Not yet a member Already a member ? Forgotten password ?
PETITCHEF
Add your blog-site | Add your recipes | Receive daily menu | Contact us


Sue?s Swedish Brown Cookies


By In Our Grandmothers' Kitchens (Visit website)



Sue Haas in the Kitchen

Sue Haas in the Kitchen


 

Here is the fourth installment in my Twelve Cookies of Christmas series. These brown cookies (they derive their color from caramelization of the sugar) will banish your March blahs.

 

The recipe comes from Sue Haas in Seattle, Washington, a regular reader of this blog and the dear sister of my dear minister, Cara Hochhalter. Sue writes children?s books when she isn?t working on art sales and appraisals. She says the recipe originated with her friend Marilynn Pray.

 

Sue and her daughter Alysa are busy planting a garden together. (I AM SO JEALOUS! We still have snow in the northeast!) Alysa writes about gardening and cooking on her own blog, Grass-Fed Goat.

 

The photos on this post come courtesy of Sue and Alysa, although I did test the recipe. (I felt it was my sacred duty.) The cookies taste of butter and honey: what could be better? Next time I may try them with maple syrup instead of the honey. After all, March is Maple Month!

 

Sue uses C&H Baker?s Sugar for the ?fine baking sugar? (a.k.a. superfine sugar) called for in the recipe. I was in a hurry and didn?t have time to go to the store for superfine sugar so I put regular sugar in my blender and pulsed. It needed a little sorting through (the pulsing left a few clumps), but after the sorting it was an acceptable substitute.

 

Enjoy the cookies. I hope you?re thinking about your own garden?.

 

Cookies_tableweb

 

The Cookies

 

Ingredients:

 

1/2 cup (1 stick) sweet butter at room temperature

1/2 cup fine baking sugar

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

1 cup flour

3 teaspoons honey (plus a small amount more if needed)

 

Instructions:

 

Preheat the oven to 300 degrees. Line a large cookie sheet with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat. Cream together the butter and sugar; then beat in the baking soda. (Sue actually whisks the soda into the flour, but I added it by itself.) Add the flour and continue to mix lightly until combined.

 

Drizzle the honey into the flour and sugar/butter mixture and stir. The dough will stick together a bit better with the honey added. You may need to add a little more honey to make the dough hold together. Form the dough into a large ?softball? shape with your hands. Divide it into two pieces.

 

Roll and pat one of the pieces of dough onto the parchment on one long side of the pan into a long, flattened 12-inch ?snake,? smushing the dough with your fingers so that it forms an even flat piece, about 2 to 3 inches wide and about 12 inches long.

 

Do the same with the second piece of dough placed several inches apart on the same sheet from the first piece. You will have two long, flat shapes of dough on one cookie sheet.

 

2 Flattened snakesweb

 

Bake the snakes until the dough is golden brown. (Sue estimated this at 15 to 20 minutes; it took a little longer in my oven.)

 

Check the dough after about 12 minutes. Take the cookies out earlier, or when they are only light brown, if you want a softer cookie. (I liked them crisp.)

 

Remove the cookie sheet from the oven. Let it cool for only 2 to 3 minutes. While the dough is still warm cut a long line down the center of each snake-shaped piece. Then cut each “snake” diagonally at about one-inch intervals to make 3-inch long cookie strips.

 

diagweb

 

If you’d rather make really long diagonal strips (about 5- to 6-inch-long cookie strips), omit making the vertical cut down the center of each snake. That would reduce the total number of finished cookies by half. OR cut each 3-inch cookie strip in half to make tiny 1-1/2-inch-long bite-size pieces to feed a big crowd.

 

“Light, buttery, and delicious,” says Sue of her cookies.  Makes 20 to 40 cookies, depending on how you cut them.

Alysa and Sue

Alysa and Sue


 


 

If you enjoyed this post, please consider taking out an email subscription to my blog. Just click on the link below!


Subscribe to In Our Grandmothers’ Kitchens by Email.




Rate this recipe : Not good   so so   Good   Very good   Excellent !!!  




Imprimer cette page

Send this recipe to a friend

ask a question about this article

share on Facebook


Related recipes

  • Recipe Apple crisp cookies
    Apple crisp cookies (1 vote)
    Dessert Easy
    45 Minute(s) 20 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :Apple Crisp Cookies (By ME) 1 Cup of Soften Butter 1 Cup of Brown Sugar 1/2 Cup of Sugar 2 Eggs 3 Cups of Flour 1 Tsp of Baking S...
  • Recipe Eggless saffron pistachio cookies
    Eggless saffron pistachio cookies (2 votes)
    other Very Easy
    10 Minute(s) 12 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :1 cup less 2 tbsp- all purpose flour 3/4 cup sugar 2 tbsp- corn starch 1/2 tsp baking soda 1/4 tsp salt 1 tbsp- dried or fresh orange zest 6 tbs...
  • Recipe Chewy oreo & chocolate chip cookies
    Chewy oreo & chocolate chip cookies (2 votes)
    Dessert Easy
    30 Minute(s) 30 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :Flour-1 ½ cup Butter-100 gm Sugar-1 cup (powdered) Chocolate Chips-1 cup Oreo cookies-10 cookies cut into pieces Baking soda-2 tsp Salt to taste Vanil...
  • Recipe Non-bake baileys oreo cookies cheesecake
    Non-bake baileys oreo cookies cheesecake (3 votes)
    Dessert Easy
    45 Minute(s) 5 Minute(s)
    Ingredients :Ingredients (7? round cake): (Base) 12 Oreo cookies 70 g Unsalted Butter (soft) (Filling) 1 block Cream cheese 2 Oreo cookies 150ml whipping cream 30...