Showing posts with label Cookies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cookies. Show all posts

Apr 5, 2010

Foodly speaking blog...

Proudly announcing (drumroll please) a brand new blog...Hi friends,

I have decided that I don't blog very often for one main reason, I need a purpose to blog! After some soul searching, pondering, yogaing, and running a few long runs, it has come to me. Inspiration at it's finest! A blog all about my favorite passion: FOOD! Now, I recognize this has been done before, many times, but never has a blog been created about my very own favorite recipes, my favorite restaurants, my obsession with vanilla extract, and my cooking catastrophes. Food fascinates me on so many levels, from growing it, finding it, choosing it, preparing it, feeding others, and eating it, I find great joy in the journey of food. So that's it, a blog all about FOOD!

It will include but not be limited to: lots of recipes featuring gluten free, vegan, everything from main dishes to cookies and baked goods, new food projects (making vanilla extract), local restaurant reviews, product reviews! Check it out at foodlyspeaking.blogspot.com.

Hip Hip Hurray for food!

Apr 2, 2010

Vanilla Project

I have dreamed about, thought about, read about it, prepared for it, but I have never as of yet done it! What, you might ask? Make my very own Vanilla Extract, with real vanilla beans, and real alcohol. Homemade has never been so great!

It is so simple:
Vanilla Beans (grade B or better),
Vodka (or 80 proof alcohol)
A bottle

I read lots of different websites and decided upon about 6-7 beans per cup of alcohol, for a 2 fold strength, given 3 beans is FDA standard. I already bake with 2 fold strength, so I would hate to step down. This little experiment became a realization when Vanilla Products USA (ebay) sent me free Vanilla Beans with my purchase of 2 fold strength Madagascar Vanilla Extract (which is fabulous)! Thanks Vanilla Product USA, I highly recommend you to everyone.

So, I sliced the beans down the center with about an inch still in tact at the top, for ease of removal later on. Some websites recommended scraping out the caviar, as it enhanced flavor. It mentioned this if you were trying to produce extract in 6 weeks. Since I have time on my side, 6 months, I opted out of that messy step, trusting these little guys to have plenty of time to seep!

Most places recommend a glass bottle, I got lazy on this step. I had a 32 oz. bottle that formerly housed Nielsen-Massey Vanilla Extract, and deemed that a worthy enough container. I filled it without about 20-22 beans and 3 cups of Vodka, immersing these guys completely.

I gave it a good shake, then I kindly placed the bottle in my cool, dark cupboard, and patiently (key word, patiently) will wait for the vanilla to seep into the alcohol producing a most happy extract. Oh joy, Connie's Cookies can hardly wait for your flavor to enhance, embolden, and empower!

Dec 14, 2009

Sacred Space

The kitchen to me is a sacred space. Albeit ours is small and humble, it is to me the landscape of creation. In the sacred walls of the kitchen, the combination of heavenly ingredients intermingle in a most melodic formula to produce an amazing end result. The fusion of life's offsprings creates new life.
But, come on Connie, it's just a cookie. No, it's so much more, its Cookie Paradise.
I clean my kitchen insidiously, almost to the point of compulsively, because to me the vessel in which creation comes must be completely pure. I would hate for any morsel of toxicity to enter into a new unblemished creation. This simply seems wrong. Any of those that know me, and as my husband will attest, it is a painstaking process to make certain these creations are developed in a pure environment, brought to life in the exact timing of their oven, and then carefully packaged and presented to their new home. It is a labor of love, that seems often to go far beyond the call of duty, but I can't help it. It seems a part of my nature as the creator to give an inordinate amount of love and attention to each cookie creation, letting each one be personally touched, shaped, packaged, and offered to a worthy partaker. It's in my blood to create more than just a cookie, indeed, in my kitchen it falls nothing short of cookie paradise.

Nov 9, 2009

Oatmeal Scotchies

Oatmeal Scotchies
Ok, so the truth is I make, bake, and consume cookies year round, regardless of the season, but there is something wonderful about Christmas time upon us that delights my soul in the smell of cookies. With the inception of Connie's Cookies this year, the good old oatmeal scotchie almost seemed  forgotten until I was quickly reminded while staring at a bag of Butterscotch chips today at Super Target.  I just knew they had to come home with me. 

This baby combines the goodness of an oatmeal cookie, but cuts out the raisins which almost might be too healthy, and adds some butterscotch yumminess.  The recipe is quite traditional but I love to add my own little variations to make it feel like my own. The rice crispies and pudding are optional (but they sure are fun!)

 Another reason I can't wait to open a Connie's Cookie Paradise where you can individualize your own little dreams.  Here is how todays creation came together. 

Note: This is for high altitude (4500 ft), if at sea level decrease flour 1/4 cup, and increase baking powder 1/2 tsp.

Ingredients:
3 cups Whole Wheat Pastry Flour
3 cups oats
2 tsp baking powder
2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp nutmeg (opt)
1/8 tsp clove (opt)
1 tsp sea salt

Mix all dry ingredients above in a bowl, set aside.

1/2 cup butter
1/4 cup canola oil
1/2 cup sugar
1 cup brown sugar
1 small 4 oz. butterscotch pudding snack
2 eggs
1-2 tsp vanilla

Cream together butter, sugar, add oil. Add butterscotch pudding snack, 2 eggs, and vanilla, mix until well combined. Add dry ingredients. Mix slowly until just combined.
Mix-ins
1 cup rice crispies
1 - 1 1/2 cup butterscotch chips (to your liking)
Mix-in by hand. Refrigerate dough for 1-24 hours for best flavor.  Bake in preheated oven 350 degrees 8-12 minutes depending on size of cookie.
Enjoy!

Sep 28, 2009

They found Joy in Cooking and Joy in Life.

These are the words on the cover "The Lynn Family Recipes," a beautiful addition to my collection of cookbooks I received this weekend.  I was pleased to have the opportunity to apprentice one of the finest bakers north of Salt Lake I have ever met.  A kind Jerry Lynn invited me into his home, into his baking delights, and into his joyful world. The Lynn cookbook was just one small token of the visit, the knowledge and experience however far surpassing the recipes. I learned on Friday, that simple Jerry Lynn is a master in his own right. He can make more cinnamon rolls and fresh bread than probably all of our efforts combined. The most impressive part, it's all by hand. The only modern devices he uses is a mixer and an oven, the rest is from the palm of his hand.  As I watched his hands and feet shuffle around the kitchen, I observed Jerry in 'his flow'. It was clear the kitchen is 'his' domain. He has a familiarity and efficiency that surpasses our everyday use of the kitchen. He told me that during busy seasons he produced up to 80 dozen cinnamon rolls and 140 dozen muffins. Jerry owned a bakery for many years in South Bountiful area. If you are familiar you may remember his incredible cinnamon roles or fresh pies. 
How did I encounter such a mentor of baked goods? The meeting of Jerry Lynn has been magical from the start. He is my neighbor at the Bountiful Farmers Market and a backyard Beekeeper of 20-60,000 bees. He sell his honey that he bottles in his own home, and friends there simply is no better honey out there.  At first meeting I may have thought that his skills stopped at Beekeeping alone, but little did I know the baking genius that lied beneath.  Jerry was kind and inquisitive of my small cookie business and eager to help teach me cinnamon roles. I mentioned to him that I felt good with cookies and Gluten Free, but the thought of Gluten Full flours and yeast made me as nervous as a little girl. In fact, we can blame this on my mother but she never cared to make fresh bread other than a bread machine and her first experience as a child baking bread it turned out like a brick. I had assumed it simply wasn't worth learning. Well, I was wrong. 
Baking bread is a science, an art, and gets better with experience. Jerry doesn't have to analyze or read recipes, baking bread is a part of who he is, it's second nature. I feel this way with cookies, but not with bread, and not with golf. Perhaps someday I will, but I realized that while we take these skills and dilute them with modern appliances, technology, and quickie solutions, there is simply no substitute for the hand made process of making and shaping bread.  Yeast is living, so we treat is kindly and let it multiply in it's element. It isn't as temperamental as I once thought after understanding the properties in which it likes to grow. 

Life has turned around for me, for years I spent time trying to climb the corporate ladder, find more money, bigger homes, faster ways of doing things. Now I find solace in the simple beauty of life, in a small garden, in a simple pose, in working with my hands, and leaving a labor of love in my path. 

Jerry left me with a new found knowledge that I certainly couldn't place a price tag. His knowledge come from generations of finding joy in cooking and joy in life.  I am certainly not convinced that I will own a bakery with yeast breads, but I do know see the love and dedication it takes produce a legacy.

Sep 19, 2009

For the love...

Of cookies. These are not my words, and I typically like to share my own, but this ode to Cookies spoke to my soul, moved me profoundly, and helped me realize there are others that feel as strongly about an amazing Gluten Free cookie as I do.

So Katrina Allrich, thank you, thank you, and thank you.

"My Ode to Cookies 

Life is short, number one. And just because I have celiac disease doesn't mean I surrender to a life without chocolate chip cookies. And coffee laced cookies. And mint chocolate chip cookies. I'm not giving up on warm-from-the-oven melty chocolate goodness. I'm most definitely not settling for any month old pre-packaged gluten-free poor excuse for a cookie. No way. Not gonna happen.

Because a good cookie is no small thing.

A good cookie can make you smile, even after a long, achingly crappy day. A good cookie might even bring you a kiss. Or little arms of appreciation wrapped around your neck. A good cookie might make you a new friend. Or prove to the class that you're not a total, allergic freak living on weirdo food that you have to feel sorry for and throw bread balls at.

A good cookie can make you feel like you belong."

Beautiful

Aug 31, 2009

Facebook

Ok, so really, I never anticipated this day would come, but it did. On saturday I did something I am not sure I can reverse(well actually, I suppose I can). I joined Facebook. After years of singlehood, I had decided that I simple did not want to be a part of social networking internet sites. I swore them off even if they were not linked to dating. I don't regret this decision, as it was a keen part of the transformational changes that came while discovering and deepening my yoga practice. One of my desires was to lead a life of simplicity. In NYC with the chaos of daily living and interacting with many people this worked out well.

Then I moved to Utah. Life is slightly more isolating the NYC, you don't walk out on the subway every day and see thousands of people before you
 even get to work, you don't run into neighbors walking home, or at the yoga studio. I am still blessed to see many people each week through teaching, farmers market, etc, but I have realized that Facebook and/or Blogging is a connection to those that have shaped who I am today, my dear friends. On Saturday I set up the account with the motivation to become a fan of Connie's Cookies ( a page my husband set up). Once I did that, I suppose it makes sense to reconnect with all those friends from NYC and all over I haven't seen for some time. I am content for now, but I know I must place controls on it to not become a time sucker!

Check out Connie's Cookies on Facebook, become a fan! For the love of cookies, please!

Aug 24, 2009

My very first review...

Wow, it's true, my very first review of Connie's Cookies came by the lovely Jessica I met at the Summerfest 08. She was helping out with the Oak Pitt BBQ, and was delighted to stumble across the Gluten Free Cookies. Have a read and tell me what you think! Her review http://wasatchfronteatsout.blogspot.com/2009/08/connies-cookies.html.



Aug 11, 2009

A SOLD OUT SHOW!!!

I just want to take a moment to personally thank each and every beautiful cookie at Connie's Cookies at Summerfest 09' in Bountiful City Park. This weekend you proved your beauty, courage, attractive appeal, and bursting flavor to wow the visitors of the festival. You did so well, both individually and in your small groups packaged of 3, to land yourself into the mouths of many guests leaving not a single one of you to take home.  In fact you sold out before the show was even over, 6:50pm on Sat, with 3 hrs to go!
While its painfully difficult as your creator to pass you into the hands of hungry mouths, the truth is, the more you get out there, the greater your likelihood for your population to never become extinct.  In fact the sole purpose of your creation is for enjoyment and consumption. You have made me so proud!  Let's take a looksie at the successful line-up!

 The display!

The stars- Allstar Monster Chocolate Chunk, your super size chunks set you apart from the pack!

Double Mint, we could never do it without you, with the second in popularity, you are a HUGE mouth pleaser!

Triple Ginger Delight, you steal the show with your kick! And thanks for pleasing those that don't like chocolate. 
Our sweet Everything Nice, to some you are a staple in their life, they couldn't do without your spice and Everything Nice (Oats, Raisins, Chocolate, Rice Crispies and more)!
Fresh from the Garden Zucchini, what? and you are Gluten-Free??? One bite and I just can't believe it! I adore you, I honor your, I bow to your existence!

And last but not least, my favorite, Triple PB Chocolate, the fusion of all great things, PB, Peanuts, sugar, PB Chips, Milk Chocolate, and best of all love!

A special thanks to our Gluten-Free variety's, you had several consumers you left speechless, and extraordinarily happy!  They wonder if it is legal for you to tantalize their taste buds like you do.  I tell them you were meant for pleasing, and that is what you'll do!

You make mom and dad proud!

You sold so well, this is what Micah thinks of not having any extra to take home and consume!

Jul 12, 2009

Flour Footracks

I am not sure who is playing in the All-Purpose, Pastry, and Bread Flour, but I do remember that Ryan Simmons got a second date out of Kimberly Calder by giving her a basket of Flours.

I love Flours, all types. I love to mix and match flours for different blends of protein, taste, texture, and flour fun.

I love flour, gluten free, gluten full, there is no bad type of flour.
In fact Flour is such a staple in our home we have over 200 lbs of it. Thats a lot of cookies.

Jun 29, 2009

Connie's Cookie Paradise in Bountiful


It is only suiting that the land of Good and Plenty in Bountiful, UT, is the first home to sell this cookie pillow delights. This is the beginning of a Cookies Baker's Dream. Soon I hope to offer them as you sit on a cloud lavishingly relaxing with a cookie in both hands. As for now the Bountiful Farmers Market is turning out as a sell-out situation on the first go around. Mom and cookies couldn't be happier. I love all you that believe in dreams, they really do come true, one cookie at a time...



and I couldn't do it without my right hand man...

My favorite flavor, although they are all my favorite would have to be the 
TRIPLE PEANUT BUTTER CHOCOLATE.
I stumbled across this recipe on celiac.com, and with a few tweaks and addition of milk chocolate, dry roasted peanuts, and reeses chip, I can't think of a better PB cookie out there. The best part, or the part that doesn't matter to you, it's Gluten-Free. (Sorry for those with Peanut allergies)




Aug 28, 2008

Anyone can bake...


Is it true, anyone can bake? Ratatouille, a most beloved film of mine proposes the following claim, 'Anyone can cook.'  I have made my own adaptation to the phrase by superimposing my one of my greatest loves, baking. I suppose one could use the phrase to suit any of their passions, ie, Anyone can practice yoga, anyone can jump out of an airplane, anyone can quit their day job and pursue their passions, anyone can get married, anyone can fly, anyone can waterski (except me).  Anyhow you get the point. Anyone can _______. You get to fill in the blank. Ewww, that could go on for hours of fun!!!!

Jan 3, 2007 I made a bolder move in my life, one that was motivated by love rather than fear. On January 3rd I was at a crossroads having been given an ultimatum to quit my job or forgo a Yoga Teacher Training of which I was already enrolled. Thinking back, and as I often recount to others I think that the decision was made that day. In all reality the decision to quit my job in the world of Finance came several weeks earlier when I had enrolled myself in the training. Secretly I had always wanted to know what it was like to do something just because I wanted to, not because I felt I HAD to.  

Let me back up a bit to shed some light on my thinking process at that time.  I grew up in a home where self reliance and independence was encouraged. I went to school, paid my way, worked hard in the lower eschalons of life serving golden swirls yogurts and bagels to make my way to a corporate job.  I truly believed that if I sacrificed by mopping floors and dealing with crusties who didn't like their coffees that someday I would have a sweet corporate job that would compensate for all the HARD word I had to do as a youngin. Boy was I wrong.  After sitting behind a computer screen for 40+ hours a week for 7 years, I started to realize that a little yoga class at the community center on Thursday night was my only sense of sweet relief. For 60 minutes I was able to 'let go'. Literally I felt the demands of the world grow lighter, as peace and calm began to wash over the achievement-oriented, fear based life I had conditioned myself to live.  It was a simple thing, yoga, but it changed the way in which I perceived the world around me and my relationship to it.

I had a dear friend at the time who once told me of his inspiration from Steven Jobs, owner and creator of Apple and Pixar. Although my friend still has yet to purchase a Mac, I believe it may happen in his dying days, he is Asian after all, so we can't fault him.  He encouraged me to read his graduation speech at Stanford. I should rephrase, a graduation speech he gave, not his own as Steve Jobs never graduated from college.  The night prior to January 3rd I felt inspired to read it. I encourage you to take the time to read it at some point or reread it if you already have. Steve makes 3 main points, 1-connect the dots, 2- Don't Settle, and 3-Live every day like its your last. Now whether you like the guy or not, or purchase his products need not matter because his points are true.  Many things impressed me at that time, but mostly the words 'DONT SETTLE', not in a career, and especially not in your choice of marriage partner. He mentioned how the choice of marital partner generally dictated the level of success in career and other pursuits. As I considered my own 7 siblings which I believe all married great, and looked over their successes in life, I then realized his conjecture was dead on. It was at that point I decided to not Settle, not in a career, not in a partner, not in anything. 

I have been engaged a few times in my life, for one reason or another it hasn't worked out. The details aren't important, but in all situations I knew at that time something about it wasn't right. I'm 30 and single. I don't plan to settle and I haven't waited this long for crap.  Crap meaning anything less that amazing. That is all I will say about marital status for now.

So the day of Jan 3rd came with keen preparation to not settle for a life that didn't bring complete fulfillment.  It was an easy decision, one that I have never looked back from with any regret. One that keeps me grounded in the present moment, with deep anticipation and excitement for the future.  

On January 3rd, 2007 I also began a set of journals inspired by my dear roommate at the time Kimberly Calder.  She had been an example to me by writing in them each day about how she was living her dreams. On that day I began to write and something marvelous happened, an unleashed beast of dreams started to flood the pages, with almost an unendin
g amount of vibrancy for life. Today I sit and look at a shelf of 10 journals with all the pages filled since then. The journal I am currently writing in is a bit less than up to par with the binding falling apart. I realized a month ago there must be a way to capture some of these thoughts in a way with greater longevity, hence the blog.

Quitting my job placed me in one of the happiest moments of my life. Over the next few months I discovered more about myself than I had in 7 years of corporate America.  I eventually did get a job but it was for a yoga studio, which seemed totally acceptable.  Once again a year and half or so later I find myself again without a formal job. I teach yoga and bake cookies, but once again I find myself in one of the happiest, freest, creative periods of life. I have the constraints of nothing but my own desires to find beauty and inspiration in this world. There is so much to be found, more than my words could ever express. I have recently developed a love for taking photos, of beautiful places, moments, people, family, whatever it may be. To capture a moment in time and refer back to it seems to bring great feelings to our remembrance, we seem to love and embrace this. Why, why do you we love to think back, is it because we want to be in that moment, living in the past, or is it because we want the moment, or more like it to come again? I'll leave the answer up to you.

About two weeks ago I came back from Utah to find a small furry uninvited house guest in my home.  I promptly set out rat poison, sticky traps with organic peanut butter, and even had a friends cat, Bonnie, come to stay for several nights in hopes of running this little pest out of his temporary human home. Surely he didn't belong with humans, or does he?  I find it interesting that Pixar chose to glorify the abilities of a rat.  The lowliest of all creatures, one that is a scavenger, carries diseases, and scurries across the train tracks for entertainment.  So while I have this disdain for the small furry rodent I realized that maybe this little guy has something to teach me after all. 

In the movie Remy (rat) says 'What's my problem? First of all I'm a rat, which means life is hard.  Second of all, I have a highly developed sense of taste and smell. What's wrong with a highly developed sense of taste and smell, rat poison.'  I'd like to think my little visitor was lured into my home because of the blissful smells of fresh baked cookies, that said a compliment he chose my place over the neighbors.  

Remy has some other great words of wisdom:
-If you are what you eat, then I only want to eat good stuff.

-What is so bad about being around humans?  They don't just survive, they discover, they create, just look what they do with food. (Again my rat must have realized my unleashed potential to create cookie magic and simply wanted to witness such miracles).

-All this cooking and reading, and tv watching while we read and cook, its like your involving me in crime, and I let you. (This one is Remy's brother, but I liken it to all those I subject as tasters of my cookies)

Gusteau, the inspired chef and owner of the restaurant also has his wisdom to impart:
-You must not let anyone define your limits based on where you come fro
m, you are only limited by your own soul, you must be fearless. (Yesterday I invested in $12 xanthum gum to perfect the Gluten Free cookie, a seemingly small thing, but anyone that understands my financially frugal personality to save a buck recognizes this is fearless).

-Food always comes to those who love to cook.

-Always do something unexpected, and for the rest of us, follow the recipe.

-Anyone can cook, that doesn't mean anyone should.

As I watch the movie,  I feel my sentiments for my houseguest soften and maybe even hope the cat didn't scare him away completely (ok maybe not but you get what I mean).  Remy, the rat has a deep adoration and appreciation for food:

-No brother of mine eats 'rejectamenta' in my town. (I feel the same way when friends visit me in NYC).

-Chew it slowly, only think about the taste. (he gets it)

-Change is nature, the part that we can influence, when we decide.

-When asked by his father 'Where are you going?' as Remy walks away, 
Remy responds, 'with luck, forward'.

Linguini is Remy's outlet of skills, using the boy to share his creations. Ego is the food critic which Linguini hopes to impress with Remy's talent. 

Linguini tells the food critic, 'You are thin for someone who loves food.'  I hope people say the same about me.
The food critic responds by saying, 'I don't like food, I LOVE it, if I don't love it, I don't swallow.'

And in the food critics conclusive commentary on the meal of Ratatouille he ex
perienced cooked by a rat and his rat family he says 'Critics rarely risk anything, but there are times when a critic truly risks something, and that is the discovery and defense of the new.  The world is often unkind to new talent, new creations. The NEW needs friends.'

I've come across many inspiring rats and individuals over the past 20 months of my life, those that have given me a small taste of what it is to do what you love.  I hope to do the same, if a rat can do it, surely can I.

I once was told by a wise friend their are two emotions, love and fear. Every thing and decision we do in life is motivated by one or the other. I don't know about you but I choose love, its a lot more fun than the other.




Aug 25, 2008

Cookie Inspiration


This photo was taken June 22, 08, a day I realized with a semi-successful batch of gluten free cookies, that I love to make cookies. Not only do I like to make cookies but I like to see a smile on the cookie recipients face.  I am showing off my own cheer here of course, but one of the intentions with this blog is to capture the joy that cookies bring into our lives. I will attempt to capture this in photo, word, and deed to the best of my abilities.

So I have a dream, it includes a cookie para
dise bakery.  It will be full of sky blue walls, cookie clouds, and one wall dedicated to cookie inspiration:

-There is more to life than cookies, but none of it is important. MJD
-Making the world a better place, one cookie at a time. CC
-Life is complete with a cookie in each hand. CC
-Wherever you go, there a cookie is. CC & CC
-Life is uncertain, eat a cookie first. BBS

And my personal favorite...

-A smile becomes real plastered in warm chocolate. CC

(Disclaimer: All quotes above come from valid, quote-able sources credited when known)


I hope to capture the true joy of experiencing a cookie...

Aug 1, 2008

Yoga and Cookies, Part 1

Some may ask what yoga and cookies have to do with one another. Well, I have a tale to tell, but the short version is I love them both. I make both an intricate part of my life weaving them into the fabric of each and every day. I couldn't enjoy one without the other, they somehow go hand in hand, literally.  My meditation is baking and asana is my prayer.  They are my passions. I am on a quest to open a cookie paradise. A home to those blessed little delights of goodness overflowing with warm morsels; arriving into the partakers mouth fresh from the bakers oven served with milk, soy or hemp milk, and of course lots of Vitamin L: LOVE.  Paradise includes making your own cookie fit to your specifications, food allergies and all including gluten free and vegan options.

I have a dream.... and it involves yoga and cookies, please join me on the journey.