Daddy salts his food, she wants salt on her food. Mama seasons the sauce, she has to season the sauce. We've developed the fine art of faking it for her. She is a wickedly smart girl, but somehow the motion of salting her food satisfies her, even if she doesn't see any salt crystals falling from our fingers. We're either that tricky or she's only two.
With the past few weeks filled with a lot of sick days we've turned to baking as a way to keep her engaged and away from Yo Gabba Gabba (she is a child obsessed). When she asked to bake cookies this week I inquired as to what kind.
"Salt."
Yup, salt cookies. In a freaky twist of fate, I had pulled out my Cook's Country cookbook and had it open to the cookie table of contents. Wouldn't you know, they have a recipe for salty thin and crisp oatmeal cookies? Considering it was a real recipe and all, I figured we had a better chance than last week, when she requested salt muffins. In case you didn't know, salt as a crunchy topping on a banana muffin is okay, but not something I have a desire to repeat. Salted oatmeal cookies are another matter entirely.
Crispy, thin, and with just a touch of salty crunch. These are good cookies for people who don't like sweets. Such a change from dense and chewy oatmeal cookies. Equally delicious, and I'm not a big fan of salt.
Salted Oatmeal Cookies
(adapted from Cook's Country)
Makes 2.5-3 dozen cookies
1 cup flour
3/4 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp table or kosher salt
14 tbsp unsalted butter (2 tablespoons less than a cup)
1 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup packed brown sugar
1 large egg
1 tsp vanilla
2 1/2 cups rolled oats (not quick or instant)
fleur de sel or Maldon salt
1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
2. In a medium bowl whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and 1/4 tsp salt. Set aside.
3. Beat together the butter and sugars until fluffy. Scrape down the bowl. Add the egg and vanilla and beat until fully incorporated. Slowly add the flour mixture until just blended, then stir in the oats until well mixed.
4. Roll cookie dough into balls about 1.5 - 2 inches around. Place them 8 to a cookie sheet and press down with your palm. Cookies should be about 3/4 inch in thickness.
5. Sprinkle with fleur de sel or Maldon salt, a generous pinch per cookie.
6. Bake for 10-12 minutes until the cookies are spread out and lightly golden. Let them cool completely on the cookie sheet.
Those sound delicious! The salt obsession must run in the family...I've been known to lick my finger and stick it in the salt too :)
ReplyDeleteI'm a salt lover too but I've weaned myself off it as much as I can.
ReplyDeleteThose look delicious! I want to try them. The NYT, in the "best chocolate chip cookie" article a few months back, advocated a sprinkle of fleur de sel on top and it's pretty good. I recently made Korova, aka World Peace, Cookies, which are chocolate with a salty edge to the flavor. They were delicious, but the salt isn't sprinkled on top so your child might miss the satisfaction.
ReplyDeleteAdding this to my "need to make soon, wish I had some now" list!
ReplyDeleteI am completely charmed by The Monster's request and completely fascinated by this recipe. Since I have a "salt tooth" rather than a "sweet tooth" - this is right up my alley. Looking forward to trying these cookies and thanks for turning me on to something new. :)
ReplyDelete