Hera
here again, another solo misadventure as I'm going to be baking for my work's
cookie exchange. This is another first trial for the recipe. Today's
recipe is brought to you by Taste of Home website.
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From www.tasteofhome.com/recipes/red-velvet-cookies
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Here we go...
Some
revisions: I will be using a mixture of chocolate chips (1 ½ cups of milk
chocolate chips and ½ cups of dark chocolate chips) and reducing
the sugar to ½ cup because there will be frosting on these. I will also
be using butter instead of shortening. I don't have buttermilk and the
store ran out, so I will be using a substitute. For 1 cup of buttermilk =
1 cup of milk + 1 ¾ tsp cream of tartar, mix well and you just leave it out
for about five minutes.
Pretty
standard beginning, creaming the butter and adding the yolks.
Then we
can add the food colouring (the healthy alternative is adding grounded cooked
beets or beet juice, surprisingly, you do not taste the beet at all).
When mixing (after adding the flour
mixture and buttermilk), it became super thick like a soft dough. Super
hard to mix with a hand mixer so I had to resort to mixing by hand. I
suspect it may not have mixed well.
Here comes the egg whites.
After I
added the stiff peaked egg whites, it was very difficult to fold because it was
basically mixing a dough with something super foamy. The dough was super
dense and it was hard to just "fold" lightly to get it all
incorporated. I had to break the golden rule of "folding lightly
with egg whites" just to get it all together. I ended up mixing very
vigorously to get it all blended. At times, the dough and egg whites were
separated.
It took a while (about a good 5 minutes
at least), but it's finally mixed. I'm worried that it may get tough from
the over-mixing.
Now we
just need to wait 12 - 14 minutes while it's cooking in the oven.
It's not
exactly the red that I see in the picture, but it's a shade of red at least?
Let's see how it tastes?
The
chocolate chips definitely helps, but it tastes like raw flour. I was
looking at the comments while it was baking and a lot of comments also agreed
that this recipe called for too much flour. I will most likely cut at
least 1 cup of flour next time I make these. My friend also tasted this,
and she thinks the frosting will help drown out the flour-iness.
I ran
out of frosting so I had to do the zig-zag patterns. The recipe also
called for crumbling 8 cookies to sprinkle as decoration, but I'm short on
cookies. The cookies were bigger than anticipated, so I got 72 cookies (6
dozen) instead. Even after adding the frosting, it didn't really look
very festive, so I decided to add in some candy cane sprinkles.
These sprinkles were really big and they're a little hard and not much
sweetness at all.
Final Thoughts: These were
at least edible, but they're definitely not very high on my list taste-wise.
The chocolate and frosting did help with the flour-iness and the cookie
was still soft on the inside. I was worried about the over-mixing because
the dough before adding the egg whites was do dense, dry and thick.
Luckily it was not the case. This recipe can definitely use some
improvement, but it's a good try for something with a red velvet theme.
RECIPE FROM TASTE OF HOME (www.tasteofhome.com)
RED VELVET COOKIES
Yield: 7 ½ dozen
Ingredients:
1 cup shortening
1 cup sugar
¾ packed brown
sugar
3 eggs
(separated)
2 tsp red food
colouring
4 cups
all-purpose flour
3 Tbsp baking
cocoa
3 tsp baking
powder
1 tsp salt
1 cup buttermilk
(I used 1 cup milk + 1 ¾ tsp cream of tartar as substitute)
2 cups (12 oz)
semisweet chocolate chips
Frosting:
1 ½ cups
butter, softened
3 ¾ cups
confectioners' sugar
1/8 tsp salt
3 to 4 Tbsp 2%
milk
1) In a large
bowl, cream the shortening and sugars until light and fluffy. Beat in egg
yolks and food colouring.
2) Combine the
flour, cocoa, baking powder and salt. Add to the creamed mixture alternately
with buttermilk, beating well after each addition.
3) In another
bowl with clean beaters, beat egg whites until stiff peaks form, fold into
batter. Fold in chocolate chips.
4) Drop by
tablespoonfuls 2 in apart onto greased baking sheets. Bake at 350°F for 12
- 14 minutes until set. Remove to wire racks to cool completely.
5) In a large
bowl, beat the butter, confectioners' sugar and salt until blended. Add
enough milk to achieve desired consistency. Crumble eight cookies and set
aside.
6) Frost
remaining cookies; sprinkle with cookie crumbs. Store in an airtight
container or freeze for up to month.