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ML-Byakuran — Cookie

Published: 2012-05-17 17:30:34 +0000 UTC; Views: 481; Favourites: 10; Downloads: 7
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Description I prefer marshmallows but cookies are good too~

Lambo(c)KHR
Cookies(c)
Art(c) me

History of Cookies
The word cookie originally came from the Dutch keokje, meaning "little cake." In addition, the Dutch first popularized cookies in the United States. The British took a liking to them in the 19th century, incorporating them into their daily tea service and calling them biscuits or sweet buns, as they do in Scotland.
Sometime in the 1930s, so the story goes, a Massachusetts innkeeper ran out of nuts while making cookies. Therefore, she substituted a bar of baking chocolate, breaking it into pieces and adding the chunks of chocolate to the flour, butter and brown sugar dough. The Toll House Cookie, so named after the inn in which it was served, was a hit.
Historians credit the innkeeper, Ruth Wakefield, with inventing what has since become an American classic - the chocolate chip cookie.
The earliest cookie-style cakes are thought to date back to seventh-century Persia, one of the first countries to cultivate sugar. There are six basic cookie styles, any of which can range from tender-crisp to soft. A drop cookie is made by dropping spoonfuls of dough onto a baking sheet. Bar cookies are created when a batter or soft dough is spooned into a shallow pan, then baked, cooled and cut into bars.
Hand-formed (or molded) cookies are made by shaping dough by hand into small balls, logs, crescents and other shapes.
Pressed cookies are formed by pressing dough through a COOKIE PRESS (or PASTRY BAG) to form fancy shapes and designs.
Refrigerator (or icebox) cookies are made by shaping the dough into a log, which is refrigerated until firm, then sliced and baked. Rolled cookies begin by using a rolling pin to roll the dough out flat; then it is cut into decorative shapes with COOKIE CUTTERS or a pointed knife.
Other cookies, such as the German SPRINGERLE, are formed by imprinting designs on the dough, either by rolling a special decoratively carved rolling pin over it or by pressing the dough into a carved COOKIE MOLD. In England, cookies are called biscuits , in Spain they're galletas , Germans call them keks, in Italy they're biscotti and so on.
The first American cookie was originally brought to this country by the English, Scots, and Dutch immigrants. Our simple "butter cookies" strongly resemble the English tea cakes and the Scotch shortbread.
The Southern colonial housewife took great pride in her cookies, almost always called simply "tea cakes." These were often flavored with nothing more than the finest butter, sometimes with the addition of a few drops of rose water.
In earlier American cookbooks, cookies were given no space of their own but were listed at the end of the cake chapter. They were called by such names as "Jumbles," "Plunkets," and "Cry Babies." The names were extremely puzzling and whimsical.
There are hundreds upon hundreds of cookie recipes in the United States. No one book could hold the recipes for all the various types of cookies.
Though they have evolved quite a bit since the Mayflower days, cookies have are never out of vogue. Homemade cookies are always head-and-shoulders better than store bought. But let's take a look at cookies then and now before showing you how to re-spin some homey classics.

The cookies that broke the mold

American cookies, like Americans themselves, have been a melting pot of cookie tastes and styles originating with the colonialists and thriving on waves of immigrant culinary contributions. Spice cookies, soft raisin cookies, shortbread, brown sugar-laced oatmeal, molasses and ginger drop cookies were delectably familiar. Our ancestors favored oversized cookies (a must for hungry farm hands) and yesteryear's cookbooks yield countless receipts for traditional delights as Snickerdoodles, raisin-filled Hermits, Sand Tarts, and Jumbles, as well as all sorts of delectable butter cookies such as Southern-style Tea Cakes, and a myriad of sweet delicacies inspired by the Pennsylvania Dutch Mennonites, Amish, and Moravian communities. But around the mid-nineteen hundreds something happened and this vast assortment of cookie-dom was supplanted by one infinitely important cookie that broke the mold - Tollhouse.
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Comments: 18

Rebornxfamilies [2012-06-04 20:58:24 +0000 UTC]

kawaii Lambo-san

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ML-Byakuran In reply to Rebornxfamilies [2012-06-04 21:39:03 +0000 UTC]

Aw, Thank you~

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Spiral---Star [2012-05-18 23:08:34 +0000 UTC]

I was loving the drawing it was making me smile it is SO Lambo. Then I see you put the "History of Cookies". I died. XDD

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ML-Byakuran In reply to Spiral---Star [2012-05-19 00:51:22 +0000 UTC]

xD I've got the history of marshmallows on another picture. I just wanna make sure everyone knows; I don't own any sugary confection~! thanks for the faves and the comment by the way~

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Spiral---Star In reply to ML-Byakuran [2012-05-19 02:46:21 +0000 UTC]

;D

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ML-Byakuran In reply to Spiral---Star [2012-05-19 02:52:53 +0000 UTC]

If I may ask, how are you?

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Spiral---Star In reply to ML-Byakuran [2012-05-20 00:21:51 +0000 UTC]

I'm well thank you for asking > w <
You?

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ML-Byakuran In reply to Spiral---Star [2012-05-20 01:03:39 +0000 UTC]

I'm good~~

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Spiral---Star In reply to ML-Byakuran [2012-05-20 01:50:49 +0000 UTC]

yay! : - D

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ML-Byakuran In reply to Spiral---Star [2012-05-20 01:55:33 +0000 UTC]

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Spiral---Star In reply to ML-Byakuran [2012-05-20 02:09:26 +0000 UTC]

lol

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ML-Byakuran In reply to Spiral---Star [2012-05-20 02:10:16 +0000 UTC]

A POCKY BUNNY! How cute!

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Spiral---Star In reply to ML-Byakuran [2012-05-20 02:13:34 +0000 UTC]

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ML-Byakuran In reply to Spiral---Star [2012-05-20 02:19:17 +0000 UTC]

...xD Oh my~ That baby is so awesome!

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Spiral---Star In reply to ML-Byakuran [2012-05-20 17:41:34 +0000 UTC]

XD

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ML-Byakuran In reply to Spiral---Star [2012-05-20 18:51:12 +0000 UTC]

.w.

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ThatReallyWeirdGuy [2012-05-17 17:33:16 +0000 UTC]

....Thanks for informing me of where cookies came from.
Don't really know what i'm gonna do with that bit of information.
Also, cute drawing.

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ML-Byakuran In reply to ThatReallyWeirdGuy [2012-05-17 17:34:16 +0000 UTC]

Haha, I did that because I was bored

Thank you

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