Sunday 16 November 2014

Chocolatey Chocolate Cookies



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Chocolatey Chocolate Cookies
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"It's just like eating chocolate! A very good chocolate," is the comment I often get. 
This is quite possibly my favourite cookie. It is thin, crisp and as chocolatey as it can possibly be. I really shouldn't eat as many of them as I do. 
CHOCOLATEY CHOCOLATE COOKIES                               
Prep:
15 minutes

Cook:

10 to 12 minutes 

Inactive:

2 hours

Level:

Easy

Makes:

36 cookies

Oven Temperature:

320 F (160 C)

Can recipe be doubled?

Yes

Make ahead?

Cookie dough can be made and chilled up to 3 days in the chiller and frozen up to 3 weeks in the freezer. Stored in air tight jars, baked cookies tastes just as fresh a week after baking.


Ingredients

4 oz (110 g) unsalted butter 

I use butter with a butterfat content of at least 82 to 83%. European butters typically have butterfat that falls within these percentages. I am partial to the French brand, President for baking cookies. Whichever brand of butter you choose to use, it must have at least a minimum of 82% butterfat. The higher butterfat and lower water content content means a more buttery and crisp cookie. My advice is to buy a good tasting butter to begin with. The better tasting your butter, the better tasting your cookie.

2.5 oz (70 g) caster sugar 

1/2 egg yolk

3/4 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

5.5 oz  (160 g) all-purpose/plain flour 

1 Tablespoons rice flour

This is that extra something that will make the cookies that extra bit more crispy.

1/8 teaspoon salt

Omit if you are using salted butter.

2 oz (60 g) bittersweet chocolate, broken up to chunks

Buy the best chocolate you have accessed to as that is exactly how your cookies will end up tasting. I use Valrhona - Guanaja 70% cocoa minimum or Scharffenberger 70% bittersweet chocolate bar. 

Find out what the '%' count of cocoa means by scrolling down to  the 'Tips' section.

2 Tablespoons cocoa powder

I use Valrhona cocoa powder.

1/2 teaspoon instant coffee powder

Method

Melting chocolate using the microwave

In a dry medium size bowl, melt chocolate in microwave at medium-hi for 2 minutes. There should still be chunks of chocolate amongst the melted chocolate.  Stir in the cocoa and coffee powder. Continue to stir to melt the chocolate completely.  Set aside and cool.

I do not bother to break up my thick and chunky chocolate.  If you use smaller sized chocolates, shorten your microwave timing accordingly. Better to leave some chunks to melt in the residual heat than to leave it in the microwave to melt completely. They might burn and turn into a grainy mess. 

Melting the chocolate over the stove

Have a saucepan and a dry, heatproof bowl ready. The bowl should fit into the pot snugly and sit about 2 and 1/2" off the bottom of the pot. 

Fill the saucepan with 1 and a 1/2" of water. The idea is to not have the bottom of the bowl touch the water. Set the bowl aside for the moment.

Get the water simmering in the saucepan. Add chocolate to the bowl. Once the  water starts to simmer, put the bowl of chocolate in the saucepan.  Stir to help chocolate melt. 

When almost all of the chocolate has melted, remove the bowl from the saucepan. Stir in the cocoa and coffee powders. Continue to stir to fully incorporate the cocoa and coffee powders and to melt any remaining chocolate pieces. Set aside and cool.

I do not leave the chocolate in the bowl to melt completely in the saucepan. Chocolate when overheated turns into a grainy mess. 

Making the cookie dough

Add the butter to the mixer bowl and let it soften to room temperature. Set aside.

Sift the all-purpose/plain flour, rice flour and salt together. Set aside.

Add sugar to the soften butter. Attach the whisk attachment and turn on the mixer to medium high speed and whisk until pale, light and creamy. 
Turn speed down to medium low and add the 1/2 egg yolk. Let the mixer run for 1 minute. Turn off the mixer, add the pure vanilla extract and quickly scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl. Turn on the mixer and let it run at medium low for 30 seconds to incorporate everything well. 

Switch to a paddle attachment if you have one, if not continue using the whisk attachment.

Turn the machine back on to low speed, gradually add in the sifted flours and salt. It should take about 1 minute. Turn off the mixer before the flours are completely mixed in. 

Incorporate the rest of the flours with a spatula, scraping the sides and bottom of the mixer bowl as you go and folding the batter over itself as you do. It should not take more than 30 seconds. Do not over mix or your cookie might not be as light.
If the dough looks too sticky, add 1 Tablespoon of all-purpose/plain flour at a time. Go slow on the flour. You want to add just enough so that it isn't sticky looking. The dough in the photograph above still has a tiny bit of flour left, that is fine.

Return the mixer bowl to the mixer stand. With the mixer at low speed, pour in the cooled melted chocolate. When it is almost completely mixed in, stop the machine and fold and cut the rest of the chocolate in with the spatula. Do not over mix.
Rolling dough into logs

Lay out an arm's length of plastic wrap on your work surface. Transfer the dough on it and with a bench scrapper, shape into a rough log with a diameter of 2" (5 cm). Next, use the plastic wrap to enclose and roll the dough, shaping it into a cylindrical log. Twist the plastic ends closed and tucked under the dough log to secure. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours to firm dough thoroughly or up to 3 days. If not, freeze up to 3 weeks. 

To get round cookies

Line the inside of a cardboard tube taken from a roll of paper kitchen towel with parchment paper. Secure one end of the tube with plastic wrap. Sit the tube upright, secured plastic end resting on your work surface.

Spoon the cookie dough into the tube. As you fill, press the cookie dough down lightly with the flat end of a rolling pin lined with plastic wrap. Once filled, cover the top with a layer of plastic wrap and refrigerate. Depending on the size of your cardboard tube, you might need either one or two cardboard tubes for this recipe.

Refrigerate as indicated above.

Slicing the cookie dough for baking

Five to ten minutes before you are ready to bake, remove the dough from the refrigerator.

The log

Remove the plastic wrap/parchment paper and cut the dough log into 0.2" (0.5 cm) thick slices and place them on silpat or parchment paper lined baking trays. Leave a 0.4" to 0.8" (1 to 2 cm) gap between cookies. 

If at any point you feel the dough has become too soft to cut neatly, return it to the refrigerator to firm up. 

Cut cookies, must be refrigerated if they are not baked immediately. Left on the work surface, they will start to melt and this will affect the texture of the cookies.

The round

To keep the cookies as round as possible, turn the circular log of cookie dough a little each time you cut off a slice. This way, you do not put undue pressure on one particular length of the dough and end up with a flat sided round cookie.

Stamping the cookie dough for baking

Besides slicing the cookies off the log, you could also choose to stamp balls of dough with a cookie stamp. My terra cotta cookie stamps measure 2" (5 cm) in diameter. Slice off a 0.2" (0.5 cm) thick slice and lay it on the silpat or parchment paper lined baking tray. Push in the edges slightly to form a squat circle.

I have found that the best way to get clear imprints on the cookies is to work with chilled dough and to loosely lay a square of plastic wrap over the squat circle of dough and then emboss the dough with the cookie stamp. 

Do not bother flouring or oiling the stamps as they do nothing to stop the dough from sticking to the recesses of the debossed surface. Plastic wrap is the way to go. All that flouring will ruin the taste and texture of the cookies.

Baking

Bake the cookies at 320 F (160 C) for 7 minutes, oven rack at lower middle position. Then rotate the cookie tray front side back and bake for another 5 minutes.  As the cookies are dark coloured, you have to rely on your sense of smell rather than sight to determine when they are cooked through. 12 minutes bake time usually cooks them through.
Remove from the oven. Let it cool for 5 minutes before transferring to a wire cooling rack to cool completely. Store in air tight jars.

Tips
What does the '%' count in chocolate means?

This is essentially what you need to know.

'85% cocoa' indicates the percentage amount of cocoa in the bar of chocolate in terms of the total weight of that bar of chocolate. The higher the percentage of cocoa indicated on the chocolate wrapping, the more intense the cocoa flavour and the lower its sugar content.

When using chocolate for baking, I typically use one with a '70% cocoa' count.

When using chocolate for ganaches, glazing, or adding to a cream, I switch to a chocolate with not more than a '60% cocoa' count. There is a lesser tendency for the emulsion to split.

The above two bars are two of my favourite chocolates for eating.
My Chocolatey Chocolate Cookies do make good bake gifts as of all the cookies I bake for gifting over the holidays, these stay fresh tasting the longest. The chocolatey taste actually intensifies with each day of keeping and they do taste just as good and I would say better a week after baking. They are just not too good for the waist line.

Bake these ahead and you can free up some of that precious time towards putting up the tree, decorating the house, buying the presents, planning and hosting your year-end parties, squeezing in a manicure ...
WHAT'S COMING UP NEXT?                                                 
Lemon cookies. 

I never bake these to give away. Find out why in my upcoming blog post.

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