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Chocolate Olive Oil Crema Cookies

This time of year, with the final stretch of Winter delivering the last of the snow and pretending to be snuggled up next to a wood-burning fire is the only way to pull through the day, the humble chocolate cookie makes its appearance in the big glass cookie jar at home. Chocolate cookies can be all sorts of things – crisp, light, decadent, gooey, dark, spicy and so comforting dunked in warm milk or coffee. But this chilli olive oil chocolate crema cookie is almost all of that, in one crumbling bite. Inspired by my favourite new cooking duo discovery – Two Tarts – this little recipe should have you skipping to Spring in no time.

Ingredients for 30 cookies:

Chocolate crema with chilli olive oil – 175g/6oz

Plain flour – 1 1/4 cup

Organic cocoa powder – 1/2 cup

Baking Powder – 2 tsp

Salt, two pinches

Extra virgin olive oil – 10 Tbsp (use Nudo’s chilli oil for extra bite)

Raw brown cane sugar – 1 1/3 cup

Eggs – 2

Vanilla extract – 1 tsp

Milk – 1/3 cup

Icing sugar, for rolling

First, cream the sugar and olive oil together, then beat in eggs and vanilla.  In a separate bowl, mix the dry ingredients (flour, baking powder, organic cocoa and salt).  Add and blend the chocolate crema into the bowl with creamed sugar. Then add dry ingredients and bit of milk as needed. When this is all combined the dough will be quite sticky, like thick cake batter.  Before making the cookies, chill the dough for about two hours or until hard enough to scoop into balls.

Chocolate Olive Oil Crema Cookies perfectly goes with espresso or a glass of milk for dunking.

Once the batter is sufficiently chilled, heat oven to 180C/Gas Mark 5/350F. In a larger bowl, place some ice cubes and cold water. Float your mixing bowl in the ice water to keep the dough cool whilst preparing the cookies. Line a baking tray with a sheet of baking paper. Using two teaspoons, scoop out a spoonful of dough, shaping it between the two spoons to form ball (it would be more a dollop, really), then roll the ball into a bowl of icing sugar to coat it well. Line the balls up on the baking sheet, leaving sufficient space for the cookies to spread, and bake at or 12-15 minutes. The shorter the cookies are baked, the more gooey they come out. Enjoy with a little espresso or, if you like dunking, a big glass of milk.

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On my way to work in Rome, I used to stop at the same café every day for my morning cappuccino. The choice was partly habit, partly location, partly a judgement of the great coffee – but the main thing tugging me back was the delicious little biscuit which the barrista would (sometimes! Brilliantly, only sometimes) nestle onto the saucer, under the curve of the cup. I later learned that these heavenly rich and crumbly little treats are called ‘lady’s kisses’ – and they certainly had me coming back for more. In this recipe I’ve used our amazing chocolate fondant as the kiss that unites the two biscuit ‘lips’.

Ingredients for about 120 biscuits (60 baci)

Skinned hazelnuts – 100g/3.5oz

Ground almonds – 100g/3.5oz

Caster sugar – 65g/2.3oz

Plain flour – 165g/5.8oz

Salted butter – 175g softened/6.2oz

Nudo Chocolate Crema with Lemon olive oil – 1 jar

Preheat the oven to 180oC/350oC/GM4. If you can’t find skinned hazelnuts toast some unskinned ones and whilst they are still hot rub off the skins in a kitchen towel.

Grind the skinned hazelnuts in a blender and put them into a mixing bowl with the almonds, sugar and flour. Cut the softened butter into cubes and mix with your hands into the dry ingredients. Once it’s well mixed line a baking tray with parchment paper, take a small piece of dough and roll it into a 2cm diameter ball (a bit wider than a dime).

Press the ball onto the baking tray to make the bottom flat. Make sure you spread the balls well out on the tray as they will expand. Once you have a tray full (you should get about 120 of these little babies) pop them in the oven for about 15 mins or until they start to go golden.

Once they’re cooked, let them cool on a rack. Then you can start cementing two similar sized biscuits together with a decent dollop of chocolate crema. Any passing children will usually be happy to help.

Serve with coffee. These will keep for a couple of days in a sealed container.

 

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Kids love cookies, and ours don’t disappoint – neither the kids nor the cookies. You can make delicious cookies with a bit less sugar than the normal truckful by replacing some of it with our sweet sapa. The adults will think you are terribly sophisticated and the kids won’t notice the difference. Perfect.

Ingredients

Butter – 200g/7oz

Sugar – 100g/½ a cup

Sapa – 2 tablespoons

Flour – 250g/2 cups

Orange – the grated zest of 1

Dark chocolate – 400g/14oz

Preheat your oven to 190oC/375oF/GM5.

In a bowl cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy.  Pour in the sapa and mix it in. Gradually beat in the flour and then the orange zest.

Next roll out the dough on a floured surface, to about ½cm thickness. Cut out your biscuits with a cutter or the top of a glass. Carefully place the cookies onto a well greased baking try and bake for 9-11 mins. They’re usually done when you can smell them.

While they’re cooling, break the chocolate up in a small bowl and melt it using a bain-marie (a glass bowl on a saucepan of just boiling water). Dip one end of each cookie into the chocolate, then let them dry completely.

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