DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (2024)

DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (1)
As if this is what it looks like when I sit down to enjoy a cookie or four. Shoot, by the time I actually get to the table, I've gotten a cookie and a half crammed into my gullet. I am convinced that eating while standing doesn't count. In fact, I'm pretty sure in Weigh Watchers-land that'd be considered negative points. Bonus points, maybe? Extra credit work. That's it.

What you are about to read involves a recipe by yours truly. I know, I know. I probably should have allowed a little more time to lapse between near foot-amputation via a food processor and a blog post of cooking tips. But this here cookie recipe is too good not to share. In fact, hubs, who is a sweets aficionado, calls these his favorite and requests them often. Which is kinda a problem because I'm a flippin unorganized disaster that misplaces this recipe constantly. So I decided to perma-ize it on to a tea towel and a thrifted platter. 'Twas easy, lemme show you how.

DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (2)
Are you checking out those ingredients? You know anything that involves a stick of butter, sugar and chocolate has gotta be good. In fact, these cookies simply taste like chocolate butter. Which would be the best invention ever. And if you don't think these cookies are amazing, than, I'm sorry, but something is seriously wrong with you. I hate to be the one to tell you. Maybe your taste buds are broken. I heard once that you can get Taste Bud Transplants (actually, I've never heard that). In which case, you'd come back to me all apologetic like raving on and on about how incredibly wrong you were and how incredibly incredible the cookies are. Which, after TBT surgery would probably sound something like, "Oh my Dod, Cathie! Theeth cookieth are tho delithith!"

(Did I just insult people who may or may not have had Taste Bud Transplants? Er, if you exist, thorry).

Because my hand writing may be a touch difficult to read, here are the ingredients for a small batch of 12 cookies:

  • 3/4 cup of flour
  • 1/4 cup of unsweetened cocoa powder (I use Hershey's)
  • 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 stick of unsalted, room temperature butter
  • 1/2 cup of sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
  • 2 tablespoons of steel-cut oats (really any kind of oatmeal is good, we just prefer this)
  • 1/4 cup of semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • Small amount of coarse sugar (like the raw stuff) in a bowl
  • Handful of cocoa nibs, if you got 'em
DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (3)
Oh, but back to the tea towel. So I used some linen-esque cotton I had in my stash. I cut it to 18" X 24" and began the entirely-too-long process of creating those light blue loose-leaf-paper lines. I set my machine on zigzag and zipped along. Once finished with that, I added the light pink vertical line and serged the edges out of pure laziness.

Once you've russell up all the ingredients, do this:

  1. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. By the way, always check the inside of your oven before turning it on or you might discover that the crusty food on those dirty dishes you put in there when the in-laws were coming over is gonna burn and stink to high heaven. Not that I would know anything about that.
  2. Mix the first 4 ingredients into medium sizedbowl. Using an electric mixer, beat the butter in a large bowl until fluffy. Ummm, fluffy butter.
  3. Add sugar and vanilla to the butter and continue to beat until blended.
  4. Add that floury stuff from the first step and attempt to beat. It'll be a little tricky because that stuff is about to get thick and clumpy. Which is usually never a good way to describe someone's cooking, but stay with me, the cookies are worth it.
DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (4)
I used a fabric pen I picked up at the local craft store to write the recipe. That was a pinch tricky as the ink of the pen liked to bleed a bit so I just wrote a little larger than normal. By the way, did you know that they no longer teach cursive writing in elementary schools? This seriously bums me out. When I was a kid, we didn't have art class so those purple ditto cursive writing sheets were the closest thing for me. And I totally rocked 'em. Couldn't do long division or pass a spelling test, but you give me one of those hot-off-the-presses smeary purple sheets and I'd cursive write it all the way to Peru. Not the country. Peru, Indiana. The town next to the one I grew up in.

5. Mix in oats, chocolate chips and cocoa nibs (which are totally optional. We just happened to have a stash and I add them for their crunch) with a spatula.
6. Shape a big ol' tablespoonish amount of the cookie dough, roll it around in that bowl of coarse sugar and kinda flatten it onto a cookie sheet. That's if you even get this far because, if you're anything like me, you're going to have consumed nearly half of that cookie dough before it even hits the sheet. Which is a good thing because this cookie dough doesn't contain raw eggs and thusly won't give you worms that crawl out your back door in the middle of the night (you know, call me naive, but I'm pretty sure most recipes shouldn't include the worm-crawling-out-yer-butt visual. Sorry).
7. Bake them bad boys for about 10-12 minutes, let 'em cool for five seconds and drop 'em in your mouth like the hot-as-coal-from-a-grill chocolate buttery goodness that they are. Don't worry about those silly burnt taste buds. After all, you can always get TBT.

DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (5)

For some reason, I got it in my heard that the recipe-emblazoned tea towel just wasn't enough. So when I spotted this giant platter at the thrift store, I decided to glaze the recipe onto it as well. I filled one of those fine metal tipped glaze bottle thingies with black glaze and then I set to work transcribing the recipe.

DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (6)

Which makes the whole process sound much easier that it actually was. Because of the heavy glaze already on the plate, the surface was super slick and hard to write on. And the glaze liked to do this coming-out-in-clumps thing which was totally awesome. After doing some serious writing, wiping off and rewriting, I found that the best thing was to drag the metal tip of the applicator across the surface as I was writing. The above is how it looked before firing...

DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (7)
And here's the after. Which looks exactly the same.
DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (8)
Cookie and platter close up. Look at that prettiful hand-writing, would ya? All that hard work, it pays off. Just don't ask me to do any of that long division nonsense, ermkay? By the way, I know it looks like there are raisins in cookies. There isn't. It's just what happens when you wrap freshly made cookies in layers of Saran wrap and stick 'em in the freezer. More on that later.
DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (9)
Yay! Hub's fave recipe immortalized! The end.

DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (10)

Okay, not really The End. I just had to share this with you. This is how hubs keeps his extra stash of cookies: in 13 layers of Saran Wrap and a zip lock baggie in the freezer. You know, if some co*ke fiend came to our house, lookin' for co*ke in the freezer (cuz that's where one keeps co*ke, right? I don't know about these things and I'm afraid to google it for fear that "angel dust in freezer" will most assuredly get me fired. Again.) they'd find these instead. Which, being jacked up on co*ke, they'd be able to wrestle through those 13 layers much faster than me (I'm pretty sure one shouldn't curse and break into a sweat as much as I do before enjoying a cookie.) Now that I think about it, I wonder if those layers aren't meant to keep these cookies Cassie-proof. Hmm...I just might have to have a cookie or (one, two, three...) eight! in order to figure this one out.

Until next time, go make yo'self some cookies! And then come back and tell me how amazin' they are!

DIY: How to Never Lose that Recipe Again! And Other Stuff. (2024)

FAQs

Who sang the best version of MacArthur Park? ›

"MacArthur Park" was subsequently covered by numerous artists, including a 1970 Grammy-winning version by country music singer Waylon Jennings and a number one Billboard Hot 100 disco arrangement by Donna Summer in 1978.

What is the meaning of the song MacArthur Park? ›

The song “MacArthur Park” was about the end of a love affair between Jimmy Webb, who wrote the song, and Suzy Horton.

What does "leave the cake out in the rain" mean? ›

"It's something I saw — we would eat cake and leave it in the rain," Webb told The Guardian. "But as a metaphor for losing a chapter of your life, it seemed too good to be true."

Who wrote "Someone left my cake out in the rain"? ›

MacArthur Park" is a song written by American singer-songwriter Jimmy Webb that was recorded first by the brilliant Irish actor and singer Richard Harris in 1968. Richard Harris's version peaked at number two on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and number four on the UK Singles Chart.

Who covered the song MacArthur Park? ›

There aren't many songs that have been recorded by a more varied group of artists than Jimmy Webb's seven-minute opus "MacArthur Park." Originally recorded by Irish actor Richard Harris in the late 1960s, the song was also covered by Waylon Jennings, Donna Summer, Tony Bennett and The Four Tops.

What artists sang MacArthur Park? ›

MacArthur Park and Those Who Ran With It
  • Jimmy Webb. Jimmy Webb wrote the song originally for The Association. ...
  • Richard Harris. The first person to try to make it a hit was, of course, Richard Harris. ...
  • Waylon Jennings. ...
  • Four Tops. ...
  • Donna Summer. ...
  • Erkan Aki. ...
  • Ronnie Aldrich. ...
  • Amen Corner.

Why are they closing MacArthur Park? ›

The city's Department of Recreation and Parks plans to use the closure to catch up on maintenance put off by the pandemic. The project will cost $1.5 million and include upgraded lights, replanted lawns, repairs to irrigation and new park benches. Cedillo told The Times he expects the park to reopen in January.

How safe is MacArthur Park in Los Angeles? ›

"this area has a high crime rate. the crimes are usually shootings, violence, burglaries, assaults, etc. "

What does box of rain mean in Grateful Dead song? ›

I can talk to babies." According to Hunter: "By 'box of rain,' I meant the world we live on, but 'ball' of rain didn't have the right ring to my ear, so box it became, and 'I don't know who put it there. '"

What is sweating a cake mean? ›

This happens when the temperature of the cake within the frosting is colder than the air outside the frosting. Condensation (or cake sweat) will happen with any big change in temperature. For example, moving a cake or cake layers from the fridge or freezer to a warm room.

What does ice of the cake mean? ›

The phrase 'Icing on the Cake' refers to something positive that enhances a situation that's already good. Example of Use: "She was delighted she was accepted to her new job, but having her best friend as her boss was just the icing on the cake."

Why do people wet their cakes? ›

The liquid “soaks” into the cake, adding more moisture to prevent the cake from drying out and infusing additional flavor and/or sweetness. A variety of liquids can be used as a cake soak.

What movie did Judy Garland sing singing in the rain? ›

It is performed on film by a nightclub band as dance music and sung in a Chinese dialect in The Ship from Shanghai (1930), by Jimmy Durante in Speak Easily (1932), by Judy Garland in Little Nellie Kelly (1940), and as background music at the beginning of MGM's The Divorcee (1930) starring Norma Shearer.

Is MacArthur Park a real place? ›

MacArthur Park (originally Westlake Park) is a park dating back to the late 19th century in the Westlake neighborhood of Los Angeles. In the early 1940s, it was renamed after General Douglas MacArthur, and later designated City of Los Angeles Historic Cultural Monument #100.

What film is MacArthur Park from? ›

MacArthur Park is a 2001 American independent drama film directed by Billy Wirth and written by Wirth, Tyrone Atkins, Aaron Courseault and Sheri Sussman. The film features ensemble cast stars Thomas Jefferson Byrd, Ellen Cleghorne, B-Real, Balthazar Getty, Lori Petty and Bad Azz.

Who wrote Galveston and MacArthur Park? ›

Multiple Grammy-winning, cross-genre songwriter Jimmy Webb's most popular songs are touchstones for a generation yet remain timeless: 'MacArthur Park', 'Wichita Lineman', 'Didn't We', 'Galveston', 'Worst That Could Happen', and 'The Highwayman'.

Why is MacArthur Park famous? ›

MacArthur Park became known for violence after 1985 when prostitution, drug dealing, shoot-outs, and the occasional rumored drowning became commonplace, with as many as 30 murders in 1990. When the lake was drained in 1973 and 1978, hundreds of handguns and other firearms were found disposed of in the lake.

Who sings the best version of Amazing Grace? ›

Judy Collins' rendition of "Amazing Grace" is considered one of the most beautiful and haunting versions of the song. Her pure, clear voice and simple arrangement make for a moving and emotional performance.

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