29.04.2009 Peanut Nobody

Whew, then. Friday marks the last day of recipe coming-up-with…edness for Joni and me. Frantic? Maybe just a little.

Friday also happens to be the last day to enter the giveaway: the two winners will be notified and announced as soon as time and sanity permit next week. So tell your friends if you haven’t already.

But in the meantime, here is a recipe for cookies that are so peanut buttery and rich, you’ll have to do a double take…bite…to make sure you didn’t dream it.

Hope the second slice of the week goes well for everyone!

Peanut Brittle Cookies:

1 cup (112 g) dry roasted peanuts
2 tablespoons (28 g) nondairy butter
2 tablespoons (30 ml) water
2/3 cup plus 1/4 cup (176 g) Sucanat, divided
1/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
1/2 cup (128 g) creamy or crunchy natural peanut butter
1/4 cup (60 ml) whiskey
2 tablespoons (30 ml) plain soy or other nondairy milk
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
1 cup (120 g) light spelt flour
1/2 cup (39 g) quick-cooking oats, finely ground
1 teaspoon baking powder

Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper or silicone baking mats, such as Silpat.
Place peanuts, butter, water, and 1/4 cup (48 g) Sucanat in a small saucepan.
Heat on medium-high, bring to a low boil and cook for about 4 minutes, stirring constantly, lowering the heat to medium, until the peanuts get some color to them, and that the liquid is mostly gone. Remove from heat. Let cool a few minutes.
Transfer the preparation to a large bowl. If it has hardened, break it apart a little bit. Combine with 2/3 cup (128 g) Sucanat, salt, peanut butter, whiskey, milk, and vanilla.
Stir in flour, ground oats, and baking powder.
Divide dough into 16 equal portions (about 2 tablespoons, 42 g per cookie). Place on prepared cookie sheets.
Flatten the cookies as much as you want them to be, as they don’t spread while baking.
Store in fridge for one hour.
Preheat oven to 350°F (180°C, or gas mark 4).
Bake cookies for 15 minutes; or until the edges are golden brown. Wait a few minutes before transferring them to a wire rack to cool completely.

Yield: 16 cookies

  • Laurel says:

    My father in law is going to FLIP over these cookies. I make him peanut brittle two or three times a year and he always hides it so no one else can see and he doesn’t have to share!

    Why is everyone putting whiskey and/or rum in their baking these days? I don’t live ANYWHERE NEAR a liquor store. I usually just add more vanilla but I’m sure there are complexities there I’m missing.

    You’re teasing us with all the new banners aren’t you? Pictures from the book? I did like the last one but who are we kidding, chocolate’s always better. That is chocolate isn’t it? Looks lovely, will you send me a piece for breakfast?

    • Celine says:

      the real question is, when do I not put whiskey or rum in my baked goods?
      don’t up the vanilla here, replace the booze with milk or even water.

      • Laurel says:

        Well, I didn’t really mean I’d replace a whole quarter cup with vanilla. I;ve been known though to up the vanilla to a tablespoon and add 1/2 tsp of almond extract. That’s if the whiskey is for flavor and not to tenderize the cookie in some way. If it’s in there to tenderize it though I’d add a bit of lemon juice. And no, you can’t taste the lemon it’s just nicer than vinegar.

  • I love that bowl in the photo — is that an Anthropologie find? Anything made with peanut butter is delicious in my book!

  • tahinitoo says:

    You know I love these cookies!

  • anna says:

    Oh wow… These might get tested this weekend. Of course I’ll have to keep sampling the whisky to make sure it hasn’t gone bad…

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