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4.11.2011
Thin Mints
The search for a homemade thin mint recipe started about 3 weeks ago when I ordered Mr. Hungry his favorite Girl Scout cookies and thought I was being quite generous with 4 boxes. I assumed he would eat a few now and we would probably have a box a week in the freezer over the next month. Six days later when all 4 boxes were gone, I decided it was time to find a homemade alternative. I mean, I love supporting the Girl Scout's and all, but our grocery budget doesn't quite allow $20 a week to support a cookie habit. Just a few days later, I found out these cookies were on someone else's mind as well.
These were great and especially when frozen, taste just like the real thing. From your house filled with mint aromas from the baking process to the delight of having these stocked in the freezer even when it's not Girl Scout cookie season, this one is a keeper.
From my little kitchen to yours... Enjoy.
Thin Mints
Adapted from Baking Bites
Recipe Notes
It's best to use a high quality chocolate for this recipe. I used Guittard semi-sweet chocolate chips and they worked great. If your chocolate is not quite thin enough, you can add a little extra butter, but beware, if you add too much butter, your chocolate will not harden as well. For the cooking time, make sure you take cookies out when edges are firm, but before the whole cookie is very firm. My friend Allison said hers turned out "beyond crisp." Every oven is a little different, so test the edges at 11 or 12 minutes and adjust accordingly.
Ingredients
for the cookies:
2 1/4 cups all purpose flour
1/4 cup cornstarch
6 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup white sugar
1/2 cup unsalted butter, room temperature
1/3 cup milk (any kind)
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
3/4 teaspoon peppermint extract
for the coating:
12 ounces dark or semisweet chocolate
1/2 cup butter, room temperature
parchment paper
Step by Step
In a small bowl, whisk together flour, cornstarch, cocoa powder and salt. In a large bowl, cream together butter and sugar until fluffy. With mixer on low speed, add the milk and the extracts. The mixture will resemble curdled milk. Slowly add the flour mixture until well incorporated and fluffy.
Shape dough into two long logs, about 1 1/2 inches in diameter (4 cm). Wrap in plastic wrap and freeze for at least 2 hours, until very firm.
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Using a sharp knife, slice dough into round no more than 1/4 inch thick. Slice carefully so they are as close to the same thickness as possible. You will have some very soft and others very hard if they differ too much in thickness. Make sure they are no more than 1/4 inch thick or they won't be crispy. Place on a parchment lined baking sheet. Cookies can be very close together because they will not spread much at all.
Bake for 13 minutes (see recipe notes); until the edges of the cookie are firm. Allow cookies to cool completely. In a microwave safe bowl, combine chocolate and butter. Microwave on high power for 30 seconds. Remove and stir; continue microwaving in 30 second increments, stirring between each, until chocolate and butter are completely melted and smooth.
Dip each cookie in melted chocolate and rotate to cover whole cookie. Using a fork, scrape off extra chocolate so there is a thin coating. Place cookies on parchment paper or wax paper to allow to cool and set; at least 45 minutes. Reheat chocolate as necessary to keep is smooth and easy to dip into.
Best served frozen.
Makes 4 dozen cookies.
Oh no, this might be trouble that I found this recipe!!
ReplyDeleteCould you please make me a batch? These look amazing :)
ReplyDeleteThin mints are truly addictive things. I understand why they were gone in a few days. Your homemade version looks AMAZING! I think these would be gone in approximately 24 hours at my place!
ReplyDeleteThese look like something I could actually bake. Thanks for the weekend project!
ReplyDeleteThose look so delicious! Fantastic.
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Rosa
Oh Ashlea, these cookies look delicious...love the minty flavor specially with chocolate. Have a great week ahead :-)
ReplyDeleteThose look and sound amazing! If you ever want a super simple version, try dipping Ritz cackers in chocolate that you flavor with pepermint oil. Scary easy and tasty :)
ReplyDeleteSara
I totally missed the boat on Girl Scout cookies this year. So sad. I'm drooling over these and wish I had time to whip some up!
ReplyDeleteWoah, these look amazing. If you are feeling really ambitious, my favorites are samoas if you can find a recipe for those!
ReplyDeleteWhat fun to find this recipe! And don't you love slice and bake cookies to start with? I freeze the dough and bake when I want them.
ReplyDeleteThin Mints...the biggest winner in the Girl Scout cookie dept.!
Oh yes, its definitely GS cookie time. Well, its jsut over (and I should know as a GS daisy leader). I have a stash.....hidden away, for the summer! LOL
ReplyDeleteAnd indeed a $20 cookie habit is no way to go!
Yum!! I've been meaning to try to make homemade Girl Scout cookies for awhile now, and Thin Mints are definitely my favorite, followed by Tagalongs. These look great!
ReplyDeleteThese look like heaven!
ReplyDeleteyum yum yum!!!!
ReplyDeleteThese are the bomb! Probably my new very very favorite recipe. Gosh, these are so good!!
ReplyDelete