These cookies are a very good and a change from the normal peanut butter or
oatmeal cookies. I bake some and told my friends they are different so they
tried them and loved it. The batch I made was gone before I knew it. What I
like about these cookies is they can be made healthy. So if you want to go
the healthy way I have a great recipe for you but you can cook them the
regular way also. These cookies are great for kids, parties, gifts or just a
get together with your friends or family. If you like oatmeal chocolate chip
cookies, you'll love these oatmeal cookies. They're soft and chewy and sure
to become one of your favorite oatmeal recipes. The cookies stayed moist,
slightly chewy and fresh tasting for several days when stored in an airtight
container, so these are a great option if you want to bake a batch over the
weekend and keep it around during the week. Don't over-bake cool and store in
an airtight container. Do not cook to long you want them to be slightly
puffed and a very light golden color on the bottom. They will not appear to
be done at this point, but will continue to bake while cooling. If you are
looking for a healthier version of traditional peanut butter cookies, this
recipe is just what you need. This recipe calls for natural peanut butter,
which has less sugar and gives the cookies a richer peanut flavor.
In a large bowl, cream together shortening, margarine, brown sugar, white
sugar, and peanut butter until smooth. For those who get flat cookies, there
are three likely problems: your fat is too warm. Your shortening, margarine,
butter should be almost chilled-just barely warm enough to be creamed with
the sugar. Generally I prefer all butter for my cookies, but sometimes, as
with this cookie, the shortening, butter combo is for a reason-shortening for
a little heft and crispiness, and butter for flavor. I added chocolate chips,
peanut butter chips and white chocolate chips to the occasional cookie for a
nice treat! These cookies contain peanut butter and oatmeal. In a mixing bowl,
cream the shortening and peanut butter. I use butter in cookies instead of
shortening and also added raisins. You can makes large batch and the cookies
freeze well. Good with milk or coffee taste great with these peanut buttery
oatmeal cookies. My cookies were not crumbly and dry at all they were chewy
and moist. I did use a reduced fat peanut butter I don't know if that had
anything to do with it and the shortening I used was butter flavored. The
peanut butter was prominent which masked the taste of the whole-wheat and the
oatmeal masked it's grainy texture. I thought these cookies were plenty sweet
enough.
This recipe is the regular ingredients.
Preparation: Cream butter, peanut butter, and sugars, beat in egg, syrup, and
vanilla.
Combine the flour, baking soda, and salt, stir into the creamed mixture. Also,
don't cream them so long that the fat warms up. Combine oats, peanut butter,
flour, baking soda, and salt, add to the creamed mixture and mix well.
2 Cups of sugar (that is NOT a typo, as I thought the first time I made them
and poured in the sugar! It takes 2 full cups)
1/2 tsp Salt
1/2 cup margarine (can sub vegan margarine here)
1/2 cup milk (can sub Silk Soy Milk here)
1/2 cup peanut butter
2 and 1/2 cup oatmeal
Mix the first 4 ingredients into a large pan over medium heat on stove stir
semi-vigorously and consistent for 5 minutes. Remove from heat and quickly
stir and mix in the peanut butter and the oatmeal. Drop by the rounded
teaspoonfuls onto ungreased baking sheet. Gradually add the flour, baking
soda, cinnamon and the salt. Alternate cookie sheets while baking, using a
cooled sheet for even baking. Makes 30 to 40 cookies. For more great recipes and great cookes go to www.Teegoes.com