Dec 16, 2015 in baking, christmas, cookies, desserts, epicurious, holidays, peanut butter, maple, peanut butter. Read the original on: Bluebonnet Baker
I donât often make peanut butter cookies at home. Donât get me wrong, I love them to the ends of the earth. But my incredibly British husband didnât grow up with peanut butter, and finds the taste off-putting.
I know. I donât know how I married him either, but it turns out heâs a pretty nice guy and the best daddy around, so I think Iâll keep him, peanut butter-hating tendencies and all.
I could make batches of the dough and freeze the dough balls, but all that temptation taking up space in my freezer, when itâs only me to eat them, is just a little too dangerous. So I just donât make them.
But this year I decided to participate in the Great Food Blogger Cookie Swap again, after a few years off. (Having a baby will throw off your traditions like whoa, people.)
I love that I get three dozen not-baked-by me cookies, and I love that the whole shindig raises money for Kidsâ Cancer research.
Now that I have a kid myself, I think about those sort of things more, and they always make me cry. I donât like to cry, so instead, I decided to bake cookies and help raise money.
Itâs only a little thing to do, baking cookies, but the raising money thing is pretty huge. Iâm amazed at Lindsay and Julie for pulling it off every year.
Now, about these cookies. Maple is a flavor that I love â when itâs baked into things. But when itâs poured over pancakes and you get sticky hands that then smell like maple syrup for the rest of the day? Not. So. Much. But I do really love maple as a baking flavor.
Paired with peanut butter? Quite magical. Itâs sweet, a little savory, with that nice nutty undertone. They bake up just like traditional peanut butter cookies, so expect that texture.
The only thing to be wary of is over-baking. You do NOT want to do that here, or you will end up with hockey pucks instead of cookies.
Go for the under-baked vs. over-baked. Theyâll cook a little more on the pan while they cool, and then theyâll be just perfect for devouring with a big olâ glass of milk.
If you have peanut butter cookie lovers in your life, youâve got to add these to your holiday baking list. Theyâre such a fun twist on the original, and as the Brits like to say, completely more-ish.
That means you want more and more of them. Isnât it a great word? I wish weâd use it more in the U.S., because it completely describes some foods, like these maple peanut butter cookies.
Read the original on: Bluebonnet Baker
Texan ex-pat in NJ seeks good Tex-Mex. Thus began the evolution of Bluebonnet Baker, my homage to all things Tex-Mex and Southern Comfort.