Saturday, December 20, 2008

Dutch Spice Cookies

The title of this post should tip you off: I still haven't been cooking much lately. That has as much to do with lingering iron-supplement nausea as it does with my insane end-of-semester busyness. I promise you we're eating more than just cookies around here, although if Charlotte had her way, it would be nothing but cookies morning, noon, and night. And so far this family recipe is her favorite cookie. She actually eats the entire thing instead of just nibbling a few bites and then leaving it somewhere for me to find later.

This is a family recipe, which I believe came from my grandma Terlouw (my mom's mom).

Dutch Spice Cookies (makes about four dozen)
1 cup butter, softened (two sticks)
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup white sugar
2 eggs
1 T. vanilla
2 1/2 cups flour
1 t. baking soda
1/2 t. salt (more if you're using unsalted butter)
1 t. cinnamon
1/2 t. each nutmeg, allspice, cloves
Additional sugar and cinnamon for coating

Blend the butter and sugar together until creamy. Add the eggs one at a time and mix until well incorporated, scraping the sides of the bowl as you go. Add vanilla and mix.

Now, here's where I break the baking rules a bit: I don't sift together my dry ingredients in a separate bowl before adding to the wet ingredients. I just dump them in on top of the wet ingredients and mix them around a little bit. And my cookies always turn out okay. So, you can be a slacker like me, and your cookies will still be smaak lekker. (Is that right, dad? I'm forgetting the little Dutch I do know.)

Anyway, dump all the dry ingredients in the mixing bowl and blend away. If the mixture seems too wet, don't add more flour, just chill it in the fridge for an hour. Once the dough is firm enough to handle, roll into balls (about a tablespoon's worth) and roll in cinnamon/sugar mixture.

Bake at 350 degrees for 7-9 minutes. I like to err on the side of underbaking these, because they're really tasty when they're soft. Remove from pan to cool. Eat, enjoy, repeat.