All the recipes by the chef Gordon Ramsay
We love a good old chocolate chip cookie in my house. In fact, they are my son’s favorite. Toffee Chocolate Chip Cookies are soft and chewy with the added bonus of toffee bits for a classic that feels even more indulgent than the original! Since they are chewy, these are great cookies to make ahead of time if you plan on taking a trip in a few days and want cookies that still taste fresh for a week or two.
My mother has been making these weekly for a while now and her grandsons make short work of devouring them. That little something different makes them extra special. Let me show you how easy they are to make!
You’ll need: brown sugar, butter (softened), corn syrup (this makes them chewy), egg, all purpose flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, semi sweet chocolate chips, and Toffee Baking Bits (I used the Heath brand that I found near the chocolate chips).
Place butter, brown sugar, corn syrup, and egg in a large mixing bowl. Beat with an electric mixer until well combined and fluffy.
Like this. Now, don’t taste of it because it has a raw egg in it. Save the tasting for me 🙂
Now, add in flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Mix that until well combined.
Add in toffee bits and chocolate chips. Stir until incorporated.
Lightly spray a baking sheet with cooking spray or line with parchment paper* and scoop dough out, leaving about 2 inches space between each cookie. *My Mama says parchment paper works best for these. You can use the same sheet multiple times.
Bake 10-11 minutes or until just lightly browned on the bottom.
Let cool on cookie sheet for a few minutes and then remove to cool completely.
Ring the cookie bell! Okay, so technically it would be a dinner bell but why don’t we have a cookie bell, too? It could be one of those fun little tinkling bells that we keep on the kitchen counter. Let me know if you want to help me start this tradition folks. Future generations could benefit greatly from our wisdom!
Enjoy your yummy toffee chocolate chip cookies! Eat one for you – and one for me. Because that is what good friends do!
Pre heat oven to 350 degrees. Lightly spray baking sheets with cooking spray or line with parchment paper. *My Mama says parchment paper works best for these. You can use the same sheet multiple times.
Place brown sugar, butter, corn syrup and egg in a large bowl. Beat iwth electric mixer until well combined. Add in flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Mix again to combine. Stir in the chocolate chips and toffee bits until just incorporated.
Drop the dough by tablespoonfuls onto baking sheets, leaving about two inches in between each cookie. Bake 10-11 minutes, until edges are golden brown. Cool on the sheet for a few minutes before removing them to a cookie rack or platter to allow to cool completely.
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I originally published this recipe in 2008 and updated the post in 2019. I hope you enjoy it!
Grandmama’s Chocolate Pound Cake with Fudge Glaze
I have received a lot of requests for recipes in the past, but this is the one cake that I am asked to make most often. Its just a good old fashioned chocolate pound cake recipe from my Grandmama that is sublime on its own, but when you add Grandmama’s fudge icing, it becomes a favorite to all.
The icing used on this cake is what the old folks refer to as a “boiled icing”. This means they make it in a pot on top of the oven and it is brought to a boil to thicken it, truly it is very much like making fudge but we use a timer instead of a thermometer to trust it gets to the right temperature.
Have you ever had your granny make one of those cakes that when she cut into it, the icing cracked and broke off in huge fudgey chunks? THIS is THAT icing! I make a peanut butter version of it, too.
This cake has an interesting history in my life. When Ricky and I got married, he had just graduated from college and I was still working on my Home Economics degree. So, in order for us to have a little extra money, I made this cake. Back then I sold them for $18 each and I felt like I was making a fortune. Every now and then someone would write me a check for $20 and I was really living the big time then! As a result, I have a special fondness for this cake on many levels: My grandmama, sweet memories of days gone by, and the joy of being able to make a little extra money to help ends meet. Aside from that, it’s just a good old timeless recipe. I hope you get to try it soon.
You’ll need: Milk, All Purpose Flour, Sugar, Baking Powder, Vanilla, Cocoa, Three sticks butter, & 5 Eggs. Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Grease and flour your pan. What I do is fold a paper towel, put it over my hand and dip into the shortening, then smear it all around. Take a bit of flour and pour into the pan and move your pan around, patting it a bit, to get the flour to coat the sides. Then I turn it upside down and shake out the excess flour into the trash can.
Cream butter and sugar with mixer until light and fluffy.
This is what “light and fluffy” looks like. 🙂
In Separate bowl, stir together baking powder, flour, and cocoa powder.
Add vanilla to milk.
Alternately add milk and flour mixture to creamed butter, mixing after each addition.
Add eggs, one at a time, while still running the mixer.
Spoon batter into greased and floured pan and spread out a bit.
Place this in the center of oven and bake for one hour and twenty minutes.
Remove from oven and let sit for ten minutes. Turn out onto cooling rack. Let cool completely while mixing up icing.
For the CHOCOLATE FUDGE ICING you’ll need: milk, sugar, cocoa, butter, shortening, vanilla, and salt.
Place milk, sugar, butter, shortening, and salt in a heavy sauce pan over medium high heat.
Stir continuously while bringing to a boil.
Once it reaches a rolling boil, stop stirring and allow to boil on its own for two minutes.
Remove from heat. Add cocoa powder and vanilla. Stir until well blended.
Keep stirring icing a minute or two until it cools just a bit. I sometimes stick the bottom of my saucepan in a bowl of cool water to speed the process.
Now act quickly. Use a large spoon to spoon the icing over the cake or just pour directly from your saucepan. It will begin to set up rather quickly.
Allow to sit until the icing hardens a bit.
DIG IN to a recipe from the old days!
Preheat oven to 325. Grease and flour bundt pan, set aside. Cream butter in large mixing bowl. Add sugar, beat until light and fluffy. Add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition.
In separate bowl, stir together flour, cocoa, and baking powder. Measure milk and stir vanilla into it. Add milk and dry ingredients alternately to batter in mixing bowl, mixing after each addition. Pour into pan and bake for one hour and twenty minutes. Let cool for ten minutes before removing from pan and allowing to cool completely before adding glaze.
For glaze, Combine sugar, cocoa, milk, shortening, margarine, and salt in heavy saucepan. Bring to a rolling , stirring constantly. Once it reaches a rolling boil, allow to boil without stirring for two minutes. Remove from heat and add vanilla. Stirr until cooled just slightly. Spoon over cooled cake.
You might enjoy my Grandmama’s No Fail 7 Minute Icing!
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