Cookie Recipes
Cut Cookie Recipes
Pecan Praline Lace Cookies
Posted by kdipaolo at recipegoldmine.com 6/11/01 2:41:19 pm
These confections are right on the cusp of cookie and candy. They have a
caramelized brown sugar flavor reminiscent of Pecan Pralines from New Orleans,
but are delicate and lacy. With little effort, you can make a big splash at
your next dinner party with these fluted dessert bowls, curled coronets, and
tasty cookies.
In the oven, they spread into perfectly flat rounds that can be molded, while
warm, into cups, cones, or cigarettes. The batter is a cinch to make and to
mold. Just stir the ingredients on the stove and spoon the batter onto the baking
sheet. You don't have to spread the batter - it flattens out in the oven. The
finished cookies peel easily off the tray.
If using a baking sheet more than once, simply wipe off the excess butter
with a paper towel. Be sure to let the tray cool before dropping the next batch
of batter.
1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons finely chopped pecans
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
2 ounces (1/2 stick) unsalted butter, softened
1/4 cup packed dark brown sugar
1/4 cup light corn syrup
Heat oven to 350 degrees F.
In a small bowl, combine the pecans and flour. In a small saucepan, combine
the butter, sugar, and corn syrup. Bring to a boil. Remove from heat and stir
the dry ingredients into the pan. Transfer the batter to a bowl and stir occasionally
until it thickens into a dough and is cool enough to handle, about 25 minutes.
With moistened hands, roll the dough into various size balls, depending on
whether you're making cookies, cups, or coronets (see below). Place on ungreased
baking sheets, 3 to 7 inches apart, depending on size-they spread quite a bit.
Bake about 32 minutes, or until the active bubbling subsides. Place the baking
sheet on a rack and let cool until the cookies are firm enough to lift with
a flexible metal spatula but are still malleable, 3 to 5 minutes. Working quickly,
mold each into shape and set on a wire rack to cool completely. If the cookies
get too cool and brittle to mold, put the tray back in the oven for a minute
to soften.
To Make 9 Dessert Bowls:
With moistened hands, mold each ball using a rounded tablespoon of dough. Place
only two balls on the ungreased baking sheet. Have two small soup bowls measuring
4 1/2 to 5 inches across the top ready by the oven. Follow the baking instructions
above. When set but still malleable, lift the cookies, one at a time, and place
each in a bowl, nutty, bumpy side up. Gently press the bottom to flatten. The
sides will ruffle prettily. Wipe the excess butter off the baking sheet and
continue with the remaining dough. If you have more than one baking sheet, stagger
the baking so that you can mold one tray while the other is in the oven. Fill
with butterscotch ice cream, pumpkin mousse, bananas and cream, or anything
that strikes your fancy and goes well with pecans.
To Make 9 Ice Cream Cones:
Follow the baking instructions above for dessert bowls, but when you lift a
cookie off the baking sheet, roll it into a cone with the nutty, bumpy side
facing out, and hold it for a few seconds to set. Lay it on the cooling rack,
seam side down, and place a cylindrical object, such as a pill bottle, in the
opening to set until you roll the next cookie. Fill with scoops of any flavor
ice cream or sorbet that complements pecans.
To Make 18 Dessert Coronets:
With moistened hands, mold rounded teaspoons of the dough into balls. Place
about nine balls on an ungreased baking sheet. Follow the baking instructions
for ice-cream cones; you're making a smaller version of the same. Repeat with
a second tray. Fill with mousse, ice cream, or berries and cream. Place a little
dab of cream on the plate to anchor the coronets, and place one or two coronets
on each plate with fruit sauce or hot fudge spilling out of the opening.
To Make 24 Cookies:
With moistened hands, mold level teaspoons of the dough into balls. Place about
12 balls on an ungreased baking sheet. Follow the instructions above. When the
cookies are set but still flexible, transfer to a cooling rack. Repeat with
a second tray.
To Make 24 Cigarettes:
Follow the baking instructions for cookies, but when you lift a cookie off the
baking sheet, roll it around a chopstick or the handle of a wooden spoon. Lay
it on the cooling rack, seam side down. If the cookies get too brittle to mold,
put the baking sheet back in the oven for a minute to soften them. Dip the ends
in melted chocolate. Immerse one end of a cookie, then the other, shake off
the excess chocolate, and dip the end into a small bowl of grated chocolate.
Lay it on a sheet pan lined with parchment or waxed paper. When all the cookies
are dipped, place the tray in the refrigerator for 5 to 10 minutes, just until
the chocolate sets.
© Copyright 1999-2010 Recipe Goldmine™ | Trademark
No portion of this website may be reproduced without permission.