Discussion:
Jill's recipe for soft and chewy oatmeal cookies
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Graham
2024-11-04 20:22:52 UTC
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I've just made a batch of the Soft and chewy oatmeal cookies using the
recipe that Jill posted. However, I converted the larger volumetric
measurements to weights using the Amendola & Rees Baker's Manual.
The cookies are great and this batch is for my son who is visiting and
returns home tomorrow.
On Friday I may make a batch with gluten free AP flour. I'm tempted to
add nuts next time and possibly swap the molasses for maple syrup.

Soft and chewy oatmeal cookies
1 c./225g butter, softened to room temp
1 c./225g packed brown sugar (light or dark, your choice)
1/4 c./50g white granulated sugar
2 large eggs, room temp
1 Tbs. vanilla extract
1 Tbs. dark molasses (do not use blackstrap)
1-1/2 c./180g all purpose flour, spooned and leveled
1 tsp. baking soda
1-1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp. salt
3 cups/300g old fashioned whole rolled oats
1 c./170g raisins (soaked in warm water for 10 minutes to plump them,
then blotted dry)

Using a hand mixer or a stand mixer with a paddle attachment, cream the
softened butter and both sugars together in a large bowl on medium speed
until smooth, about 2 minutes. Add the eggs and mix on high until
combined, about 1 minute. Scrape down the sides and bottom of the bowl
as needed. Add the vanilla and molasses and mix on high until combined.
Set aside.

In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, cinnamon and
salt. Add to the wet ingredients and mix on low until combined. Beat
in the oats and raisins on low speed. The dough will be thick yet very
sticky. Chill the dough in the refrigerator for 60 minutes. Allow to
set at room temp for 30 minutes before hand-rolling and baking.

Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line two large baking sheets with parchment
paper. Roll balls of dough by hand (about 2 Tbs. per cookie) and place
2 inches apart on the baking sheet. Bake for 12-14 minute until lightly
browned on the sides. The centers will look very soft and under-baked
but they'll be fine. Remove from the oven and let cool on the baking
sheets for 5 minutes (they'll continue to "set"). Remove to a wire rack
to cool completely. Store in an air-tight container.
gm
2024-11-04 20:39:56 UTC
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Today at my annual physical we discussed how the doctor has not done
rectal exams for many years now, as they have little to no benefit...

Bonus medical news: A recent very large study showed colonoscopies do
not reduce all cause mortality...

B-)

--
GM
antimony
2024-11-04 21:41:52 UTC
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Post by gm
Today at my annual physical we discussed how the doctor has not done
rectal exams for many years now, as they have little to no benefit...
Bonus medical news: A recent very large study showed colonoscopies do
not reduce all cause mortality...
B-)
--
GM
AI has become involved.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-022-10597-y

https://www.cancer.gov/news-events/cancer-currents-blog/2023/colonoscopy-cad-artificial-intelligence
D
2024-11-05 10:14:31 UTC
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Post by gm
Today at my annual physical we discussed how the doctor has not done
rectal exams for many years now, as they have little to no benefit...
Bonus medical news: A recent very large study showed colonoscopies do
not reduce all cause mortality...
B-)
--
GM
On the other hand... without rectal exams, Richard Gere might have left us
already!
gm
2024-11-04 23:04:32 UTC
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I have lived through the administrations of 13 American presidents..

The Xiden-Harris term has been the most divisive and corrupt in my
remembrance. It has corrupted or undermined every government institution
and damaged our country to the breaking point...

Never before have so many (73 percent!) believed that our country is
headed in the wrong direction. We live in a nation of anxiety,
discontent and violence...

Hope springs eternal. I pray that this last best hope of mankind will
endure and
ultimately prevail through these difficult times...

🙏

--
GM
Cindy Hamilton
2024-11-05 09:50:18 UTC
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Post by gm
Never before have so many (73 percent!) believed that our country is
headed in the wrong direction.
There's a funny thing about that question. Ask two people, and they
both say it's headed in the wrong direction. One means too far to the
left; the other means too far to the right. But the bare question
doesn't capture that.
--
Cindy Hamilton
D
2024-11-05 10:18:16 UTC
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Post by gm
I have lived through the administrations of 13 American presidents..
The Xiden-Harris term has been the most divisive and corrupt in my
remembrance. It has corrupted or undermined every government institution
and damaged our country to the breaking point...
Never before have so many (73 percent!) believed that our country is
headed in the wrong direction. We live in a nation of anxiety,
discontent and violence...
Hope springs eternal. I pray that this last best hope of mankind will
endure and
ultimately prevail through these difficult times...
🙏
--
GM
Let's pray! And sometimes late tonight (CET) I'm certain our wise leader
Trump will be ready to rebuild the nation and heal its wounds!
Citizen Winston Smith
2024-11-05 16:17:59 UTC
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Post by gm
I have lived through the administrations of 13 American presidents..
The Xiden-Harris term has been the most divisive and corrupt in my
remembrance. It has corrupted or undermined every government institution
and damaged our country to the breaking point...
Never before have so many (73 percent!) believed that our country is
headed in the wrong direction. We live in a nation of anxiety,
discontent and violence...
Hope springs eternal. I pray that this last best hope of mankind will
endure and
ultimately prevail through these difficult times...
🙏
--
GM
+1111
Dave Smith
2024-11-04 23:09:46 UTC
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Post by Graham
I've just made a batch of the Soft and chewy oatmeal cookies using the
recipe that Jill posted. However, I converted the larger volumetric
measurements to weights using the Amendola & Rees Baker's Manual.
The cookies are great and this batch is for my son who is visiting and
returns home tomorrow.
On Friday I may make a batch with gluten free AP flour. I'm tempted to
add nuts next time and possibly swap the molasses for maple syrup.
It's an interesting looking recipe. I would be curious about the maple
syrup. I am not sure that it would be better than molasses. I mentioned
earlier about the oatmeal cookies my wife gets at the corner bakery.
They have oatmeal and molasses and I have to say it is a great
combination. They also have craisins in them. I can't eat those cookies
because they have walnuts, but the nut free nibbles I have had convinced
me they are close to the best cookies ever.
jmcquown
2024-11-05 21:56:56 UTC
Reply
Permalink
Post by Graham
I've just made a batch of the Soft and chewy oatmeal cookies using the
recipe that Jill posted. However, I converted the larger volumetric
measurements to weights using the Amendola & Rees Baker's Manual.
The cookies are great and this batch is for my son who is visiting and
returns home tomorrow.
On Friday I may make a batch with gluten free AP flour. I'm tempted to
add nuts next time and possibly swap the molasses for maple syrup.
It's an interesting looking recipe.  I would be curious about the maple
syrup. I am not sure that it would be better than molasses.  I mentioned
earlier about the oatmeal cookies my wife gets at the corner bakery.
They have oatmeal and molasses and I have to say it is a great
combination. They also have craisins in them. I can't eat those cookies
because they have walnuts, but the nut free nibbles I have had convinced
me they are close to the best cookies ever.
The original recipe I was given mentioned optional 1/2 c. of finely
chopped toasted walnuts. I left it out when I typed it because she
doesn't usually add them.

Jill
Graham
2024-11-05 23:02:59 UTC
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Post by jmcquown
Post by Graham
I've just made a batch of the Soft and chewy oatmeal cookies using the
recipe that Jill posted. However, I converted the larger volumetric
measurements to weights using the Amendola & Rees Baker's Manual.
The cookies are great and this batch is for my son who is visiting and
returns home tomorrow.
On Friday I may make a batch with gluten free AP flour. I'm tempted to
add nuts next time and possibly swap the molasses for maple syrup.
It's an interesting looking recipe.  I would be curious about the
maple syrup. I am not sure that it would be better than molasses.  I
mentioned earlier about the oatmeal cookies my wife gets at the corner
bakery. They have oatmeal and molasses and I have to say it is a great
combination. They also have craisins in them. I can't eat those
cookies because they have walnuts, but the nut free nibbles I have had
convinced me they are close to the best cookies ever.
The original recipe I was given mentioned optional 1/2 c. of finely
chopped toasted walnuts.  I left it out when I typed it because she
doesn't usually add them.
Jill
If I make some for my w/e kaffeeklatsch, I'll have to omit any nuts as
one member of the group has various digestive issues.
jmcquown
2024-11-07 00:04:30 UTC
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Post by Graham
Post by jmcquown
Post by Graham
I've just made a batch of the Soft and chewy oatmeal cookies using the
recipe that Jill posted. However, I converted the larger volumetric
measurements to weights using the Amendola & Rees Baker's Manual.
The cookies are great and this batch is for my son who is visiting and
returns home tomorrow.
On Friday I may make a batch with gluten free AP flour. I'm tempted to
add nuts next time and possibly swap the molasses for maple syrup.
It's an interesting looking recipe.  I would be curious about the
maple syrup. I am not sure that it would be better than molasses.  I
mentioned earlier about the oatmeal cookies my wife gets at the
corner bakery. They have oatmeal and molasses and I have to say it is
a great combination. They also have craisins in them. I can't eat
those cookies because they have walnuts, but the nut free nibbles I
have had convinced me they are close to the best cookies ever.
The original recipe I was given mentioned optional 1/2 c. of finely
chopped toasted walnuts.  I left it out when I typed it because she
doesn't usually add them.
Jill
If I make some for my w/e kaffeeklatsch, I'll have to omit any nuts as
one member of the group has various digestive issues.
Well hey, nuts were listed as optional and the cookies taste great
without them!

Jill
Hank Rogers
2024-11-07 00:26:48 UTC
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Post by jmcquown
Post by Graham
Post by jmcquown
Post by Graham
I've just made a batch of the Soft and chewy oatmeal cookies using the
recipe that Jill posted. However, I converted the larger volumetric
measurements to weights using the Amendola & Rees Baker's Manual.
The cookies are great and this batch is for my son who is visiting and
returns home tomorrow.
On Friday I may make a batch with gluten free AP flour. I'm tempted to
add nuts next time and possibly swap the molasses for maple syrup.
It's an interesting looking recipe.  I would be curious about the
maple syrup. I am not sure that it would be better than molasses.Â
I mentioned earlier about the oatmeal cookies my wife gets at the
corner bakery. They have oatmeal and molasses and I have to say it
is a great combination. They also have craisins in them. I can't eat
those cookies because they have walnuts, but the nut free nibbles I
have had convinced me they are close to the best cookies ever.
The original recipe I was given mentioned optional 1/2 c. of finely
chopped toasted walnuts.  I left it out when I typed it because she
doesn't usually add them.
Jill
If I make some for my w/e kaffeeklatsch, I'll have to omit any nuts as
one member of the group has various digestive issues.
Well hey, nuts were listed as optional and the cookies taste great
without them!
Jill
I think he is smarting off to your Majesty.

He should have kept his mouth shut.
jmcquown
2024-11-04 23:13:42 UTC
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Post by Graham
I've just made a batch of the Soft and chewy oatmeal cookies using the
recipe that Jill posted. However, I converted the larger volumetric
measurements to weights using the Amendola & Rees Baker's Manual.
The cookies are great and this batch is for my son who is visiting and
returns home tomorrow.
I'm glad you tried it (thank the friend who gave it to me). They're
very good cookies!

Jill
Post by Graham
On Friday I may make a batch with gluten free AP flour. I'm tempted to
add nuts next time and possibly swap the molasses for maple syrup.
Soft and chewy oatmeal cookies
1 c./225g butter, softened to room temp
1 c./225g packed brown sugar (light or dark, your choice)
1/4 c./50g white granulated sugar
2 large eggs, room temp
1 Tbs. vanilla extract
1 Tbs. dark molasses (do not use blackstrap)
1-1/2 c./180g all purpose flour, spooned and leveled
1 tsp. baking soda
1-1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp. salt
3 cups/300g  old fashioned whole rolled oats
1 c./170g raisins (soaked in warm water for 10 minutes to plump them,
then blotted dry)
Using a hand mixer or a stand mixer with a paddle attachment, cream the
softened butter and both sugars together in a large bowl on medium speed
until smooth, about 2 minutes.  Add the eggs and mix on high until
combined, about 1 minute.  Scrape down the sides and bottom of the bowl
as needed.  Add the vanilla and molasses and mix on high until combined.
  Set aside.
In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, cinnamon and
salt.  Add to the wet ingredients and mix on low until combined.  Beat
in the oats and raisins on low speed.  The dough will be thick yet very
sticky.  Chill the dough in the refrigerator for 60 minutes.  Allow to
set at room temp for 30 minutes before hand-rolling and baking.
Preheat the oven to 350°F.  Line two large baking sheets with parchment
paper.  Roll balls of dough by hand (about 2 Tbs. per cookie) and place
2 inches apart on the baking sheet.  Bake for 12-14 minute until lightly
browned on the sides.  The centers will look very soft and under-baked
but they'll be fine.  Remove from the oven and let cool on the baking
sheets for 5 minutes (they'll continue to "set").  Remove to a wire rack
to cool completely.  Store in an air-tight container.
GM
2024-11-07 00:30:48 UTC
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Opinion piece by David Brooks in The New York Times:

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/11/06/opinion/trump-elites-working-class.html

Voters to Elites: Do You See Me Now?

Nov. 6, 2024

"As the woke left veered toward identitarian performance art, Donald
Trump jumped into the class war with both feet...

His Queens-born resentment of the Manhattan elites dovetailed magically
with the class animosity being felt by rural people across the
country...

His message was simple: These rich educated elite people have betrayed
you, and they are morons to boot...

In 2024, he built the very thing the Democratic Party once tried to
build — a multiracial, working-class majority...

His support surged among Black and Hispanic workers...

He recorded astonishing gains in places like New Jersey, the Bronx,
Chicago, Dallas and Houston...

According to the NBC exit polls he won a third of voters of color...

He’s the first Republican to win a majority of the votes in 20 years..."

O:-)

--
GM

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