Cookiepedia & Writing It Down

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I recently received a copy of The Cookiepedia by Stacy Adimando from Quirk Books

The Cookiepedia Mixing, Baking, and Reinventing the Classics Written by Stacy Adimando Photos by Tara Striano

The book contains recipes for 50 popular cookies.

Table of Contents  Introduction Page One  The ABCs of Cookie Baking Page Four Kitchen Tools Cookie Speak Fun with Decorating  Buttery Cookies Page Twelve Animal Cookies Butter Balls Blondies Cornmeal Cookies  Everything but the Kitchen Sink Cookie Frosted Maple Pecan Cookies  Italian Biscuits Old-Fashioned Sugar Cookies Sables Shortbread  Chocolaty Cookies Page Thirty Eight Brownies Chocolate Chip Cookies Crinkles Chocolate Sandwich Cookies Chocolate Spritz Cookies Florentines Mint Thins Triple Chocolate Cookies  Fancy Cookies Page 60 Alfajores Amaretti Black and White Cookies French Macarons Madaleines Palmiers Pinwheels Vanilla Meringues

Fruity Cookies Page Eighty-Two Coconut Macaroons Dried-Fruit Cookies Fig Bars Lemon Chewies Linzer Cookies Oatmeal Raisin Cookies Rugelach Thumbprints  Spicy Cookies Page One Hundred Four Cardamom Cookies Gingersnaps Gingerbreads Green Tea Cookies Molasses Spice Cookies Salt-and-Pepper Cookies Snickerdoodles  Nutty and Seedy Cookies Page One Hundred Twenty Six Almond Biscotti Almond Crescents Caramel Nut Bars Peanut Butter Cookies Pecan Sandies Pignoli Cookies Pistachio Cookies Poppy Seed Squares Sesame Crisps  Index Page One Hundred Fifty

Although it’s always possible to Google for recipes, read blogs and find recipes, use the online recipe websites, or use your Grandmother’s top secret recipe for the perfect chocolate chip cookie, it’s nice to have 50 popular yet diverse recipes all in one book.

The other thing I like about the book is that it has space on the pages to write notes and jot things down.  I am the queen of scribbling things next to recipes (with flour and butter on my fingers amid baking) but most cookbooks don’t have places for notes.  That was a nice touch.

I am excited to make Molasses Spice or Snickerdoodle Cookies from the book; classics that I haven’t tried my hand at yet, but want to.

I do have a Raw Vegan Gingerbread Cookie Bites recipe but I love ginger and molasses and want to make baked cookies.

Raw Vegan Gingerbread Cookie Bites
I can’t wait to play around with Stacy’s recipes.  I’ll keep you posted how things turn out.

If I had not been writing down the recipe for these Peanut Butter Oatmeal White Chocolate Chip Cookies while I was standing there making them I would have forgotten exactly what I had done.

Peanut Butter Oatmeal White Chocolate Chip Cookies stacked

Same goes for Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars (Vegan, GF)

Pumpkin Peanut Butter Oatmeal Bars

Even if it meant I had grease marks and flour dusted all over my scraps of paper and the pen was slipping out of my hands because I had butter and dough all over my fingers, I stopped to write things down.  I don’t even use a notepad.  My kitchen notes are scattered on random scraps of paper. Normally I’m not random like that but my recipes tend to be on little scraps.  Not high tech, at all.

The winner of the Gourmet Pretzels Giveaway is:

Kat October 31, 2011 at 8:50 am

I’d love to try the gluten free pretzels!

Congrats, Kat!

Questions:

1. Do you have a favorite cookbook or any cookbooks that you resort to over and over? 

I’m not the best lately with cracking open  my cookbooks.  I get so much online these days that I don’t use a fraction of the books I own or anywhere near their fullest extent of recipes.  Blogs, online sources, or Pinterest anyone?

2. Do you write notes down when you’re baking or cooking so that you can remember things later?

I used to think that I’d remember what I did or how I made something because it was so “obvious” or easy so wasn’t always the best at writing things down.

Until the next time I went to make that recipe months (or years) later and had absolutely no idea what tweaks or changes I made to an existing recipe.  And sometimes didn’t have the foggiest idea how I even began or started the recipe.

That happened to me with granola.  I used to make it years ago but randomly stopped for about 5 years and when I went to make it again was scratching my head.   I knew there was oats and sugar.  Or did I use Karo Syrup and brown sugar?  Or maybe white sugar with margarine?   Yeah.  I learned the hard to write things down.  Granola recipe (vegan, gluten-free) was recovered but it took some trial and error.   Lesson learned for me is to just stop and write things down because my memory apparently isn’t always what I think it is.

Thanks for the $25 Gift Card Giveaway entries!

P.S. Please Vote for Me in the Biscoff-Delta Bake Off.  I would really appreciate your vote and it just takes one second to click.  Thank you!

About the Author

Welcome to AverieCooks! Here you’ll find fast and easy recipes that taste amazing and are geared for real life. Nothing fussy or complicated, just awesome tasting dishes everyone loves!

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Please note: I have only made the recipe as written, and cannot give advice or predict what will happen if you change something. If you have a question regarding changing, altering, or making substitutions to the recipe, please check out the FAQ page for more info.

Comments

  1. I’m constantly writing down notes and changing recipes around to my own intolerances and preferences. I try and keep track of any little tweak or trick to make it better because I want my food to taste awesome, not just “ok.”

  2. I am a cookbook whore. I admit it. I love cookbooks, especially when there are color pictures of the recipe. My go to books are from America’s Test Kitchen. Food science is geeky-fascinating. I’m a note jotter just like you–somewhere on the page. A goal for “someday” is to take one of those books and make everything in it. (like on Julie & Julia) only nothing that requires a calf foot :)

  3. I love reading cookbooks just for fun–and that table of contents looks so comprehensive, it must be a treasure trove.

    I definitely get messy fingers all over things but as far as writing notes down, I try to remember to do that afterwards, rather than in the middle of it. Definitely a good idea to make a note…

  4. Very interesting cookbook, some like fabulous recipes.

    1. Not lately since I’ve been so busy, but usually one of Ani’s books.
    2. Yes, mainly substituting ingredients and tips.

  5. I am all about writing it down. And then I added more flour, more butter, etc. You just never know what you are going to tweak and if something sucks, you have to have it written to know why! And vice versa if it turns out great. Its the scientist in me.

    I have a huge stack of cookbooks and rarely crack them out, but when I do, I have a few favorites that I use as base recipes. Better Homes and Garden is always good for a jumping off point, and I have a couple vegan ones that I really like – Nava Atlas has a couple good ones.

  6. This cookbook looks great! I know you can get recipes online, but I think a cookbook is so much nicer! I need to find a place so I can have easier access to them. My kitchen is to small!

  7. Wow, your Raw Vegan Gingerbread Cookie Bites sounds delicious!! They are perfect to make for the holidays! Everything looks amazing and they are great for the season!

  8. I wish my baking notes were more organized. I had a book, but I have no idea where it is. Oh well. ;)

  9. I love hwen cook books are so worn in, stained a little, completely used. Those are the best kinds! I love looking through my mom’s old cookbooks and remembering meals she made and seeing how used they are. I usually take notes as the item is baking or cooking before I forget!

  10. I’m the EXACT same way about writing things down! I’ll find pieces of paper with a recipe scribbled down stuffed into my jacket pockets, in my purse, in my car… It’s always kind of exciting trying to remember what I made with the recipe, how it turned out, and then having the chance to make it again. Also, the cookbook looks wonderful!

  11. I love cookbooks period. I almost never use them, but love looking through for ideas and flavor combos I might never think of. I do keep a recipe journal in the kitchen for writing down recipes and have gotten over my No Writing in Books rule.

  12. Because of space issues, I’ve limited my collection of cookbooks, and I suppose it’s just as well, because I haven’t been cracking them open lately.

    I need to be more like you and write more stuff down as I’m cooking. Blogging helps with that–gives us a reason, and a place to put down the random notes and scribbles.

    Congrats on your new cookbook. Please promise me you’ll make the pignoli cookies. Those are so awesome and I’m looking for a good recipe for them ;-)

    1. Haha I was just about to say the same thing! You have GOT to enter the cookie swap – with your arsenal of goodies it would be almost mean not to! ;)

      1. I know, I’m going to be gone all December traveling so can’t do it…wish I could :(

  13. I’m normally Pretty good at remembering recipes I am making, but the greasy, floury, chocolatey covered fingers of Mine end up Leaving prints allll over the kitchen. The cooking spray is permanently covered In cookie dough, cake batter, etc.