Friday, 12 March 2010

  • Big Funfetti: Funfetti Cake Mix Cookie Sandwiches for Serious Eats

    This is a guest post from Cakespy.

    Cookie sandwiches involve so much awesome. In one single unit, you to get two cookies and delicious filling, and you get to eat them all at once.

    But there's always room for more awesome at the cookie sandwich party, as I learned when I prepared a batch of sweet sandwiches using Betty Crocker's Cooky Book and the finest of cake mixes—the kind with a built-in rainbow. What better pick-me-up for dull winter days than a double dose of dense, moist, lightly tangy, cakey cookies sandwiched with rich, sweet, buttery frosting? 

    Funfetti Cake Mix Cookies

    Ingredients

    For the cake mix cookies

    1/4 cup butter, softened
    1 package (8 ounces) cream cheese
    1 egg
    1/4 teaspoon vanilla
    1 package funfetti or rainbow chip cake mix

    For for the filling (optional):

    1 1/2 sticks of butter
    1 teaspoon vanilla
    2 to 4 cups confectioners' sugar, depending on your desired consistency

    Procedure

    1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Note: the original cookie recipe called for 8 to 10 minutes at 375°F, but I found that baking slightly longer at 350°F worked better for my cookies.
    2. Cream the butter and cream cheese. Blend in egg and vanilla.
    3. Add cake mix in two parts, mixing well (it will be a super thick batter—if it is too stiff, add a small quantity of heavy cream to the batter and mix well).
    4. Using a small cookie scoop, drop balls of cookie dough on an ungreased baking sheet. Leave about 2 inches between the cookies.
    5. Bake for 8 to 12 minutes, or until lightly browned. Cool cookies for at least 15 minutes on the cookie sheet before transferring to a wire cooling rack; the cookies are very delicate when they first come out of the oven and they will break if you try to transfer them too soon.
    6. Once completely cool, add a generous dollop of frosting to the bottom of half the cookies, and then sandwich the rest of the cookies on top to form something that vaguely resembles a whoopie pie, but tastes like something else entirely.
    7. If you want the filling, go ahead and prepare it by mixing the butter until fluffy in your electric mixer; add the vanilla and then the confectioners' sugar, bit by bit, until it has reached your desired consistency. Thin with cream or milk if desired, and adding a few drops of pink food coloring never hurts.

Comments (12)

  • Sign in to Comment

  • Give eProps (?)

About the Author

  • cakespy
    • From: cakespy
    • Name: Jessie
    • About Me: Cakespy.com is a Dessert Detective Agency dedicated to seeking sweetness (literally) in everyday life. We do this by writing about bakeries, conducting baking experiments, and picking the brains of bakers and food artists, and finding awesome products for lovers of baked goods. The Cakespy crew is comprised of about 6 or 7 Cake Gumshoes throughout the US, and is headed up by Head Spy Jessie Oleson. Jessie O is a freelance writer and illustrator, whose writing appears on DailyCandy.com, and who has illustrated for various companies including Microsoft, Chelsea Paper and iPop, and regularly provides illustrations for the publication Taste of Home. Also, if you're in the Seattle Area, check out Cakespy Seattle here: http://blog.seattlepi.nwsource.com/cakespy/
    Stats: This Week All Time
    Posts: 3 324
    Views: 957 298907
    Comments: 2 2209
    View all posts by cakespy

Who recommended?