Friday, 28 January 2011
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Recipe: Samoas Cookies
Earlier this week, it was brought to my attention that Girl Scout cookies are on sale! My absolute favorite cookie are Samoas and a while back, after I had eaten up my entire stock, I had tried to find a good recipe for Samoas.In case you didn't know, Samoas (aka Caramel deLites) are doughnut-shaped cookies with a hole in the center covered in caramel and toasted coconut and striped with chocolate. Hungry yet?
This is a great recipe for when Samoas are not on sale and you've consumed your stock or if you just can't rationalize shelling out $3.50 for a box!
Check out this recipe that I found on Babble:
INGREDIENTS
Cookie
2 sticks (1 cup) unsalted butter at room temperature
1 cup superfine sugar (or granulated)
1 large egg
1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 teaspoon kosher salt
3 cups unbleached, all-purpose flour
Dipping Caramel (recipe follows)
1 cup unsweetened shredded coconut (available at health food stores)
12 ounces of chocolate chipsCaramel
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar)
4 tablespoons corn syrup
6 tablespoons water
pinch of salt
6 tablespoons butter
6 tablespoons heavy cream (DO NOT use plain whipping cream)
1 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
DIRECTIONS for Cookies1. In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream together butter and sugar. Beat until light and fluffy. Add in egg and beat until well incorporated, scraping down the bowl, if necessary. Add in vanilla. Beat until smooth. With mixer on low, add in salt and flour. Mix until completely incorporated and dough is uniform. Pull dough together and shape into a cylinder with a diameter of about 2 1/2 inches. Wrap in parchment paper and freeze for at least 25 minutes.
2. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Slice dough into 1/8 inch disks and place on baking sheets, about an inch apart. Once you have made 30 cookies, wrap up the cookie dough, freeze, and save for another time. Use a tiny circle shaped cookie cutter or a large round cake decorating tip to cut a hole in the center of each disk. Refrigerate for an additional 10 minutes. Bake for 8 minutes, or until crisp. Let cool completely.
3. Add coconut into the caramel. Warm the caramel in the microwave for about 10 seconds if necessary. Take cooled cookies and gently dip them completely in the caramel. Place on a parchment paper lined baking sheet. Freeze until set, about 5 minutes.
4. Melt chocolate in a microwave safe bowl in 30 second intervals, stirring well after each interval, until fully melted. Place the caramel coated cookies in the chocolate. Use a fork to pull them out of the chocolate and place them on a parchment line cookie sheet. Use the chocolate still on the fork to drizzle stripes over the top of the cookies. Refrigerate until set.
DIRECTIONS for Caramel
1. In a heavy bottomed saucepan with high sides, combine sugar, corn syrup, water, and salt. Whisk until combined, and set over medium-low heat. Swirl the pan every now and then to help distribute the heat. Use can use a pastry brush dipped in water to brush the sugar crystals down the sides of the saucepan. When the sugar dissolves completely, raise the heat to medium. When it comes to a boil, watch very carefully for the bubbles to become more viscous (this means that the water has evaporated and that it is ready to go through the candy stages). As it is bubbling away, you want it to turn a deep amber color. When it does, remove the heat and, working quickly, use the spoon to scoop up a small amount of the candy and drop it into the small glass of water. If the blob turns hard like lollipop, then it is ready. If the blob is still soft, put the pan back on the heat. Keep testing until the candy is hard. Remove from heat.
2. Whisk in butter, 6 tablespoons of cream, and vanilla (Careful here, as the mixture should bubble violently for about 10 seconds). If the caramel isn’t smooth right away, return the pan to low heat and whisk until smooth.
Do you like Samoa Cookies? Would you make them home-made or just buy them?
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Comments (28)
oh my gosh! i may just have to make some of these!
Thank you for this. Thank you so much.
Ohhhhh lord... if I make these, I guarantee my mom will eat every single one because they're her absolute favorite.
I'll add this to my ever growing list of recipes.
I was a girl scout for forever and could never convince my mom to buy enough boxes of these cookies...now I don't have to hunt down any girl scouts at home to get some boxes of my favorite treat =]
I would make them myself. Although I think you left out the step where you make the caramel.
Since the recipe does suggest that you still have cookie dough left after you make 30 cookies, how many cookies does the recipe make in total?
Girl scouts don't come to my door, so YES I would make my own girl scout cookies if possible! :O
My favorite girl scout cookie!
Just so you all know, Keebler now makes a cookie that tastes and looks EXACTLY like samoas. They are called coconut delights and you can buy them year round!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Ohhhh man. I am definitely adding this to my list of recipes... does anyone also have a recipe for Thin Mints? I would love to make those, as well :D
OMG!! Bless you, BLESS YOU!!
@smil_ING@xanga - WHAT? You made my life! I'm going to try and find these today!!!! Words cannot express how happy I am to hear this!!!!!!!!
@Ktothetin@xanga - I do! I was going to dedicate a post to it this week :) But if I decide not to, I'll post it here in reply to you!
@chocolatescifi@xanga - Ah you're right! My sincerest apologies! I've added the missing steps for preparing the caramel. To answer your question about how many cookies, I think it depends on how big your cookies are. I made 45 cookies and used up all the dough! Hope this helps :)
all my hopes and dreams keep getting shot down because i don't own an electric mixer :( i'd make these but i'd leave out the coconut.....if i had a mixer
@beebizzle@xanga - Then they wouldn't be samoas! :p
@explosive@xanga - they'd still be hella good though! lol! i just can't eat coconut.
Samoas are my absolute favorite cookie. I love cooking and baking in the kitchen. When making your cookies, have you ever tried pasteurized eggs? If you haven't I would simply offer a friendly recommendation. When using egg-based recipes, maybe try pasteurized shelled eggs. Especially when you have sunny-side eggs, (fried eggs,) raw cookie dough, anything to that affect which leaves some part of the egg raw. Only reason I say this is because I am concerned with what I eat,and also look at those who I'm cooking for. With all these recent egg recalls, you can never be to sure. You should check them out.
I've made home made samoas before, but it was a different recipe. They came out great! Not exact facsimiles, but close!
It's looks really attractive n delicious
I thought they were $4 a box!!
looks really good!
Lucky you to be able to buy them for $3.50 a box because they are $4 or $4.25 in my neck of the woods! I avoid the "Caramel DeLites," they are not a fine substitute for Samoas. Samoas are my favorite Girl Scout cookie. Folks have even posted on Facebook that their kid is selling them...! I might try the recipe if it doesn't turn out to be too much work...which I made the mistake with cinnamon rolls. They came out so good but was sooo much work.
@Ktothetin@xanga - The post for Thin Mints is up! Hope it helps :)
@MizDaryl68@xanga - I get them for $3.50 :-/ I don't think I'd buy girl scout cookies for $4! Well, I would, but probably not as many