D'Acampo -- Gino D'Arcy Spice Apples Dabinett Apple Dai Choy Goh Daifuku Daikon Radishes Dainagon Beans Dairy Dairy -- Butter Dairy -- Cheese Dairy Salt Daisui Li Dakchip Potatoes Dakota Chief Potatoes Dakota Gold Apples Dakota Pearl Potatoes Dalgairns -- Catherine Emily Callbeck Dalmatian Beans Dalmatian Bitter Cherry Dalmatian Marasca Cherry Dalmatian Wild Cherry Damascena Dambala Damper Devils Damper Dogs Dampfwurst Sausages Dan's Italian Rocambole Garlic Dan's Russian Porcelain Garlic Dan Beh Danablu Danbo Cheese Dancing Mushroom Dancy Tangerines Dandara Dandelion Previous | Next | Cookies© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedThere are things that the ancient Romans made but we don't know what they actually were, as the items were so everyday in their kitchens that they never needed explaining in writing. Two thousand years from now, historians may struggle equally over our word, "cookie." Cookie is really hard to define; with any luck, future archaeologists will find a petrified example of one with a label attached and that will set it all straight. An attempt at a definition: a small, usually crisp cake that can be eaten from the hand in a few bites. It is flat, though sometimes it may be raised slightly. It is made from a sweet dough that has been rolled and cut and then baked on a cookie sheet (flat baking sheet.) Sometimes, the dough is a bit more moist, and is dropped onto the cookie sheet by spoonfuls. Cooking Tips
Soft Cookies
If a recipe calls for some white sugar and some brown sugar, then the author of that recipe is aiming to create a cookie that is somewhere betwixt crisp and soft. Butter, being a natural substance, contains water and so will melt as it heats, making Cookies that spread out. Shortening, being a man-made product, contains less water than butter, and so won't melt as fast during cooking, making dough that holds its shape more and thus Cookies that spread out less. Literature & Lore Cookies is more of a North American word. They are called "biscuits" in the UK, though the North American word is starting to make inroads. Language Notes The word "cookie" may come from the Dutch word "koekjes", passed into English through the Dutch settlers in New York. In Latin, "that's how the cookie crumbles" is "sic friat crustulum". Also called: Biscuits (French); Biscotti (Italian); Bizcochos, Galletas, Pasteles (Spanish); Biscoitinhos, Bolachas (Portuguese)
See Also:BiscuitsOther entries for: CookiesAnzac Biscuits, Benne Wafers, Children's Rusks, Chocolate Wafers, Cookies, Drop Cookies, Forfeit Cookies, Fortune Cookies, Frappe (Biscuits), Gingerbread, Iced Zoo Biscuits, Ladyfingers, Lebkuchen, Madelines, Mostaccioli Cookies, Okra, Pasticci, Pizzelle, Ratafia Biscuits, Refrigerator Cookies, Rolled Cookies, Rosettes, S'mores, Shrewsbury Biscuits, Speculaas Cookies, Spritz Cookies, Vanilla Wafers, Wagon Wheels, Whippet Cookies, Yatsuhashi Other entries for:DessertsAboukir Almonds, Angel Delight, Applesauce, Bananas Foster, Bangbelly, Belgian Waffles, Bhapa Doi, Bizcocho Borracho, Cakes, Cassata Gelata, Cassata, Cassatelle di Ricotta, Cherries Jubilee, Chiboust Cream, Compote, Cream Tea, Crème d'amandes, Crème Plombières, Cumberland Rum Butter, Custard, Deep-Fried Mars Bars, Doughnuts, Dream Topping, Dream Whip, Dutch Crunch Topping, Eton Mess, French Toast, Fürst-Pückler-Eis, Halvah, Hattit Kit, Ice Cream Cones, Marshmallows, Meringue Italienne, Meringue Powder, Meringue, Mishti Doi, Moonpies, Nanaimo Bars, Nun's Tummies, Orange à la Norvegienne, Pastry Cream, Pies & Tarts, Pokerounce, Poor Knights of Windsor, Poutine au Pain, Poutine à Trou, Puddings, Spumoni, Syllabub, Tavuk Gögsü, Timbale Brillat-Savarin, Tiramisù, Tortoni, Trifle, Vark, Waffles, Wagashi, Warabi Mochi, Zuccotto Other entries for: DishesDumplings, Salads, Savoury Dishes Related RecipesOatcakes, Potato Chip Cookies, Pumpkin Spice Cookies, Shrewsbury Biscuits |
|

