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Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipes

Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipes

 

First, always use real butter. Don't let anyone convince you that butter vs. margarine don’t make any difference. It does. Second, TRIPLE the amount of vanilla extract recommended. This means to use a tablespoon where a teaspoon is specified. Also, always use real vanilla extract and not "vanillin," which is bogus, although cheaper, and sold next to the genuine article in many grocery stores.

 

Third, and this can make a big difference, don't just let the butter sit out at room temperature to become soft. Instead, melt it, very carefully, so that it doesn't burn (you can use a double boiler -- if anyone out there still has one! -- or else a microwave oven that is set very low and which you are watching like a hawk). A microwave can burn the butter in a second if you turn your back at an inopportune moment.

 

If you like, try adding a 10-ounce bag of Reese's peanut butter chips, along with the chocolate chips. This makes a great cookie, but if you do this it is probably best to omit the nuts. Or, try adding a bag of butterscotch chips and substituting oatmeal for the nuts.

 

·         Make sure your cookie dough is cold when you put it on the cookie sheet. If you have to chill it in between batches, that's what you should do.

·         Make sure your cookie sheet is cooled to room temperature between batches. I usually rinse mine under the tap to clean off the crumbs and cool it down.

·         Mix the dough thoroughly but don't over-mix it.

·         Don’t overbake.

 

Whether or not you use Heath bars, cinnamon, maple syrup, or other non-standard ingredients, the nuts are optional. Many people prefer chocolate chip cookies without nuts. Alternatively, you can try adding oatmeal (even if you don't add butterscotch chips) in the same volume as the nuts called for by the recipe (but if you do this, be sure to add more liquid).

 

I do feel obligated to point out, for that matter, that both the morsels and the baking itself can be optional. Those of us who make chocolate chip cookies know how important it is to sample the dough before baking! And I'd have to confess that sometimes the raw dough (I prefer my raw dough chipless) is even better than the cookies.

 
Polish Recipes

Polish Recipes

 

Polish history began in the early 9th century when the Polians (dwellers in the field) obtained hegemony over the others Slavic tribes that occupied the country. Their principal dynasty (PIAST) accepted Christianity in 966. Poznan was the earliest Polish capital and Gniezno the first Episcopal see. The main line of the Piast dynasty ended in 1370 with Casimir III, and the crown passed to Casimir's nephew, Louis I of Hungary and to Louis's daughter Jadwiga. Jadwiga married Ladislaus (Wladyslaw) Jagiello, duke of Lithuania, who became king of Poland as Ladislaw II (Wladislaw). The time 1386-1572 under Jagiello's power was considered the "golden age" of Poland. King Ladislaw III (Wladislaw) (killed) by the Turks in the battle of Warna (1444), gave Poland the prestige of championing the Christian cause against the Moslem tide. In 1569 Poland absorbed Lithuania by the Union of Lublin. After 1572 no dynasty maintained itself for long, and the theory that the entire nobility could take part in the royal elections, applied in practice, frequently led to contested elections and civil wars.

 

As summer draws to an end, the Polish Feast of Greenery (Matki Boskiej Zielnej), which is usually held on September 8th, takes place on September 8th.  The farm people bring to church great bouquets of herbs, vegetables, and corn, interwoven with a few flowers from the fields and gardens, which are blessed by the priest. These bouquets are carried home and kept until the name day of the following year. When there is sickness in the household, the herbs are brewed and used for medicinal purposes, not only for the people, but for the livestock as well.

 

Christmas Day was considered so important a holiday that menial work of any kind was not even thought of. This day was spent in comparative quiet surroundings within the intimate family group. Christmas day had its traditional menu, but there was no special number of courses. Ham and Polish sausage were very popular, since pork had always been eaten at special festivities. The old Polish literature testifies that Bigos, hunter’s stew, was often used as the principal dish on Christmas Day. Cooking included only the heating of previously prepared food.

 

In every house, from the richest to the poorest, the table is spread with food that is blessed on Holy Saturday. The Easter table will be covered with a white tablecloth. The white tablecloth is indicative of the white swaddling cloth with which Our Lord was wrapped when he was placed in the Holy Sepulcher. There must always be a roasted pig's head decked with flowers, ham, veal and the famous Polish sausage strongly flavored with garlic. In the middle of the table is a lamb holding a cross, which is made of sugar. On the Polish Easter table there is also a great number of cakes made in special shapes ­ tall iced babki, flat and thin kolacze, and the most delicious mazurki flavored with lemon and dried fruit. The blessed eggs, the symbol of life, are sliced into pieces, and each person present takes a piece of egg and wishes each other good health, prosperity, and happiness for the coming year.

 
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