Summer is fleeting fast and I realized that I have shared exactly one ice cream recipe with you this year.
That's a problem. We all need more ice cream. The whole world needs more ice cream.
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Summer is fleeting fast and I realized that I have shared exactly one ice cream recipe with you this year.
That's a problem. We all need more ice cream. The whole world needs more ice cream.
Read moreIt's Wednesday night. You're making dinner. How about showing a little extra care to your obligatory vegetable?
Read moreI know what you are thinking...
"Another cookie recipe?!"
But give me a chance...
I do not typically share the elephantine load of baked treat recipes that one might expect from a food blogger around this time of year.
There is one, very simple reason for that choice.
Most of my favorite holiday cookies really are not that dazzling. Come Christmastime, I prefer the uncomplicated. The unadorned, antediluvian cookies that my great-grandmother used to pack into red and green tins. Sugar cookies as thin as parchment, Russian tea cookies thick with confectioner’s sugar and bleeding with butter, and soft peanut butter balls dipped in rich chocolate ganache - affectionately known as “buckeyes.”
I will take all the innovation and neoclassicism you can devise come December 26th, but for now, all I want is to be drenched in edible nostalgia.
That being said, yesterday morning I woke up and decided that I wanted to throw pistachios, popcorn, and brown butter (Do I hear angels singing? Oh, no, sorry... That was just my Pandora station.) into my cookie dough.
Never underestimate the creativity that can come from your 9am cravings.
It’s been a couple years since I first discovered the magic of popcorn cookies. Leave it to Deb to come up with something so unapologetically indulgent.
I understand the skepticism, but trust me on this. It is the new pretzels-in-your-ice-cream.
Disclaimer: This recipe will tell you to make about twice as much popcorn as you actually need for the cookies, but I do not need to tell you why, now do I?
Have you ever browned butter before?
Do you like things that smell wonderful and taste even better? I know you do, of course you do! This is why we are friends.
Butter is heated until it is slowly bubbling, then all of our little bits of fat become toasty brown and we have something that is just about as close to heaven as we can get from these earthly kitchens of ours.
Oh, hello cookies!
These cookies are so full of crunchy, salty-sweetness, it's almost too much for a girl's heart to handle.
Almost.
Crispy, golden edges and soft, chewy centers. I think these cookies just may have earned themselves a place next to my great grandmother's sugar cookies.
Christmas is next week. Breathe in and out. Enjoy every moment. And try, please try, to avoid that post office if you possibly can.
Sincerely,
Pedantic Foodie
makes roughly 18 cookies
- 1 tablespoon coconut oil
- 1/4 cup popping corn
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter, divided (at room temperature)
- 1 cup + 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon fine salt (plus extra for salting popcorn)
- 1/4 cup brown sugar
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 1 large egg
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1/2 cup roasted, unsalted pistachios
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F.
Place a 4-quart saucepan over medium high heat and add coconut oil. When the oil has melted, add popping corn and cover.
Cook, shaking the pan occasionally, until the kernels begin to pop. Once this begins, shake the pan vigorously over the heat until you no longer hear kernels popping.
Remove the pan from the heat and salt the popcorn to taste. Set aside.
Place 1/4 cup butter in a small frying pan and place over medium heat. Once the butter begins to bubble, watch it carefully. The goal is for the butter to become rich topaz in color, with tiny darker bits laying on the bottom of the pan. This should take about 5 minutes.
Once the butter has browned, remove from heat and use a spoon to scrape off the white froth from the top of the butter. Allow the butter to cool while you prepare the cookie batter.
In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, and salt.
In the work bowl of your stand mixer combine remaining 1/4 cup butter with sugars. Beat on medium speed, scraping down the sides as necessary, until the mixture is airy and well-combined. Beat in egg.
With the mixer on low speed, slowly incorporate browned butter and vanilla extract.
While continuing to mix, gradually add the flour mixture until all of the dry ingredients are well incorporated.
Fold in pistachios and 1 1/2 cups popped corn.
Line two baking sheets with parchment paper and use an ice cream scoop to portion out the dough into 2 tablespoon balls.
Bake for 9-12 minutes, until the cookies are golden brown. The centers should still look slightly soft.
Transfer the cookies to wire racks to cool. Store in airtight containers until ready to serve. Enjoy!
ARE YOU READY FOR ANOTHER FANTASTIC HOLIDAY DRINK?
Me too.
We are in the home stretch. With just forty-eight hours between us and the most delightfully indulgent holiday, there is a lot to be done.
Chances are you already have your menu planned, and if you have already done your marketing, well there’s some extra points for you.
Put in charge of the vegetable side dish this Christmas and really wanting to offer up something besides corn casserole or green beans? I feel you.
From the looks of my Instagram feed, I think most of us set up our trees over the weekend.
I know this may be shocking to some of you, but I am really not a big fan of stuffing.
Want to make fancy pretzels with me? Yay! Let's do it together.
In our home, with new “favorites” constantly being developed, sampled, and savored, many much-loved recipes never find their way back onto our plates. But, every-so-often, a recipe gains instant “repeat” status and is thrown into a sacred category all its own, to be fished out of the archives over and over again. This elite status is not earned by mere deliciousness, since I would attribute that title to all of the recipes I share, but by an uninterpretable algorithm which balances comfort, ease, singularity and pure delight. It’s a science.