When a Good Cookie Goes Bad...


Last week, I did my Christmas (cookie) marathon, constructing and baking 4 different batches of cookies through the week, and another 4 on Saturday.  It's not like there's  a lack of other things going on this month -- I just broke them up into stages and wove the different stages (dough, shaping, resting, baking, decorating) in and around other things.

Usually, the star performer in my Christmas cookie plate is Alton Brown's Chocolate Peppermint Pinwheel.  I've been known to (have to) make more than one batch of them in a season.

This year, it was a good cookie gone very, very bad...

gone bad

Note how the chocolate layer is broken/breaking off.

one bad cookie


I'm still not really sure what happened, though I have a suspicion.  The cookies are made by making one batch of butter cookie dough, splitting it in half, adding peppermint flavouring to half of it and chocolate to the rest.  I.e., the base cookie dough is the same in the whole cookie.

When I went to roll the doughs out, the chocolate dough was hard.  It actually clattered when it hit the counter.  This was straight out of the fridge, so I waited to see if it would behave any better when warmed.  My suspicion is that I didn't split the dough evenly enough, and that threw off the ratio of melted chocolate to dough in the chocolate segment.  So, it was hard chocolate hitting the counter.  I wound up having to heat the dough in the microwave (for 30 seconds) to be able to roll it out -- but it never behaved like a cohesive whole, as is witnessed by the broken bits above.

Oh, well.  Still tasty.  But I don't think I can put them in Christmas cookie gifts!

The beauty of doing 8 batches is that, for every failure such as the above, there are successes... The raspberry jam-filled, chocolate dipped ones seem to have come out okay.

jam filled


And, the ginger bread condescended to let me roll it out and cut it this year.

ginger cat