who doesn't love a good old fashioned chocolate chip cookie? Well there are some who do and some who want a little more variety. Not surprisingly the recipe has some interesting turns over the years.
Chocolate chip or Tollhouse cookie us a Twentieth Century invention created by Ruth Wakefield in 1939. She added broken chocolate pieces to a brown sugar cookie recipe, thinking the chocolate would melt. They didn't, much to the delight of her diners at her famed Tollhouse restaurant in Whitman, Massachusetts. However that's a myth , She deliberately created something new on her dessert menu to give her other cookie recipe, a thin butterscotch nut cookie with ice cream. It appeared in her Tollhouse cookbook too, spreading the recipe through the Boston area. It was World War Two however that make her "chocolate crunch"cookie super popular. They were packed into the care packages that families sent their sons overseas and in turn the boys shared it with fellow troopmates. Soon these GIs were writing home, begging their moms and sweethearts to bake and send this new kind of cookie. The recipe is a basic one (that can be made without the chips for a buttery brown sugar snap) that combines brown and white sugars with shortening , flour , hot water and baking soda.Vanilla and salt are added for flavor and to bring out the other ingredients flavors.
Eighty years later the recipe is still going strong but with many variations. One of the earliest - )and my and child hood favorite) is where M&M's are subbed in for the chips. These came out almost as soon as the original chocolate chip cookie did. M&M's were created in 1942 for our troops. They were modeled on the British Smartie, with a soft, melty milk chocolate center and hard candy shell. These are a fun variation, especially when biting into those crisp shells. The holiday M&M's make them perfect for Christmas, Valentines' Day, Easter and Halloween cookie trays, You can also sub in M&M Peanut variety or even Reeses Pieces too. Toss in some walnuts or almonds too if you want more flavor. The basic recipe stays the same. The basic recipe can also change, The original one calls for using Crisco, but using dairy or plant based butters give the cookie a richer flavor.What about whole wheat flour? Many home chefs wonder if this will change the cookie's original taste.It won't.It may give it a denser texture however thanks to the entire wheat kernel being used. You can also use almond and rice flour too.As for the brown sugar you can use both light and dark, omitting the white. This results in a cookie with very crispy edge.
Chocolate chip cookies are one of the best cookies out there. However there are variations to try. The result? An even better version of this American favorite.