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Crimbl Cookies Wildwood.

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  #46  
Old 08-22-2025, 11:53 AM
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Originally Posted by asianthree View Post
Original recipe was just her homemade cocoa and chipped chocolate. My guess was not sweetened because they only used honey. Even with bitter chocolate the honey takes over. Fair warning cookies with honey never get hard. So always soft. I hate soft cookies because that’s all I had growing up with no sugar everything honey. That why I have tried to convert to sugar but they just won’t release from molds.

When the kids were small I used her sweet homemade chocolate and cocoa. As they got older we added dark semi sweet. So it became triple chocolate, then one year the boys were eating cherries i dried and wanted to add them. So triple chocolate Traverse City Cookies was invented.
Today they used freshly dried cranberries, so no chopping. Oldest has taken the recipe higher level and added rolled oats.

My southern roots cooking was teacup, dessert spoon, saucer, knob, pinch, smidgen, handful, dollop, and a glob. Although baking is supposed to be a science, by background is far from it. My Blackberry jam cake recipe is over 150yo that I swear weighs 5lb. My aunt made 15 with only a wooden spoon every Christmas. I damn near killed my 28lb lift Kitchen Aid with that recipe.
Lol, that's so cool and I'll bet your muscular aunt did even harder work than that. I like the dried cranberries idea, those are always in our pantry for tossing over our salads. I also thought we might try adding chopped nuts which I enjoy in cookies. We'd better try the recipe out before we start adding to it. Thanks again.
  #47  
Old 08-22-2025, 12:23 PM
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Originally Posted by Aces4 View Post
Lol, that's so cool and I'll bet your muscular aunt did even harder work than that. I like the dried cranberries idea, those are always in our pantry for tossing over our salads. I also thought we might try adding chopped nuts which I enjoy in cookies. We'd better try the recipe out before we start adding to it. Thanks again.
My aunt was 98lbs but farm raised, so there’s that. You will notice there isn’t a baking power or soda in the recipe. I don’t know if not available or My guess is not needed when using cookie mold.
I would try adding at least 1/4 teaspoon of either if you are using a sheet pan.
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  #48  
Old 08-22-2025, 12:34 PM
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Originally Posted by asianthree View Post
My aunt was 98lbs but farm raised, so there’s that. You will notice there isn’t a baking power or soda in the recipe. I don’t know if not available or My guess is not needed when using cookie mold.
I would try adding at least 1/4 teaspoon of either if you are using a sheet pan.
Good suggestion, we'll add that when attempting this recipe.
  #49  
Old 08-22-2025, 10:08 PM
margaretmattson margaretmattson is offline
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Originally Posted by Bill14564 View Post
Yeah, I did consider that.

I can buy three cookies...

OR

I can buy five pounds of flour, five pounds of sugar, a bag of brown sugar, a box of salt, tins of baking soda and cinnamon, a lemon to squeeze, a bottle of vanilla extract, a bag of walnuts, and a dozen eggs. Then I buy electricity to heat the oven for an hour. When I'm done I'll have a couple dozen cookies but I will have spent more than just buying three.

Sometimes I would rather pay more per cookie at somewhere like Crumbl than buy all the supplies I would need to make two dozen of each of the varieties available at Crumbl.

There is a price for convenience - sometimes it is worth it.
Where do you buy your pantry items? Sur La Table or a different expensive store? $5 - $6 per cookie at Crumbl, your list of pantry items is relatively the same cost. However, after making two dozen cookies, you have remaining staples to use. The remaining eggs can be used for breakfast, or hard boiled for salads or lunch. Walnuts can be used dozens of ways not only for desserts. Cinnamon can be sprinkled onto toast, cereal, into tea or coffee. Or, a cinnamon glaze can be made to serve with sweet potatoes. Sugar and lemon will make lemonade or a lemon curd to top on fresh scones. Brown sugar and vanilla will make an excellent caramel sauce. Of course, several more baked goods can be made. They can be frozen to eat at a later date if you choose. There are hundreds and hundreds of ways to use pantry staples. In the long run, buying the pantry staples is the better option. However, I realize some do not know how to cook. Most likely, they will throw the remaining pantry staples away.If this is your case, enjoy those Crumbl cookies!

Last edited by margaretmattson; 08-22-2025 at 10:44 PM.
  #50  
Old Yesterday, 06:27 AM
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Originally Posted by margaretmattson View Post
Where do you buy your pantry items? Sur La Table or a different expensive store? $5 - $6 per cookie at Crumbl, your list of pantry items is relatively the same cost. However, after making two dozen cookies, you have remaining staples to use. The remaining eggs can be used for breakfast, or hard boiled for salads or lunch. Walnuts can be used dozens of ways not only for desserts. Cinnamon can be sprinkled onto toast, cereal, into tea or coffee. Or, a cinnamon glaze can be made to serve with sweet potatoes. Sugar and lemon will make lemonade or a lemon curd to top on fresh scones. Brown sugar and vanilla will make an excellent caramel sauce. Of course, several more baked goods can be made. They can be frozen to eat at a later date if you choose. There are hundreds and hundreds of ways to use pantry staples. In the long run, buying the pantry staples is the better option. However, I realize some do not know how to cook. Most likely, they will throw the remaining pantry staples away.If this is your case, enjoy those Crumbl cookies!
Looking at it that way, I can make cookies at home for free. If I previously bought all those pantry items for the purposes you list above then the money is already spent. The items are sitting in my house waiting to be used and if I don't use them soon some of them will spoil and need to be discarded. I don't have to spend any money to make the cookies, the ingredients are already in my home, but I could even look at it as if it was putting money back into my pocket since I used the items rather than throwing them away.

I didn't want to inventory my house, I didn't want to get in my steps walking the grocery store aisles, I didn't want to have my AC battle my oven over the room temperature, I didn't want to find space in my freezer to store unbaked dough, I didn't want to rearrange the dirty dishes in my dishwasher to make room for the mixing bowl and baking sheets, and I didn't want to page through cookbooks looking to find recipes to use the leftover pantry items. I just wanted three cookies with different flavors.
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  #51  
Old Yesterday, 08:08 AM
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I don’t like crossing 466A unless I have to. Besides, I can get huge cookies at Winn-Dixie for next to nothing in the checkout. To me there is no such thing as gourmet cookies.

Now gourmet cupcakes, that’s an entirely other subject. I love double chocolate raspberry filled cupcakes.
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  #52  
Old Yesterday, 08:54 PM
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Originally Posted by Bill14564 View Post
Looking at it that way, I can make cookies at home for free. If I previously bought all those pantry items for the purposes you list above then the money is already spent. The items are sitting in my house waiting to be used and if I don't use them soon some of them will spoil and need to be discarded. I don't have to spend any money to make the cookies, the ingredients are already in my home, but I could even look at it as if it was putting money back into my pocket since I used the items rather than throwing them away.

I didn't want to inventory my house, I didn't want to get in my steps walking the grocery store aisles, I didn't want to have my AC battle my oven over the room temperature, I didn't want to find space in my freezer to store unbaked dough, I didn't want to rearrange the dirty dishes in my dishwasher to make room for the mixing bowl and baking sheets, and I didn't want to page through cookbooks looking to find recipes to use the leftover pantry items. I just wanted three cookies with different flavors.
Like I said, if you do not cook, enjoy the Crumbl cookies. I meant what I said. Do what makes you happy! At the same time, please understand that some of us are seasoned cooks. We enjoy our time in the kitchen.

Reversing your thought pattern, I do not have to waste gasoline, lose some of my free time in traffic, wait in line for the cookies, pay extra because of tip, waste more gasoline on the return home, and lose more of my free time caught up in traffic, yet again. I cook batches of food, not just baked items, when I have to be home for whatever reason. This does not affect my free time. I freeze the items and use whenever I wish. In my freezer today, I have lasagna, pot roast, pumpkin rolls, and several flavors of cookies. I need only to reheat the lasagna and pot roast. The baked goods simply need to be thawed. And yes! They taste fresh. Time saved when I have a busy schedule. Each time you have a craving for sweets, or other ready made items, (which were most likely bought frozen by the store) you waste much more time, money, and gasoline than I.

Last edited by margaretmattson; Yesterday at 09:44 PM.
  #53  
Old Yesterday, 09:14 PM
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Juleskringle (Marzipan Christmas Kringle) Recipe


My Aunt still sends Kringles near Christmas time. Made from a recipe her German speaking mother used for years. Her English left a lot to be desired but she had 10 kids all delivered at home. One died soon after birth.


She had a lot of experience with cooking Kringles.


Oddly my Dad was one of the last born and a small plane crashed in their back yard during or just around his birth. The crash killed whoever was in the plane . The crash did make the Chicago newspaper the next day.

Last edited by Taltarzac725; Today at 09:17 AM.
  #54  
Old Today, 10:05 AM
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Is there a new Outback Steakhouse around there? I also heard about a new Target?
Yes and yes
  #55  
Old Today, 10:12 AM
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Yes and yes
Thanks! I would usually use the car to get to the Lady Lake Target. I do think I could have got to that Target by golf cart.
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