The Gourmet Cookie Book: The Single Best Recipe from Each Year 1941-2009 Hardcover - 2010
by Gourmet Magazine
The best cookie from each year of the premier food magazine’s nearly seventy-year history.
Summary
Details
- Title The Gourmet Cookie Book: The Single Best Recipe from Each Year 1941-2009
- Author Gourmet Magazine
- Binding Hardcover
- Edition [ Edition: repri
- Pages 176
- Volumes 1
- Language ENG
- Publisher Rux Martin/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, U.S.A
- Date 2010-11-02
- Illustrated Yes
- ISBN 9780547328164 / 0547328168
- Weight 1.6 lbs (0.73 kg)
- Dimensions 8.56 x 8.76 x 0.7 in (21.74 x 22.25 x 1.78 cm)
- Library of Congress subjects Desserts, Cookies
- Library of Congress Catalog Number 2010018882
- Dewey Decimal Code 641.865
Excerpt
INTRODUCTION
Buy a cookie, and it's just a bite of sugar, something sweet to get you through the day.
Bake a cookie, on the other hand, and you send an instant message from the moment you
measure out the flour. Long before they're done, the cookies become a promise, their
endlessly soothing scent offering both reassurance and solace. And even the tiniest bite is
powerful, bringing with it the flavor of home. For anyone who is comfortable in a
kitchen, a warm cookie is the easiest way to say I love you.
Somewhere in the back of our minds, we all know this. It is the reason we bake
cookies at Christmas, why we exchange them as gifts. Not for nothing do we pack up our
cookies and send them off to our far-flung families. Like little ambassadors of good will,
these morsels stand in for us. There are few people who don't understand, at least
subconsciously, how much a cookie can mean.
But until we began work on this book, it had never occurred to us to look at
history through a cookie prism. When we decided to select the best cookie from each of
Gourmet's sixty-eight years, we knew we would end up with an awesome array of treats.
But we did not realize that we would also discover a way of charting the changes in the
way that we eat. Our cookie cravings, it turns out, offer a fascinating window on history,
a portrait of our country that reveals the way our appetites have evolved.
We were so captivated by the language of cookies that we have printed the recipes
exactly as they originally appeared. In the early years, they are remarkably casual, a kind
of mysterious shorthand that assumes that each reader is an accomplished cook who
needs very little in the way of guidance. "Bake in a moderate oven until crisp," is a
classic instruction. So is "Add flour until the dough is stiff." It's interesting to watch as
numbers creep into the recipes in the form of degrees, minutes, and cups. And it's
startling to observe the recipes growing longer and longer as they become increasingly
precise.
Although we have left the language of the recipes unchanged, we have removed
the guesswork; when we retested, we added notes, so that you'll know exactly how hot
your oven should be, and how many cups of flour it takes to stiffen that dough.
Cookies turn out to be an excellent indicator of what we have been eating. The instinct to
bake them is essentially conservative, which means that cookies are rarely the first place
that new ingredients appear. An ingredient must have a solid place at America's table
before it makes its way into the cookie cupboard. So when pistachios start showing up in
cookies in the eighties, you know that the luxurious nut has finally become part of the
American food landscape. And when, in the early nineties, espresso stops making the
occasional appearance and turns into a standard ingredient, it is no accident; this is just
when venti became part of our vocabulary, a sign that America's drinking habits had
undergone a serious revolution.
Looking at cookies in this way is a fascinating exercise. It is also a great predictor
of future trends. Work your way through this book and you'll be in a very good position
to know what cookies we'll be baking next year, and the year after that. But while new
cookies keep being invented, old cookies never die. They just get better and better. We
like to think that you'll be baking the ones in this book for many years to come.
—The Editors
1941 - Cajun Macaroons
America's first epicurean magazine had very
ambitious plans. Although war was imminent,
you wouldn't have known it from turning the
pages. In this, the second issue, Gourmet's
chef, Louis P. DeGouy ("de goo-ey"), taught
his readers how to cook a duck. They could
also read about "Famous Chefs of Today";
peruse the first installment of "Clementine
in the Kitchen," the story of a French cook
(the series eventually became a beloved
book); and shop vicariously at a store that
specialized in dates (it sold Deglet Noors,
Golden Saidys, and black Hyanas). Turning
to the menus, they found a rather elaborate
celebration of Mardi Gras in New Orleans,
complete with oysters rockefeller, Creole
soup, papaya balls, pompano fillets, pigeon
pie, poinsettia salad (canned pineapple,
pimiento strips, cream cheese moistened
with French dressing, and paprika), creamed
peas, and sugared yams.
But the best thing about the menu was the
finale: crisp, chewy little cookies with a
subtle almond scent. Although the recipe
required a lot of work, readers would beg
for it again and again over the years.
Happily, the food processor has taken most
of the labor out of these French-style
macaroons, and today they are a breeze to
make.
Makes about 4 dozen 1 1/2-inch cookies
These should be baked a few days in advance. They will keep several months
when kept in a closed tin in a cool, dry place.
Work 1/2 pound almond paste with a wooden spoon until it is smooth.
Add 3 slightly beaten egg whites and blend thoroughly. Add 1/2 cup
sifted pastry flour, resifted with 1/2 cup fine granulated sugar and
1/2 cup powdered sugar. Cover a cooky sheet or sheets with bond paper.
The cooky mixture may be dropped from the tip of a teaspoon and
shaped on the paper, or may be pressed through a cooky press, or
shaped with a pastry bag and tube. Bake in a slow oven (300° F) about
30 minutes. The cakes may be removed from the paper by means of a
spatula while still warm.
Variations: Finely chopped or ground candied fruits may be added to
the mixture before baking. Or the tops of the macaroons may be
decorated before baking by placing in the center of each a nut half, a
raisin (seedless, black or white), or a bit of candied fruit—such as a
bit of angelica—cut fancifully, or by sprinkling with finely chopped nut
meats. The cakes may be decorated after baking by dainty frosting
designs formed with the help of a cake decorator or a pastry tube.
Recipe Notes
1. The almond paste should be at room temperature.
2. Rather than working the almond paste with a wooden spoon, use a food processor.
3. Use White Lily flour (see Sources, page 154) or cake flour (not self-rising) in place of
the pastry flour.
4. Use regular granulated sugar in place of fine granulated sugar.
5. In place of the bond paper that the recipe calls for, use parchment paper.
6. The cookies should be pale golden.
1971 - Speculaas
(Saint Nicholas Cookies)
A former minister of foreign affairs in
Holland offended many cooks when he
informed the world that the speculaas was
Europe's best cookie. That is a matter of
opinion, but it is a matter of fact that
they are among the oldest cookies on
record, for speculaas have been baked in
the Netherlands for centuries. They began
life as gifts to the gods, left in the
fields as offerings to ensure a good
harvest. But humans are equally enamored of
this cross between a spice cookie and a
shortbread because of their comfortingly
robust and old-fashioned flavor.
Makes about 4 dozen cookies
Into a bowl, sift together 3 cups flour, 4 teaspoons baking powder, 1 tablespoon
cinnamon, 1 teaspoon each of cloves and nutmeg, and 1/2 teaspoon each of ground
aniseed, salt, and ginger or white pepper. In a bowl of an electric mixer, beat 2 sticks, or
1 cup, butter, softened, with 1 1/2 cups firmly packed dark brown sugar until the mixture
is light and fluffy. Stir in 3 tablespoons milk, dark rum, or brandy.
Gradually add the flour mixture, stirring until it is well combined, and form the dough
into a ball. Knead the dough on a board sprinkled with about 1/4 cup flour and roll it out
into a rectangle 1/4 inch thick. With a sharp knife or cutter, cut the dough into rectangles
2 1/2 inches by 1 1/2 inches. Put the rectangles on a buttered cookie sheet, decorate them
with blanched almonds, halved or slivered, and brush them with lightly beaten egg white.
Bake the cookies in a moderately hot oven (375°F) for 12 to 15 minutes, or until they are
browned and firm.
Recipe Note
Gently push the nuts into the dough before brushing the cookies with egg white
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