BAKING COOKIES
When the dough has been rolled until it is of the right thickness, cut it in the manner shown in Fig.9, using cooky cutters of any desired size and shape. The four cutters shown, which are heart, round,
diamond, and star shapes, are the ones that are most commonly used. They are merely strips of tin bent
into a particular shape and attached to a handle for convenience in using. In cutting the dough, try to cut
it to the best possible advantage, leaving as little space between the cookies as possible. Very often, as,
for instance, when diamond-shaped cookies are being cut, the line of one may be the exact line of the
one next to it and thus no dough need be left between the cookies.
However, as Fig. 9 shows, a certain amount of dough necessarily remains after all the cookies that
can be made out of a piece of rolled dough have been cut. Put these scraps together and set them aside
until all the fresh dough has been rolled. Then put them together carefully, roll them out again, and cut
the piece thus formed into cookies just as the others were cut. Some persons are in the habit of working
these scraps in with the next piece of dough that is rolled out, but this is not good practice, for by the
time they are rolled on the board a second time, more flour will be worked into them than into the dough
with which they were put and the texture will not be the same.
BAKING COOKIES
Have a cooky sheet or other large shallow pan greased and floured, and
as soon as all the cookies are cut from a piece of dough, pick them up with the aid of a spatula, as in Fig.
9, and arrange them on the pan. Do not place them too close together, or upon baking they will stick to
one another and lose their shape. As soon as a pan is filled, set it in the oven, either directly on the
bottom or on a low rack. If the temperature of the oven is correct, the cookies should begin to rise within
2 or 3 minutes after they are put into the oven. After they have baked on the bottom and have risen as
much as they will, they will appear as shown in Fig. 10. At this point, set them on a higher rack to
brown on top. In this browning, they will shrink to some extent, so that the finished cookies will not
have so smooth an appearance as when they are placed on the top rack. When done, they should be
slightly brown, and if it is found that they are too brown on top, it may be known that the oven
temperature was a little too high or perhaps that they should have had a little less time on this rack.
Molasses cookies require special care to prevent them from burning, for, as is explained in
Hot Breads
,
any food containing molasses burns readily. A comparatively short time is necessary for the baking of
cookies, but they should be left in the oven long enough to be thoroughly baked when removed. When
ready to serve, properly baked cookies should appear as in Fig. 11.
RECIPES FOR COOKIES
With the principles of cooky making well understood, the
housewife is fully qualified to try any of the recipes that follow. As will be noted, a number of recipes
are here given and so a pleasing variety may be had. Some of them are suitable for certain occasions and
some for others. For instance, barley-molasses cookies are very good with coffee for breakfast, while
filled cookies make an excellent cake for picnic lunches. Cream cookies or vanilla wafers could be
served at an afternoon tea, while sand tarts make a very good accompaniment for ice cream or some
other dainty dessert. The nature of the cooky will enable the housewife to determine when it should be
served.
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