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    Molasses Ginger Cookies

    By jim On 31 August 2004 · 9 Comments · In Recipes

    The Best Recipe is rapidly earning a reputation as one of my favorite cookbooks. Tonight I made Molasses Ginger Cookies, using fresh ginger. This is a great recipe for the little helpers because they can roll the dough into balls and coat them with sugar.

    The trick with these is to suppress the urge to continue cooking them until they “look done.” If you do, they’ll be crisp… not that there’s anything wrong with that, but I prefer chewy cookies.

    I prefer to use parchment paper on top of my cookie sheets. It’s easy to pull the paper and cookies off to cool, then load up the pan for the next batch. When I cash in my vast BlogShares stocks, I will investigate the newfangled silicone mats. The silicone spatulas rule, so I’m optimistic mats may be a boon to cooking.

    Molasses Ginger Cookies– makes about 15 large cookies

    2 1/2 C whole wheat flour
    2 t baking soda
    1 t ground ginger
    1 1/2 t cinnamon
    1 t ground cloves
    12 T unsalted butter, at room temperature
    1/2 C brown sugar, packed
    1/2 C white sugar
    1 egg
    1 t vanilla extract
    1/3 C unsulphured molasses
    1/3 C white sugar (reserve for rolling cookies)

    1. Preheat oven to 375°F
    2. Whisk flour, baking soda, cinnamon, ginger, and cloves. (I used fresh ginger. I peeled the skin off, then tossed it in the freezer for about half an hour. It grates much more evenly that way.)
    3. There is no number three.
    4. Cream the butter, sugars for 3 minutes, until it’s fluffy. Scrape down the sides of the bowl.
    5. Add the vanilla, egg, molasses. Stir another 30 seconds. Scrape down the sides of the bowl.
    6. Stir in the dry ingredients and mix until just combined, about 30 seconds.
    7. Fill a small bowl with the 1/3 C sugar.
    8. Roll 2 T of dough into a ball (it’ll be just under 2″ thick). Roll the balls in the sugar, place on parchment paper-lined cookie sheets, about 1 1/2 to 2″ apart.
    9. Bake for 11-13 minutes, when the outer edges begin setting and the centers are puffy. Rotate the cookie sheet halfway through the time. The cookies should look underbaked.
    10. Cool for 3 minutes, then transfer to a cooling rack.

     

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    9 Responses to Molasses Ginger Cookies

    1. jen says:
      1 September 2004 at 6:05

      Amazon just had Silpats in the last Friday sale for $10 for the half sheetpan size…great price, since they are usually $16-17/each. One is on my way to me as I type. Everyone I know swears by them for baking.

      Reply
    2. tedder says:
      1 September 2004 at 6:16

      Yep. We like our Silpat. They fit perfectly in a jelly roll pan, which is kinda convenient.

      -ted

      Reply
    3. jim says:
      17 March 2005 at 8:47

      I tried adding 2 teaspoons of orange zest to the sugar mixture. It’s kind of hard to taste. In retrospect, I think maybe making a glaze out of it would work better.

      Reply
    4. David says:
      21 May 2005 at 10:50

      mr. carson, thanks for providing the molasses ginger cookie recipe; i’ve used it twice and am VERY happy with it.

      Reply
    5. Kim says:
      26 May 2005 at 21:47

      The cookies are great! Thanks for the recipe.

      Reply
    6. sol says:
      7 June 2005 at 8:11

      I love your sites receipes. I enjoyed the second way to make cc cookies for my family and my favorie is the Molasses Gigner cookies. I would love it if your site was more printer friendly. Or am I just missing it?
      Thanks again.
      Sol

      Reply
    7. Kayley says:
      21 November 2005 at 16:50

      what does t stand for?

      Reply
    8. jim says:
      21 November 2005 at 18:36

      what does t stand for?

      t = teaspoon, or about 5 milliliters.
      T = tablespoon, which is three teaspoons or 15 mL
      C = cup, or 237 mL

      Reply
    9. jim says:
      8 March 2007 at 12:43

      Key note: when using whole wheat flour, it shouldn’t be ultra mega bran-enhanced with extra fibre. Otherwise, the cookies won’t have the chewiness. When in doubt, use unbleached white.

      Reply

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