Egg nog cookies are the perfect cookie to add to a Christmas cookie platter. They also travel well, making them great to give as gifts for the holidays.
Welcome to the final day of Cookie Week 2012, Friends! Today, there are 3 great cookie recipes to share.
Madeline/Munching in the Mitten brings out the Big Dogs with a fab Food 52 recipe called Salted Double Chocolate Peanut Butter Cookies. It’s like taking awesome, injecting it with more awesome, and sprinkling it with still more awesomeness. Wow. Nothing about that this cookies sounds like it sucks. Not even a little bit.
Gosh, I miss peanut butter. 😉
My BFF Carrie is back with another winning cookie recipe. These are her Brown Sugar Shortbread, which she brilliantly dips in milk chocolate and toffee bits. I’m pretty sure I’d eat dirt if you dipped it in chocolate and rolled in toffee, so to do it with shortbread? Well, I’m powerless to resist such delicacies.
I’m also powerless to resist Egg Nog Cookie Logs–a great cookie from the CD Archives that really deserves to be dusted off and be given their Proper Due.
I first posted the Egg Nog Cookies recipe three years ago, when I hosted my first Cookie Week here on the blog. Since not many of you had stumbled across my (then new) little blog, you might have missed the recipe.
Given that egg nog cookies are one of my very favorite Christmas cookies, it doesn’t feel like the Christmas season until I’ve baked a batch. I can’t in good conscience let them stay buried in the vault.
Promise me that you’ll try the Egg Nog Cookies recipe!
My Holidays will not be complete until you do. So try them…for me. 🙂
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I Know that I promised a 3rd slow cooker recipe, but since I have pretty much been living solely off of cookies and chai for the past two weeks, I couldn’t hold out on cookie week any longer. Please try to understand. 🙂
SO, yes! It’s Cookie Week! With a serious exclamation point because:
- Cookies are awesome!
- This time of year is awesome!
- Egg Nog Cookies are awesome!
- Cookies are awesome!
Oh, wait. I already said that.
Cookie Week!!!!
OK, I’ll try to rein it in a little.
But, cookies!!! WOO-HOO!!!!
Sorry, I’ll try tone it down a bit. Seriously.
The original recipe for egg nog cookies came from my BFF Sandy.
She brought them to a cookie exchange once, what seems like 67 years ago. No small feat at the time, because Girlfriend had 4 kids, aged 5 and under. So the fact that she was out, let alone baking, was quite an accomplishment! (Yes, really.) Now she has 6 of the most beautiful, blue eyed, pea-in-a-pod toe-heads you’ve ever seen. They’re totally adorbs!
Sandy brings her egg nog cookie logs to our cookie exchange. The first time, I inhaled a dozen and decided that I was smitten. All the other ladies must have been too, because I’m pretty sure none of the batch made it on to our cookie trays to bring home to our families.
If you are not an egg nog fan, I hear ya. Just hang tight for a few more minutes. I like the flavor of egg nog, but the texture is just all wrong. Way too thick for human consumption. But these cookies? These cookies have all the delicious flavors of egg nog with the perfect texture. Slightly crisp on the outside, soft and densely chewy on the inside, with a creamy frosting on top. Yeah…you SO want to bake up a batch!
Let’s get our egg nog cookies baking!
For the Cookies:
1 C. unsalted butter, softened
¾ C. granulated sugar
1 egg
2 tsp. rum flavoring
2 tsp. vanilla extract
3 C. all-purpose flour
¼ tsp. salt
2 tsp. ground nutmeg
For Frosting:
1/3 C. (5 1/3 Tbs.) unsalted butter, softened
2 tsp. rum flavoring
1 tsp. vanilla extract
2 Tbs. milk
2C. powdered sugar
Ground nutmeg for garnish
Line 3 baking sheets with parchment paper or a silcone baking mat; set aside.
These egg nog cookies are so easy to make that I let my little helper here do most of the work himself.
I’m a little lazy like that. He measured the flour, nutmeg, and salt into a medium sized bowl, and whisked it together.
Allow your child labor helper to add the butter and sugar to the mixing bowl. Remind him that squeezing the softened butter through the wrapper with both hands is not the most efficient way to get it into the bowl.
Cream the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy. I love the way butter looks kind of like a sugar scrub at this stage. Makes me want to dig in there and exfoliate my elbows.
Which is kinda gross when we are talking about cookies. Sorry–I live with a bunch of boys so sometimes I forget how to relate to polite company.
Add the egg, real vanilla extract, and the rum extract. It’s the rum extract that gives the cookies their egg noggy flavor.
Stir in the egg and extracts until they are just incorporated. Try not to over mix, or the cookies will be too dense. (read: bricks)
Stir in about one third of the flour mixture at a time. The dough is about to get really stiff, so I like to ease my mixer into it.
See what I mean? Stiff stuff. (No relation to the hairspray of the same name.)
Turn the dough onto a sheet of plastic wrap, and form it into a large ball.
Cut the dough into 4 equal pieces.
In the spirit of equity, give each portion of dough their own sheet of plastic wrap.
Roll each dough portion into a long rope, about 1/2 inch in diameter. Wrap each rope in plastic wrap, and refrigerate for several hours. Because the dough is soft, I like to roll it into ropes on a large cutting board. That way, when they are all rolled and wrapped, I can carry them to the fridge on the cutting board, and pop the whole thing in there to chill. Ta-da! No broken dough ropes.
After an hour or so, remove the ropes from the refrigerator and unwrap them. Cut each rope into 2 inch segments, or “logs,” and put them on the prepared baking sheets. I put a dozen logs, 2 inches apart, onto each prepared baking sheet. (This recipe makes about 32 cookies.)
Bake the egg nog cookies at 350 degrees F, for about 15 minutes, or until very lightly browned.
Cool for 2 minutes on the baking sheet, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely. Remember that you are doing a blog post, and make a note to take pictures of this step next time.
While the cookies are cooling, make the frosting. Believe me when I tell you that the frosting makes these cookies. Cream the milk, vanilla, and rum extracts into the butter.
Mix in the powdered sugar, and beat until creamy.
Doesn’t that look cool? Kind of like an interpretation of Starry Night in frosting. Once the cookies have cooled completely, frost ’em up!
I use a knife to spread the frosting on top of the cookies. Apparently, I was under the delusion of have oodles of free time, so I put the frosting into a pastry bag and applied it with a star tip. The boys thought this was awesome, so everyone took a turn frosting with the pastry bag. It worked well for the first half of the cookies, but by the second half, our hands had warmed the frosting so much that it started pouring out the end of the bag.
Moral of the story: if you are a nut like me and decide to use a pastry bag, fill it with half of the frosting at a time, or use two bags. Or just use a knife.
Sprinkle a little nutmeg on top of the egg nog cookies, just for prettiness.
Eat one or two if you simply can’t wait, but I like to let the frosting set up a bit first. The Egg Nog Logs are pretty sturdy once the frosting has set, which makes them great travelers for a cookie exchange or holiday gathering. Just be sure to store them in a single layer in an air-tight container.
If you are really organized, you can make the cookies a week or two ahead of time and freeze them in the container. Just let ’em thaw on the counter for a few hours before serving.
Just make them!
Believe me when I tell you that once you make egg nog cookies, your holiday cookie tray will seemed naked without them.
Makes 32 to 36 cookies
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Yields 36 Egg nog shortbread cookies, topped off with fluffy egg nog frosting. 2 hr, 30 Prep Time 15 minCook Time 2 hr, 45 Total Time Ingredients Instructions Notes Prep time includes time needed for chilling the dough.
Kirsten Kubert
Madeline says