What does this picture say to you?
To me, it screams “turn us into cookies.” And when a plate of generally unrelated ingredients talks to me, I listen.
Earlier this year, I picked up some extra work that has me working with folks from some 30+ companies who, every six weeks, descend upon our offices in DC from all corners of the country. At our last meeting, I mentioned that I’ve been known to bake for out-of-town visitors.
“Do you take requests?”
Sure thing. The consensus was that for our November get-together, which started yesterday and wraps up today, something with oatmeal and cranberries would be just perfect from a seasonal perspective. Chocolate was a clear need as well, and I determined that white chocolate chunks would work best. It seemed everything was falling into place perfectly, except that I didn’t have an oatmeal cookie recipe in my pocket.
Then three weeks ago, David Lebovitz posted about the oatmeal raisin cookie recipe from Joanne Chang’s new cookbook. Just a week after that, I went to her bakery myself. And. Loved. It.
This wasn’t the ingredients talking to me. This was divine intervention. I had to make these cookies. Using that recipe as inspiration.
Ingredients
1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
2/3 cup granulated sugar
1 cup packed light brown sugar
2 large eggs, at room temperature
1 3/4 cup flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon sea salt
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1 tsp vanilla powder
1 3/4 cup old fashioned oats
6 ounces dried cranberries
12 ounces chopped white chocolate chunks (suggest Callebaut)
The most notable changes were that I swapped in some vanilla powder and swapped out some nutmeg. And of course, dried cranberries and white chocolate chunks stand in for the raisins.
I started out by creaming the butter and sugar for five minutes.
It sure does get fluffy. While that is going on, I got all the ingredients from the flour through the white chocolate chunks mixed together in a separate bowl.
I thought that having the white chocolate chunks coated in flour would stop me from picking at them. I thought wrong. Luckily, I was almost done. I simply had to beat in the eggs one at a time, and then beat in the dry ingredient mixture on low speed until just incorporated. I then had dough.
Joanne suggests refrigerating the dough overnight. Even though she went to that other school in Cambridge, MA, she did develop the recipe, so I obliged.
Next up was baking time. I pre-heated my oven to 350° F, rolled the dough into balls about two tablespoons apiece in size, dropped them on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper, and slightly flattened them. Since I divided the dough into half the size called for in the recipe, I baked them for a little less time – 13 minutes had them about right.
And did they ever turn out right. Hopefully the folks at my meeting today agree.
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