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Food52's Automagic Holiday Menu Maker
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25 Comments
Jess L.
April 6, 2020
Hi, I have tried many things so far- like chilling in the freezer for 90minutes in the ball shapes.
Also tried different temperatures and they still spread....
in my recipe I used plain flour, not self raising. Adding extra tablespoon of self raising flour would make the difference or not?
Also tried different temperatures and they still spread....
in my recipe I used plain flour, not self raising. Adding extra tablespoon of self raising flour would make the difference or not?
Matt H.
December 30, 2019
I noticed you measured your ingredients by volume. When you use volume to make your cookies, every batch will be different so your conclusions are not really that valid. It would be great to see if your outcome is still the same by using the exact same quantity of ingredients by weight and to provide the recipe by both volume and weight.
Christine
November 18, 2018
No scientific advice, but I use a cookie scoop. Flatten the dough in the scoop against the side of the mixing bowl. Takes a little longer, per batch, but cookies all bake to a consistent size. And they all fit perfectly into the muffin liners used in my Christmas Cookie tins. I bake 10 different types of cookies (last year's total was close to 1,200), and haven't had a complaint yet about consistency or taste!
Christine
November 19, 2018
And exhausting ... but worth it! Four dozen cookies per tin. No Christmas shopping for us. We give cookies!
mrslarkin
November 19, 2018
Now I need to know what types of cookies you make! I’m starting my Christmas cookies next week!
Nana
June 12, 2018
Thank you for all the comments as I will try a few. One of my problems is that I moved from a low and dry city to 8300 feet altitude. Sure made a difference in my baking and some of my cooking.
Margaret M.
January 17, 2017
The blue tape made the labels in the photos completely unreadable.
Sarah J.
January 17, 2017
Yes, sorry about that! I wrote explanations in the captions, so I hope that helps!
dianne
January 15, 2017
Hi!
I have found putting in 1/2 butter and 1/2 shortening stops the spread in my chocolate chip cookies. That's the only thing special I do.
I have found putting in 1/2 butter and 1/2 shortening stops the spread in my chocolate chip cookies. That's the only thing special I do.
Cate
January 13, 2017
I've found that subbing a quarter or so of the flour with whole wheat pastry flour helps cookies keep their shape. No chilling, and I partially melt the butter to make the dough.
Danielle W.
January 12, 2017
my drop cookies never spread, my spritz cookies however, need a couple of test batches before I get the dough right. what's that about?
mrslarkin
January 12, 2017
Thanks for your research, Sarah! For me, I have found the temperature of the butter prior to adding to the dough has the biggest effect on the outcome of the cookie. Very warm room temp butter will make the cookie spread like crazy. And freezing the dough after won't make much of a difference because the warm butter has been mixed into the flour already. Also, I have found baking soda makes cookies spread, so increase or reduce in a recipe depending on what you want to make happen.
Smaug
January 12, 2017
I suppose all this stuff makes SOME difference, though it seems most of it would be negated by checking the cookies rather than baking strictly by time. I must say that I usually bake cookies as soon as the dough is made, that I generally start with cold butter, and that I almost never have a problem with running. Cookies that require three sheets don't show any noticeable difference despite the fact that the third sheet has been sitting at room temp. for a considerable period before baking- they're sometimes a shade faster, but nothing significant, and I think that has more to do with the oven than the dough. One tip- drop cookies are less likely to run if made into neat balls with damp hands (most of them should be flattened afterward)- they will be more uniform, but you may miss the extra crisp edges.
PieceOfLayerCake
January 12, 2017
Its really just about creating a proper emulsion between the butter, sugar and egg. That is done by adding ingredients that are the proper temperature to each other slow enough to allow the emulsion to catch. That's a cornerstone of baking anything that has a high fat content.
Another thing so many recipes fail to mention is the importance of scraping the sides and bottom of the mixing bowl....especially when using a stand mixer. If you have pockets of fat or sugar in your batter that hasn't been properly incorporated it will erupt out of the dough in the oven causing spread.
Also, you have to be careful not to over beat the eggs. If you incorporate too much air in the egg phase of the recipe, the cookie will souffle and collapse into a flat, craggy mess.
Another thing so many recipes fail to mention is the importance of scraping the sides and bottom of the mixing bowl....especially when using a stand mixer. If you have pockets of fat or sugar in your batter that hasn't been properly incorporated it will erupt out of the dough in the oven causing spread.
Also, you have to be careful not to over beat the eggs. If you incorporate too much air in the egg phase of the recipe, the cookie will souffle and collapse into a flat, craggy mess.
PieceOfLayerCake
January 14, 2017
Exactly, like when you add the LIQUID egg whites into the batter, it has to emulsify properly with the fat in the butter....that's why you don't just dump it all in at once. I know what I'm talking about, you don't have to school me on vocabulary.
PieceOfLayerCake
January 18, 2017
Dictionaries aren't culinary experts...are you arguing with me on the definition of a word or the function of a recipe because I'm pretty sure "Mr. Webster" has his own website. If you disagree on how I explained the chemistry, by all means, tell me how I was wrong.
Smaug
January 18, 2017
Look it up anywhere you want- what you're talking about is not an emulsion. You run, for one thing , into the problem that you only have two liquids- egg white and yolk ( which can,, indeed, be emulsified with each other but aren't in this procedure. You add the eggs one at a time because otherwise you get lumps of solid more or less floating, and they are very difficult to combine for purely physical reasons- like trying to stir dirt clods into a bowl of oil. An emulsion is a suspension of droplets of one sort of liquid in a continuous bath of a different liquid- like a vinaigrette. The sugar/flour/ egg mixture that cookies start with is just a mixture- many people do it with a wooden spoon. From a culinary standpoint, your post really amounts to saying that the ingredients must be mixed properly, which is certainly true- if you have pockets where the fat content is excessively high- like the stuff that wants to stick to the bowl- your cookies will likely run.
PieceOfLayerCake
January 18, 2017
Again....so what I said was true but you're STILL just arguing about the use of the word "emulsion". Thank you for rewording what I already typed...go troll someone else.
Smaug
January 19, 2017
Since you're resulting to gratuitous insults, may we assume that you're conceding the point? Sure, your post was essentially correct (not to say that's THE problem, but it is A problem) despite stretching what required a simple sentence into a page of pseudsoscientific babble.
Rita
January 22, 2018
Is it really necessary to argue, over such a small thing, Why not have a friendly discussion over the differences of a mixture, emulsions, etc.
See what other Food52 readers are saying.