Cowboy Cookies

I think I can do better than The New York Times and Laura Bush.

The Harvest Foods supermarket in Quincy, WA, makes the most incredible cookies I’ve ever eaten. They call them Cowboy Cookies and they contain the best of all worlds: chocolate, oatmeal, coconut, and nuts. They’re relatively large, not too sweet, and just soft enough to give you the satisfaction of a soft, chewy cookie.

Because Quincy is a bit farther away than I’m willing to drive for cookies, I hunted down a recipe to make at home. I found this recipe from the New York Times. It has a backstory:

This recipe came to The Times in 2000 during the Bush-Gore presidential campaign when Family Circle magazine ran cookie recipes from each of the candidates’ wives and asked readers to vote. Laura Bush’s cowboy cookies, a classic chocolate chip cookie that’s been beefed up with oats, pecans, coconut and cinnamon, beat Tipper Gore’s ginger snaps by a mile.

I made the cookies today. Not a full recipe; I made a 2/3 recipe. (The recipe is very easily cut into thirds.) They were good, but not Harvest Foods good.

Too much sugar, I think. Not cakey enough; very crispy. With all those goodies in them, they should have been substantial. But they weren’t.

I started thinking about my favorite cookie recipe, for Oatmeal Chocolate Chips. I blogged the recipe 14 years ago and still love them. I suspect that I could modify that recipe to have fewer chocolate chips, a bit less oatmeal, and some additional coconut and nuts.

So that’s how I’ll be doing it next time. If you try it first, let me know how it goes.

Maria’s Marvelous Stuffing, 2021 Edition

My favorite part of Thanksgiving Dinner.

It’s about 7 AM on Thanksgiving day. Even though I’m not hosting Thanksgiving dinner at my home, I’ll be a guest at a friend’s house and I asked her if I could bring the stuffing.

(Yes, I said stuffing. I know it doesn’t go in the bird so it shouldn’t be called stuffing, but I refuse to call it dressing. It’s stuffing. Period. No discussion will be accepted.)

What’s In It This Year

I love making stuffing and eating my stuffing. Why? Because not only is it delicious, but it’s also it’s a meal in itself. It has all kinds of things in it and every year that list is different. Here’s what’s in this year’s stuffing:

  • StuffingCloseup
    A closeup of this year’s stuffing, still in the pan.

    Jimmy Dean Sage sausage

  • Onions
  • Celery
  • Carrots
  • Garlic
  • Sweet potatoes (from my garden)
  • Butternut squash
  • Brown rice
  • Quinoa
  • Chestnuts
  • Almonds
  • Apples
  • Figs (dried)
  • Stove Top Cornbread Stuffing Mix

So yeah: it has meat, veggies, fruit, and bread in it. Because it has twice as much (by volume, anyway) non-bread ingredients than bread, it’s not really what most folks would call stuffing (or yes, dressing). In fact, it sounds like a meal in itself to me.

It’s great beside turkey or chicken and a good turkey gravy and cranberries can’t hurt it.

I make some version of this every year, whether I’m hosting a meal at my home, going to someone else’s home, or camped out in my RV out in the desert. Way back when I hosted family meals in my old home, I made huge quantities of it. It’s always the first thing I do (after having my coffee, of course) on Thanksgiving day.

I’ve never had any complaints about it. Most folks seem to like it, although probably not as much as I do.

That’s okay. The less they eat, the more is left for me after the big day.

Make It Yourself!

If you’d like to try making this, have at it. But don’t expect me to provide you with measured quantities. I wing it every year with whatever I’ve remembered to buy (like the chestnuts) with whatever I find in the fridge or pantry (most everything else). The only thing I measure is the water that has to hydrate the dried stuffing mix — and that’s so it’s moist enough. Even then, I usually add more so it’s plenty moist and survives some time in the oven or a microwave for reheating or keeping warm. I usually don’t add salt because the stuffing mix and sausage (and likely the gravy that’ll go over it) are salty enough; it’s easier to add salt later than try to remove it, no?

If you’re completely clueless about how to get started, start by lightly browning the sausage (or bacon works, too) with the onions, celery, and garlic. Then add the other ingredients that need cooking, stirring so they get some time on the bottom of the pan. Then stir in the ingredients that don’t need cooking. Then add the water, preheated to boiling. Cover the pan and let it cook for 5 minutes or so. Then add the dry stuffing mix, stir well, and remove from the heat. You’re done; it’ll be done in 5-10 minutes. I try to keep it warm until dinnertime, usually in a covered oven/microwave safe dish in the oven. That helps the flavors meld and the whole thing gets soft.

Yum.

Orange Banana Dessert and Waffle Topping

A quick recipe for a hot fruit topping.

I’ll keep the intro stuff brief since I really hate drawn out intros to recipes and I bet you do, too.

Waffles with Bananas
My breakfast this morning. The waffle recipe I found was very plain/boring and it needed something to spice it up. I had the ingredients for this so I made it.

I made waffles from scratch this morning and needed something — other than maple syrup [yawn] — to put on it. I had the ingredients for this, which I sometimes make to top vanilla ice cream. Try it the next time you want a hot fruity topping for an otherwise plain dessert or waffles.

Ingredients

  • RIPE banana(s)
  • Butter
  • Brown Sugar
  • Orange Juice
  • Orange liquor (optional)

Yeah, I realize I didn’t put in amounts. The amounts you use depend on how much you want to make and how sweet you want it to be. If you’ve got any cooking experience at all, you should be able to figure it out. For the purpose of this recipe, I’m assuming that you use 1 to 3 bananas.

Preparation Steps

  1. Slice up the banana(s) into 1/4 to 1/2 inch slices.
  2. Melt a tablespoon or two of butter in a pan.
  3. Add the bananas and 2 to 4 tablespoons of brown sugar to the pan.
  4. Saute for a minute or two. The banana slices should start losing their definition as they soften. With luck, the brown sugar isn’t a solid mass (like mine was) and will melt quickly. If it doesn’t, it will during the next step.
  5. Add 1/4 to 1/2 cup of orange juice to the pan.
  6. Bring mixture to a simmer. It should thicken a little. The longer you cook it, the thicker it’ll get. I usually cook it until the bananas are heated through and dissolving in a syrup. If the syrup is too thick for your taste, add more orange juice.
  7. If desired, add a splash of orange liquor. Then cook 1 more minute.
  8. Pour hot topping directly over ice cream, pound cake, waffles — whatever.

This absolutely rocks over vanilla ice cream. But it was pretty good over my waffles, too.