Difference between revisions of "Chocolate Chip Cookies by doctor god"

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Submitted by [[:user:doctor_god|doctor_god]] Uploaded by [[:user:You ate my cat|You ate my cat]]
 
Submitted by [[:user:doctor_god|doctor_god]] Uploaded by [[:user:You ate my cat|You ate my cat]]

Latest revision as of 06:36, 24 May 2012


Submitted by doctor_god Uploaded by You ate my cat

This isn't really a very complex recipe, nor is it an old family secret or something. This is just the recipe from the back of a bag of Nestle Chocolate Chips. I'm posting this one mainly because it's a simple recipe to make, and if you're just getting started cooking, it's a good place to begin.

Ingredients:[edit]

  • 2 1/4 cups flour
  • 1 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 cup (2 sticks) melted butter
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 3/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 cups (12 oz, or 1 small pack) chocolate chips
  • 1 cup nuts (If you want to)

Makes 50-70 cookies, depending on how big you make them

Recipe:[edit]

Preheat your oven to 375F.

First, we put the flour, baking soda, and salt together in a bowl. Mix it all together.

01mixdryingredients8me.jpg


Butter isn't soft when you take it out of the refrigerator, so you have to soften it up. Stabbing the butter is completly unnecessary, but it can make you feel delightfully evil.

02cutbutter6ok.jpg


Chop the butter into a few small pieces (about 1Tbsp each, so 8 chunks per stick), put them in a small bowl, and cover it with plastic wrap. Put it in the microwave for a few seconds, until it's just starting to melt. In my microwave, this took about 30 seconds.

03buttercut7ud.jpg


When it's properly softened, it should look like this. At this point, it's permissible to ask the butter if it's "ready to talk, yet?"

04buttersoftened4fy.jpg


Brown sugar has a nasty habit of absorbing water from the air, so you need to make sure it's in a tightly sealed container, rather than an open ziplock bag. Breaking these clumps can be a real pain, I ended up using a pair of pliers on some of the harder ones.

05brownsugarclumps0eg.jpg


Mix the two types of sugar together in a large bowl, along with the butter and vanilla.

06otheringredients6qp.jpg


When it looks like this, it's time to add the eggs. Add one egg, mix it in well, then add the other egg and mix it in, too. You can still kind of see some clumps in my brown sugar here, but they got mixed out eventually.

07addeggs2yd.jpg


After the eggs are added, the batter should look about like this.

08eggsmixed3xz.jpg


Next, we add the flour mixture, a little bit at a time. After each addition, mix well. Add the chocolate chips and nuts (if you want them) after the flour is all mixed in.

09adddry9nc.jpg


The batter should look like this when it's all done. It shouldn't be gooey, but it should stick to itself pretty well. Feel free to taste a bit of the batter and make sure it's good. At this point, I suppose I should note that I adhere to the Pentagon school of thought when it comes to cooking: by the time you're done, half your materials should be unaccounted for.

10batterdone4ny.jpg


Next, we're going to put spoonfuls of batter on the cookie sheet. A spoonful is a pretty strange measure, so this is about how much I usually use.

11spoonfull8tw.jpg


You should be able to get 16 cookies on a large cookie sheet.

12batteronsheet9vw.jpg


Put the cookies on the middle rack of the oven.

13batterinoven0hb.jpg


After 10 minutes or so, the cookies should look about like this.

14cookiesdone6jw.jpg


Take the cookies out of the oven, and give them a few minutes to cool down before trying to do anything with them.

15cookiesdone20wc.jpg

In the end, this wound up making about 50 cookies.