I received the following e-mail a few days ago:
Hi Siri!
Dave and I were looking for a recipe for a soft ginger molasses cookie. Do you have any recipe recommendations? I know you just posted a chocolate ginger cookie recipe on your blog but we were looking for something with more spice, less chocolate.
It was an e-mail that found me not only digging out an old recipe, it found me tying on my apron and digging out a few of my favorite spices again. Some recipes (like this one) need to be baked at least once a season. It's an old Transplanted Baker post from late September, 2008. If you're feeling a bit adventurous, do try my recipe for Chocolate-Ginger Cookies. That is, after you've tried this one.
The original post:
I used to work at a well-known Minneapolis cheese shop and deli before packing up the trunks and shipping across the Atlantic.
It was a good job for a person to have after finishing up a liberal arts degree and looking for some direction, any direction. Through never -ending sampling, serving food-minded people, and most importantly, befriending and picking the brain of a talented and generous chef, I learned a lot about food. I guess you could say it was the kind of experience that leaves a girl awake at night, contemplating breads to bake, recipes to try, and ingredients to scout out. I should also mention that it was this very same job that got me into the habit (good or bad, you decide) of eating ginger-molasses cookies for my mid-morning snack alongside a much-needed cup of coffee.
My earliest blog posts revolved around quintessential American foods that are not available in these parts. These were things that I missed, like; strawberry-nectarine pie, egg bagels, and quick bread. Today’s post is along those same lines, but rather than baking something as American as (no, not apple pie, I was going to say “chocolate chip cookies”...which everyone and their third cousin, once removed has a favorite recipe for, so there’s no need to plague you with mine), I’m going with something a little bit sweet, a little bit savory, oh so autumny, and really a lot like the Scandinavian classic, peparkaker. “Peparwhater? !”, you exclaim in confusion! (Pep-are-kaak-aire), those crisp, spiced cookies that the Swedish company, Anna’s, has made famous. They’re traditionally a Christmas cookie, which makes perfect sense, considering their warming blend of cinnamon, ginger, cloves, and cardamom, but I dare you to bake some in September, the month where only children under the age of 10 (and my husband) start dreaming of Christmas.
I’d like to present to you a challenge: The Great Spiced Cookie Challenge! It’s not so much a challenge as a ploy to get you into the kitchen and digging out those spices you haven’t used for nine of ten months. But the real point of all of this, is to let you help me declare a superior cookie. Is it the tender, chewy, American ginger-molasses? Or, is the crisp, zippy, Scandinavian Peparkaker more worthy of the title? So that the pressure to bake isn’t too strong, I’ve decided to divide the challenge over the course of a week or two. This week, you can fill your cookie jars and breakroom tables with the American classic, and once those disappear, you can start sneaking into a jar full of Peparkaker.
If you were reading my whole-wheat molasses recipe a few weeks ago and debating whether to make a special trip to the store for a bottle of that hearty, dark slow-as-molasses, molasses, your decision has made itself. A couple tablespoons of molasses can make all the difference in a loaf of bread or batch of cookies. I think it gives it that je ne sais pas quality, don’t you? So, no need to keep in you any more suspense, I reveal to you the greatest ginger-molasses cookie recipe ever. Stay tuned for next week’s peparkaker recipe!
American Ginger-Molasses cookies
Amerikansk Ingefærsmåkaker med melassesirup
(makes about 2-dozen small, or 1-dozen
super-sized cookies)
* Recipe from Molly at Batter Splattered
2 1/4 cups (350g) all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons ground ginger
1 teaspoon baking soda
3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
1/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup(1 1/2 sticks/165g) butter, softened
1 cup (200g) white sugar
1 egg
1 tablespoon water
1/4 cup (60ml) molasses
+2 tablespoons white sugar for rolling
1. Preheat oven to 350F/175C. Sift together the flour, ginger, baking soda, cinnamon, cloves, and salt. Set aside.
2. In a large bowl, cream together the
butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Beat in the egg, then stir in the
water and molasses. Gradually stir the sifted ingredients into the molasses
mixture.
3. Shape dough into walnut sized balls, and roll them in the remaining 2
tablespoons of sugar. Place the cookies 2 inches apart onto an ungreased cookie
sheet, and flatten slightly.
4. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes (no longer if you want them to stay soft!) in the
preheated oven. Allow cookies to cool on baking sheet for 5 minutes before
removing to a wire rack to cool completely.
5. Eat a couple while still warm. Set aside at least two or three for breakfast with a cup of hot coffee.
Those cookies look fabulous. So mouth watering. Beautiful photo too.
Posted by: George@CulinaryTravels | September 06, 2009 at 06:17 PM
I love soft ginger cookies. Yum!
Posted by: jillian | September 08, 2009 at 04:47 AM
hey Siri!
This post got me absolutely craving some ginger cookies! unfortunately, i don't have an oven where i'm staying right now. So bright and early this morning i went out into trondheim with a mission - find some peparkaker... but alas, no luck. I know you said anna's was the brand name - any specific store you have luck finding them?
sadly, i'm leaving norway in a week. funnily enough, most of what i'm bringing back with me is food. :) jam, lots of different brown cheese (i'm addicted!), some havreflarn cookies with chocolate in the middle. I'm going to miss the good eats here for sure! :) I can't wait to get home to my oven to try out the eplekaker and ginger cookies on my own though. :)
Posted by: Lindsay Blaylock | September 08, 2009 at 12:59 PM
So lovely! We always made molasses gingerbread cookies at Christmas. My grandma would cut them into little people for us to decorate. I love them when they are really really soft. Yum!!
Posted by: Megan@Feasting on Art | September 09, 2009 at 12:34 AM
Excuse me, miss, but I have also been dreaming about Christmas since September. And I'm not 10 years old, either.
Posted by: Heather | September 09, 2009 at 01:36 AM
Ditto for me [see above comment]. Looking at the calendar to schedule our holiday party.
Posted by: rachel | September 09, 2009 at 02:40 AM
Lindsay-
Turns out that you can get a hold of "Anna's Thins" cookies in just about any major city across the world. Why's that, you ask? Because they stock them at the IKEA Marketplace. Actually, I think a lot of major grocery stores in the states sell them in a variety of flavors, although, in my opinion, original is best.I like Havreflarn too, but try to steer away from the cookie section at the store, because I always have a stock of 2 or 3 varieties of something from the blog at home. Happy baking when you get back home! -SIRI
Posted by: Siri | September 09, 2009 at 09:21 PM
Thanks for the recipe Siri! It was perfect and the cookies were delicious! Dave has already requested more. Thanks so much!
Posted by: Sarah | September 09, 2009 at 11:35 PM
Hey Siri,
I just made these, with Pomegranate Molasses instead of regular (it was all I had). Strange and delicious results!
-BC
Posted by: bill c | October 13, 2009 at 12:26 AM
Howdy! This is my first visit to your blog! We are a collection of volunteers and starting a new initiative in a community in the same niche. Your blog provided us valuable information to work on. You have done a extraordinary job!
Posted by: kredyty konsolidacyjne | October 12, 2013 at 12:47 PM