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Best Chocolate Chip Cookies Ever  

post #1 of 23
Thread Starter 
1 cup (2 sticks) butter, softened slightly
1 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs
2 teaspoons vanilla
1 teaspoon baking soda
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt
12 oz chocolate chips
1 1/2 cups walnuts or pecans, broken or chopped

Cream butter until soft, add sugar, and cream until light and fluffy. Beat in eggs and vanilla.

Sift flour with baking soda and salt. Stir into creamed mixture, beating well. Stir in chocolate chips and nuts.

Drop by rounded tablespoons about 1 1/2 inches apart on greased cookie sheets. Bake in 375-degree oven 9-12 minutes. Remove from pan immediately. Makes about 5 dozen cookies.

Recipe found from "Simple Pleasures" by Susannah Seton, Robert Taylor, and David Greer.
post #2 of 23
Thread Starter 
Sorry guys, I just realized I posted this in the wrong thread. I'm a newbie, does anyone know where/how I should move this?

I'm just a newbie trying to figure this out!
post #3 of 23
and I was all excited thinking that chocolate was allowed on NT now
post #4 of 23
Quote:
Originally Posted by jrose_lee
and I was all excited thinking that chocolate was allowed on NT now
I don't care if it's "allowed" or not, I'm still eating it! (But I make my chocolate chip cookies with sprouted spelt wholegrain flour and Rapadura sugar.)
post #5 of 23
Quote:
Originally Posted by AJP
I don't care if it's "allowed" or not, I'm still eating it! (But I make my chocolate chip cookies with sprouted spelt wholegrain flour and Rapadura sugar.)
:



Actually, I am jonsing for a good, NT-friendly GF chocolate chip cookie recipe... The GF flours don't really do it. I just picked up some GlutenEase enzyme formula, though. I'd highly dubious, but hopeful... maybe that will let me eat spelt cookies again :
post #6 of 23
Has anyone read Nina Planck's book, Real Food? She mentions chocolate in there, and I'm thinking of chocolate as a health food now!
post #7 of 23
I did read that, and totally agree with her. I just can't buy that the amount of phytates in the small amount of chocolate that we eat (even if we eat relatively a lot of it!) is even a patch on the amount of phytates that the average american eats in grains, beans and nuts. I do not buy that small amounts of caffiene are that bad for you, and dark chocolate has only a small amount of sugar - especially the 87% dark Eclipse Dagoba bar!
post #8 of 23
I cannot give up chocolate chip cookies. They are my weakness and make my life worth living. I can give up most every other kind, but chocolate chip cookies make my world rock. Someone here posted "Sin Cookies" awhile ago. Who was it? Xenabyte? Ah! I found it!
http://www.mothering.com/discussions...ht=SIN+COOKIES

I use sprouted spelt flour and half coconut oil/half butter in this recipe and they turn out divinely! I have been on a lifelong search for the perfect recipe and I have stopped with this one. It's a huge treat, even as far as NT is concerned, but the ingredients fit in. They are so so so delish!
post #9 of 23
GF is TOUGH! I agree that it is a healthful food, though I do buy it raw. It has minerals and a ton of antioxidants. Processing can do bad things to it-hence the recall with the Dagoba if I remember correctly. It's how my kids get alot of their dietary magnesium.

If anyone finds a yummy GF recipe POST IT! My ds would love it for his birthday.
post #10 of 23
You mentioned sprouted spelt flour. can you tell me how to make sprouted flour? Or do you buy it? I really want to do that....
Thank you!
Kellie
post #11 of 23
Quote:
Originally Posted by James127
You mentioned sprouted spelt flour. can you tell me how to make sprouted flour? Or do you buy it? I really want to do that....
Thank you!
Kellie
I buy it here: http://www.creatingheaven.net/eeprod...sfc/index.html You can make it at home, I've found it much easier to sprout regular wheat than spelt. You just sprout the wheat berries until the sprout has barely emerged, then dry them in a dehydrator or warm oven, then grind into flour using a grain mill. I like the flour I buy from the above link better than what I've made at home, though - the texture is better.
post #12 of 23
I use the same sprouted spelt flour AJP mentioned. I sub it in everything and it's always good!
post #13 of 23
Quote:
Originally Posted by firefaery
Processing can do bad things to it-hence the recall with the Dagoba if I remember correctly.
If anyone finds a yummy GF recipe POST IT! My ds would love it for his birthday.
The recall had to do with high levels of lead.

I have a couple of very good flourless cookie recipes if anyone is interested. I'm pretty sure they're GF, they're definitely grain-free.
post #14 of 23
Quote:
I have a couple of very good flourless cookie recipes if anyone is interested. I'm pretty sure they're GF, they're definitely grain-free.
Yes, please! Dh is sensitive to wheat but can eat oats, so I've been subbing with oat flour or a gf blend...would love some other options.
post #15 of 23
RIght, but the lead was due to the processing I thought. The raw beans didn't test out.
post #16 of 23
Lead in Cocoa Products: Where Does Contamination Come From?
David A. Taylor

See "Lead Contamination in Cocoa and Cocoa Products: Isotopic Evidence of Global Contamination" on page 1344.
Top

Manufactured cocoa products frequently have higher lead concentrations than other foods, even though cocoa beans, the main ingredient, have some of the lowest reported lead levels for any natural food. In 2001 the Codex Alimentarius Commission, an international body based in Rome, proposed reducing the maximum permissible level of lead in cocoa products by half, to 100 nanograms per gram (ng/g) for cocoa butter and 1,000 ng/g for cocoa powder. At a March 2002 meeting in West Africa, where most of the world’s cocoa supply originates, producers agreed that to reduce lead in their products, they needed research to identify the source of contamination. Now a U.S.–Nigerian research team has uncovered some of the first clues about where the lead is coming from [EHP 113:1344–1348].

Lead contamination of candies has been recognized as a problem since 1820, when a British study found the poison widespread in London confectionary products. In recent years, documented lead content in candy has ranged from a mean concentration of 21 ng/g in milk chocolate bars in an Australian study to an average of 1,920 ng/g in chocolates seen in research in India. In Nigeria, a 1999 study found an average of 310 ng/g lead in cocoa powders. (For comparison, the mean U.S. lead concentration for apples is 20 ng/g, 200 ng/g for dry table wine, and 100 ng/g for canned pineapple.) Lead is known to cause anemia, muscle weakness, and brain damage, with children particularly susceptible to effects.

In the current study, the researchers studied the lead isotopic compositions of cocoa beans and shells from six farms in Nigeria’s top three producing states to determine if soil or farm sources might be the cause of lead contamination. The team took bean and sediment samples and homogenized them to make composites for soil, beans, and cocoa bean shells for each farm. They analyzed lead concentrations using high-resolution inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry to make preliminary isotopic measurements, followed by thermal ionization mass spectrometry measurements.

The lead concentrations for cocoa beans ranged from less than 0.103 to 1.78 ng/g, averaging 0.512 ng/g—among the lowest lead concentrations reported for any food. The average concentrations found in the cocoa bean shells, however, was about 320-fold higher (160 ng/g). Soils showed a range of isotopic compositions overlapping those of the shells.

The cocoa bean shells all had an extremely similar isotopic composition, indicating a singular source of contamination, perhaps leaded gasoline. The authors conclude that although the soil may have caused a small degree of the contamination, the narrower range of isotopic composition in the shells suggested the more singular source of contamination was the true culprit. According to the paper, cocoa bean shells are known to be very effective at removing lead from solutions. So, although they provide excellent protection of the bean inside, the shells may also serve to contaminate the cocoa beans during fermentation or drying.

The team also compared the cocoa beans with finished cocoa products and found much higher lead concentrations and greater variability in the isotopic composition among the finished products. They therefore deduced that most of the contamination occurred after the cocoa left the farm stage.
post #17 of 23
I love how this thread has taken off from a mistaken post Those of you who eat raw chocolate...is this what you're talking about?

http://www.rawfood.com/cacao.html

I love chocolate...I'd love to eat some and feel good about doing so
post #18 of 23
Yup! Mmmmmmmmm. Going to make a smoothie right now.
post #19 of 23
Firefaery, that's encouraging. thanks for posting this. I've held back on buying even raw cacao due to lead content. Still, that last sentence still has me wondering. How's it going with the new babe btw?
post #20 of 23
I take that to mean the further processing by choc. maufacturers. There are other articles I found that seemed to support that.

He's gorgeous, thanks for asking! Practically perfect in every way.
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