Try this Bohemian Christmas Crunch Cookie recipe, or contribute your own.
Suggest a better descriptionSource: Roberta Brisson This recipe comes from my girlfriend?s mother-in-law. This is a very old recipe and requires more work than most other cookies, but they are worth every bite! 1. Freeze the grinder and the chocolate chips before using. 2. Using the medium blade of an old-fashioned meat grinder, grind nuts and chocolate chips together. To make grinding easier, put some nuts in first, then the chocolate chips. Repeat this process, until all the nuts and chocolate chips are ground. Buy putting the nuts in the grinder first, they help oil the meat grinder, making the chocolate chips grind with a little less effort. Refrigerate this mixture. 3. In a separate bowl, cut the softened butter and confectioner?s sugar until it looks like pie dough. Cut in the salt, flour and vanilla. Last, add the chocolate and nut mixture. Blend just enough with a fork. Do not cream this mixture and do not over mix this dough. You should be able to see tiny ground up lumps of butter, chocolate and pecans. 4. Using a 1-inch cookie scoop, fill-up a scoop of dough and drop it onto a cookie sheet, and using the base of your thumb, flatten the cookie ball to about 1/4-inch thickness. Keep the cookies about 3-inches apart on a cookie sheet. Refrigerate the flattened cookies on the cookie sheets for at least 30 minutes before baking them. 5. Bake at 250? F. for 40 to 45 minutes. DO NOT OVERBAKE THESE COOKIES! They should not be too soft and not too hard or well-browned on the bottom. They get a certain sheen to them on the tops. Let cook, remove from cookie sheets and store in air-tight tins. If cookies become too hard due to over baking, place a slice of white bread in the tin. The cookies should still have a crunch. NOTE: I have several friends that use their food processor to grind the pecans and chips. The cookies taste good, but their coloring becomes very light and bland looking. They do not have the very dark and rich coloring that comes from using the meat grinder. Posted to recipelu-digest Volume 01 Number 635 by QueenBerta@aol.com on Jan 29, 1998
View line-by-line Nutrition Insights™: Discover which ingredients contribute the calories/sodium/etc.
|
||
Serving Size: 1 Serving (9g) | ||
Recipe Makes: 72 Servings | ||
|
||
Calories: 52 | ||
Calories from Fat: 39 (75%) | ||
|
||
Amt Per Serving | % DV | |
|
||
Total Fat 4.4g | 6 % | |
Saturated Fat 2.1g | 11 % | |
Monounsaturated Fat 1.5g | ||
Polyunsanturated Fat 0.5g | ||
Cholesterol 6.8mg | 2 % | |
Sodium 46mg | 2 % | |
Potassium 18.5mg | 0 % | |
Total Carbohydrate 3.3g | 1 % | |
Dietary Fiber 0.3g | 1 % | |
Sugars, other 3g | ||
Protein 0.5g | 1 % | |
Powered by: USDA Nutrition Database Disclaimer: Nutrition facts are derived from linked ingredients (shown at left in colored bullets) and may or may not be complete. Always consult a licensed nutritionist or doctor if you have a nutrition-related medical condition. |
Calories per serving: 52
Get detailed nutrition information, including item-by-item nutrition insights, so you can see where the calories, carbs, fat, sodium and more come from.
There are no reviews yet. Be the first!
What would you serve with this? Link in another recipe.