RECIPE: From "1001 Cookbooks" REC: Chocolate Puddle Cookies--boy, do these look good...

RECIPE:

charlie

Well-known member
Chocolate Puddle Cookies

Serving Size : 18

3 cups walnuts -- (11 ounces or 310 g) toasted & cooled

4 cups confectioner's sugar -- (1 pound or 453 g)

1/2 cup cocoa powder -- unsweetened, plus

3 tablespoons cocoa powder -- unsweetened (2 ounces or 60 g total)

1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt -- scant

4 large egg whites -- room temperature

1 tablespoon vanilla extract

Preheat oven to 320F / 160C degrees and position racks in the top and bottom third. Line three (preferably rimmed) baking sheets with parchment paper. Or you can bake in batches with fewer pans.

Make sure your walnuts have cooled a bit, then chop coarsely and set aside.

Sift together the confectioner's sugar, cocoa powder, and sea salt. Stir in the walnuts, then add the egg whites and vanilla. Stir until well combined.

Spoon the batter onto the prepared sheets in mounds of about 2 tablespoons each, allowing for PLENTY of room between cookies. These cookies are like reverse Shrinky Dinks - they really expand. Don't try to get more than 6 cookies on each sheet, and try to avoid placing the batter too close to the edge of the pan.

Bake until they puff up. The tops should get glossy, and then crack a bit - about 12 -15 minutes. Have faith, they look sad at first, then really blossom. You may want to rotate the pans top/bottom/back/front.

Slide the cookies still on parchment onto a cooling rack, and let them cool completely. They will keep in an airtight for a couple days.

NOTES : I've used both 365 organic powdered sugar from Whole Foods, and Hain organic powdered sugar with success. I prefer to use non-alkalized cocoa powder (Scharrfen Berger or Dagoba) but also tested with Droste, which is a Dutch-process cocoa powder. All with success. On the nut front, be mindful of how you toast your walnuts - it's the single factor that impacts the personality of these cookies most. Using deeply toasted walnuts makes for a much more intense, nutty cookie. Lightly toasted walnuts can sometimes be mistaken for chocolate chips, and make for a much more mild cookie. Both good! Also, cooking time - you don't want to over or under bake here - over bake, and your cookies will cool too a crisp, under bake, and they are too floppy and crumbly. Also, underbaking makes it more difficult to remove the cookies from the parchment paper after baking - you get the swing of it after a batch or two. Use large eggs, I suspect if you use extra-large, the batter will run, and you'll have to compensate with more powdered sugar.

 
These are very similar to one I made earlier: Savannah Chocolate Chewies

I was just gonna make these today! They're wonderful, very chocolatey and very chewey smileys/smile.gif


Savannah Chocolate Chewies
Yield: 2 dozen chews

From The All-American Cookie Book, by Nancy Baggett

2 cups (8 oz) chopped pecans
2 1/4 cups (8 oz) powdered sugar
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons (1 ¼ oz) unsweetened natural cocoa powder*
2 tablespoons (1/2 oz) all-purpose white flour
Generous pinch of salt
3 large egg whites
3/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 ounce bittersweet or semisweet chocolate, grated (not unsweetened)

*Author calls for natural cocoa. I’m going to try dutch-process the next time I make this.

Preheat the oven to 325 degrees. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.

Spread the pecans in a medium baking pan and toast in the oven, stirring occasionally, for 7-9 minutes, or until fragrant. Immediately turn out into a medium bowl let cool.

Sift together the powdered sugar, cocoa powder, flour and salt into the bowl of an electric mixer.

Beat the egg whites one at a time into the powdered-sugar mixture with an electric mixer on low speed. Add the vanilla and beat for 1 1/2 minutes on high speed, scraping down the sides several times. Fold in the pecans and the chocolate until evenly incorporated. (The dough will be quite liquid, like a cake batter.)

Drop the dough onto the baking sheets by heaping tablespoons, spacing about 2 inches apart.

Bake the cookies, one sheet at a time, in the middle of the oven for 15 to 18 minutes, or until dry on the surface but soft in the centers when pressed. Reverse the sheet from front to back halfway through baking to ensure even browning. Slide the cookies, still attached to the parchment onto a wire rack.

Let cool completely, then carefully peel the cookies from the parchment.

The cookies can be stored in an airtight container up to three days or in the freezer for 1 month.

 
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