In your mixer with paddle attachment, cream together butter and sugars until light and creamy. Add eggs one at a time. Leaving time between each incorporation so that each egg is fully integrated into the batter before you move on. Add vanilla. Integrate just like the eggs.
Slowly add flour mixture until just combined. Add oats and mix for a few seconds before adding raisins.  

CHILL mixture in refrigerator for at least ½ hour. CHILL! CHILLL CHILL CHILL! This is important, I don’t know if I’ve made that clear. So I’ll say it again, CHILL THE DOUGH.
Scoop dough with medium sized cookie scoop and press down on the dome of the dough to flatten just a bit. Sprinkle the top of each cookie with a wee bit of coarse salt.

Bake at 350 for 12 to 15 minutes, turning the cookie tray every five minutes to make sure the cookies brown evenly.

6 comments:

Alison said...

Oh God, I LOVE SaltyOatCookies, as I became addicted to them after eating them at Teaism at DuPont Circle in Washington DC.

Thank you for posting your version...

By the way, I like the way you just talk out yr ass. It's funny. And honest.

Anonymous said...

I am not, and never will be, a professional baker. But, I've made my share of oatmeal cookies. These are the BEST! I even managed to forget the cinnamon and they were still the best oatmeals I've ever had. Can you do the same for a chocolate chip cookie???

niabassett said...

Ooooooh. It took me a minute to realize that AP = all-purpose flour.

maria said...

can you clarify as to why we need to chill the mixture before baking.?
thank you for your time.

Heather said...

yummmmm! I'll have to try this. I remember loving oatmeal raisin cookies as a kid and then as an adult not liking them when I bought them or tried baking them myself. My mom recently cleared that up for me. When she made them she would put in hardly any sugar at all! I don't apparently like sweet oatmeal raisin cookies. Shocking.

Linda said...

Try dried sweetened cranberries, moist dried blueberries or dried cherries sometime instead of the raisins. I have a son who hates raisins and dogs that love oatmeal cookies, well any kind of cookie actually, and if I make them with other fruit than raisins (bad for dogs) I can share nibbles without worrying about them.

Maria- chilling the cookies before baking lets mixture set up in the oven and hold a plump shape without spreading too thinly from the heat

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