I made these cookies this weekend and they were a real popular treat for my family! They were gone in 24 hours. This is a soft cookie with a cream cheese icing that highlights the flavors of cranberry, orange, cream cheese, and butter. The recipe made 24 cookies.
Cranberry Orange Cookies
Yield: 24 cookies
Ingredients:
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
3/4 cups sugar
1 tablespoon plus or the zest of 1 orange
1 cup butter, room temperature
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup of dried cranberries, rehydrated
Orange glaze:
2 tablespoons of cream cheese, softened
3/4 cup powdered sugar, sifted
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon plus orange juice (juice of 1 orange)
Instructions:
Preheat the oven to 350°F.
Measure out your dried cranberries in a small bowl and boil some water. Pour enough boiled water over them to cover them and let them set at least 30 minutes. This will rehydrate your cranberries and make them more palatable.
In a medium sized bowl, combine the flour, baking powder, and salt and set aside.
In a large bowl add sugar, orange zest and rub the orange zest into the sugar with a spatula until the sugar is moist and fragrant. Beat the orange zest and sugar until light and fluffy, a couple of minutes. Add the egg and vanilla, mixing until smooth. Add the flour mixture, mix until incorporated. Fold in the cranberries by hand.
I used a medium cookie scoop and scooped out the cookies as balls and placed them on a parchment lined baking sheet. Bake them for 13-15 minutes. Let the cookies cool some before moving them to a cooling rack. They are a soft cookie, sort of cake like.
To make the glaze, mix the sifted powdered sugar, (I sift because I always get lumps in my powdered sugar) orange juice, softened cream cheese, and vanilla together with a hand held mixer till smooth. You want to get a really soft consistency although it doesn't really drizzle. I put it in an icing bag or a zip loc bag with the end cut off to pipe on the cookies. The icing stays soft and you can't stack the cookies on each other. You have to store them flat. If you want an icing that will harden you will want royal icing. The original recipe (see link below) had that type of icing. Just make it with orange juice instead of lemon.
Store in an airtight container. I did not refrigerate these cookies and they were fine for 24 hours on the counter. If you want them to last longer or you think they won't be eaten right away I would refrigerate them. They will last in refrigerator for up to a week.
Recipe adapted from: What Megan's Making
And of course, have them with tea! I love baking in the autumn!
In Victory,
Sherry
These look and sound amazing! I think cranberry and orange are such a perfect combo! Thanks for sharing. Blessings on your week ahead. Sherry. xo
ReplyDeleteOh my, these looks so delicious!!!!
ReplyDeletethese look very good, I hope to start baking more things now that summer is over, bread is all year long. We could use some cookies. I have some Lemon Verbena which I put in the dehydrator, I think those would be a lovely cookie.
ReplyDeleteYes, we have been eating all the fillers and additives so the bread doesn't go bad, and we've gotten used to it, which is why there is such illness & malnutrition. The Amish white bread makes a good loaf. Learning curve with the freshly grained, high in nutrition and fiber, different than store bought anything. Thank you for stopping over my place & leaving a comment.
ReplyDelete