Carpe Cookie

A grade-A cookie lover's account of the best – and sometimes worst – cookies around.

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Ginger Molasses at Dovetail Bakery

Posted by on Apr 14, 2011 in Ginger Molasses, Vegan | 0 comments

Dovetail Bakery
3039 NE Alberta St. – Portland
$2.25

As I have mentioned, I am not a vegan. This, if you have read any of my other cookie reviews, is stating the obvious.  But despite my love of butter and eggs, some of my favorite cookies ever have been, to quote the used car salesman who sold me a 1988 Nissan Pulsar, “critter-free.” (True story: he was a vegan used car salesman and he really did say “critter-free” in reference to his dietary practices.  I’m not making it up. And yes, I really did buy a 1988 Nissan Pulsar (in 1996) – T top convertible, cherry red, btw. It (I?) was pretty smokin’, if you wanna know the truth.)

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Cookie Salon #2: Peanut Butter*

Posted by on Apr 3, 2011 in Peanut Butter, Cookie Salon | 0 comments

Peanut Butter* Cookie Salon

(What is a cookie salon?)

Date: March 15, 2011

Attendees: Sarah V.B., Brooke M., Giovanna Z., Beth S., Joanna M.

*The theme was actually “Nut Butter/Nut Flour, but in the end it was peanut butter dominated affair, with only 2 of the 9  cookie being non peanut butter (almond flour).

Top row – from left

• No flour peanut butter – Sarah
Grand Central Bakery Cookbook (with chocolate chips)- Sarah
• Grand Central Bakery Cookbook (w/o cc) – Sarah
Food and Style Sienese Almond Cookie – Beth
New Seasons Grocery Store (purchased from in-house bakery) – Brooke

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Cookie Salon

Posted by on Mar 24, 2011 in Oatmeal, Cookie Salon | 0 comments

COOKIE SALON

Friends, I have fulfilled a New Year’s resolution.  Since the beginning of this year, I started up  a “cookie salon” with a handful of friends and my sister (who is also a friend, btw).

What is a Cookie Salon?” you might ask.

From Wikipedia:

A salon is a gathering of people under the roof of an inspiring host, held partly to amuse one another and partly to refine taste and increase their knowledge of the participants through conversation. These gatherings often consciously followed Horace’s definition of the aims of poetry, “either to please or to educate” (“aut delectare aut prodesse est”). Salons, commonly associated with French literary and philosophical movements of the 17th century and 18th centuries, were carried on until quite recently, in urban settings, among like-minded people.

Mostly, it’s an excuse to eat cookies and feel like we’re doing something important, intellectual and artistic.

We’re pretty much just making it up as we go along – no hard and fast rules have been set. It should be stressed that the meeting’s featured cookies are, indeed, included as “participants.”  In other words, in keeping with the above conversation,  we aim to increase our knowledge of the participants (i.e., cookies and one another) through conversation.

We’re meeting approximately once a month, choosing a different theme each time. So far we’ve had:

1) Oatmeal Salon
2) Nut Butter/Nut Flour Salon

upcoming salon: New York Times Chocolate Chip Cookie

The idea is to make a cookie (a couple of  overachievers in the group have made 3-5 different cookies per salon) relating to the chosen theme and then pack a dozen or so in a tin and meet a neighborhood pub where they don’t seem to pay much attention to six women sitting at a mini-hoffbrau table with an abnormal amount of (not the pub’s) cookies spread out before them. And then to simultaneously taste each cookie, one-by-one, discussing and pontificating as we go.  This is what it basically is:  cookie monsters geeking out on cookies the way that only cookie monsters who also bake (and not just eat) cookies are able to do.

Like, we’ll talk about what happens when you use baking powder and not soda, how less flour and more oats make a chewier cookie, etc.  Or if we like golden raisins better than Thompson. Or apricots better than raisins.  Or how processed peanut butter behaves in comparison to natural peanut butter. Or how the Gourmet Cookbook recipe stacks up next to Dorrie Greenspan’s. Important stuff like that.

I am now posting photos and notes from Oatmeal Salon and Nut Butter/Nut Flour Salon -and will post a report for each ensuing salon.

Membership is open. No annual dues required (apart from bringing cookies to the table.  Literally.)

Inquire within for more details.

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OMG Chocolate Chip at Alma

Posted by on Mar 17, 2011 in Chocolate Chip | 0 comments

Alma Chocolate
140 NE 28th Ave – Portland
$1.25

OMG Chocolate Chip Cookie:  This is what the bakery calls it. I didn’t just throw that in there ‘cuz I think it’s a slammin’ cookie (I do think it’s a slamming cookie, BTW). Or, because I like to use cute abbreviations for stuff, FYI.  Or because I buy them for my BFF’s, who love CCC’s, and live in PDX.

Like I was sayin’, this is a great chocolate chip cookie and I should have mentioned it sooner.  Portland Monthly Magazine, in fact, just gave it a nod in their recent cc cookie roundup – and although I am not on board with a few that they singled out, I could not agree more about this (kind of) hidden gem at Alma.

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Chocolate Chip at Common Grounds

Posted by on Feb 26, 2011 in Chocolate Chip | 0 comments

Common Grounds Coffee House
4321 Se Hawthorne Blvd – Portland
$1

Since I just told you about the unexpectedly delicious oatmeal cookie that I found at Common Grounds recently, I thought I may as well stay on topic and tell you about their chocolate chip.

As I mentioned in the oatmeal post, I was alerted by on of my main chipster tipsters that the chocolate chip cookie here is straight up Toll House, super basic and pleasing. No nuts, nothing fancy – just old school, after-school special style. But so far I’ve  bypassed the ccc, honing in on the oatmeal and, on my last visit, was unable to resist taking home a chunk of their homey, unadorned gingerbread – which I did not regret for a split second. It was some top notch G-bread. And if you dig that sort of thing, you need to get some in your mouth, stat. (I drooled a little bit onto my keyboard just thinking about it, if you want to know the truth.)

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