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Kimmie Cookies

These light, melt-in-your-mouth cookies are named for my good friend Kim, who started baking them as a child with her Scandinavian grandmother. While Kim makes them with her kids during the Christmas holidays, I think they are great for a spring or summer party. I tint the butter icing a light pink or pale blue. They always disappear quickly: kids love them, adults can’t resist them, and I never tire of them.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    makes about 6 dozen cookies

Ingredients

Cookies

2 cups (4 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature
1 cup sugar for the cookies, plus 1/2 cup sugar for sprinkling (optional)
2 teaspoons pure almond extract
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
4 cups all-purpose flour

Butter Frosting

1/3 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Pinch of kosher salt
4 tablespoons (or more) whole milk, slightly warmed
2 cups (or more) powdered sugar
2 or 3 drops food coloring of your choice (optional)

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    TO MAKE THE COOKIES: Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly grease 2 baking sheets with cooking spray or butter, or line with parchment paper or silicone liners.

    Step 2

    Using an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the butter and the 1 cup sugar on medium-high speed until light and fluffy, about 2 minutes. Beat in the almond extract and salt. Add the flour and beat on low speed just until thoroughly combined. Using your hands, roll the dough into 1-inch balls. Put the 1/2 cup sugar in a shallow bowl and roll each cookie in the sugar to coat, if you like.

    Step 3

    Place the cookies about 1/2 inch apart on the prepared baking sheet and flatten by lightly pressing down on the dough with the bottom of a juice glass. (The cookies should be about 1/4 inch thick.) Bake until the bottoms begin to turn golden brown, 10 to 12 minutes. Don’t let the tops brown or the cookies will be overdone. Transfer to a wire cooling rack and frost while the cookies are slightly warm.

    Step 4

    TO MAKE THE BUTTER FROSTING: In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the 1/3 cup butter, vanilla, salt, and warm milk on low speed until combined. Add the powdered sugar and beat on medium speed until combined. If the icing seems too runny to spread, add a few tablespoons more of powdered sugar. If it seems too thick, add more milk, 1 teaspoon at a time, until it reaches the desired consistency.

  2. do it early

    Step 5

    Like most cookies, these are at their very best eaten the day they are baked. You can make the dough and stow it in a container in the refrigerator up to 1 week before baking. Make the icing and bake the cookies the day of your party.

  3. tips

    Step 6

    Some people dislike the taste of almond extract, but I have found that even avowed almond extract haters love these cookies without detecting their almond flavor. The extract lends a subtle depth of flavor, not a pronounced almond taste. Make the cookies once with the extract and see if the naysayers react. If they do—I’d be surprised—you’ll have more cookies for yourself. Next time you make them, you can substitute vanilla extract for the almond.

  4. Step 7

    Using a 1-inch-diameter metal ice cream scoop eliminates the drudgery from portioning out cookie dough, and insures that your cookies will be of uniform size and bake at the same rate. The best scoops are lever-activated and push the dough out and onto baking sheets quickly and easily.

Pastry Queen Parties by Rebecca Rather and Alison Oresman. Copyright © 2009 Rebecca Rather and Alison Oresman. Published by Ten Speed Press. All Rights Reserved. A pastry chef, restaurateur, and cookbook author, native Texan Rebecca Rather has been proprietor of the Rather Sweet Bakery and Café since 1999. Open for breakfast and lunch daily, Rather Sweet has a fiercely loyal cadre of regulars who populate the café’s sunlit tables each day. In 2007, Rebecca opened her eponymous restaurant, serving dinner nightly, just a few blocks from the café.  Rebecca is the author of THE PASTRY QUEEN, and has been featured in Texas Monthly, Gourmet, Ladies Home Journal, Food & Wine, Southern Living, Chocolatier, Saveur, and O, The Oprah Magazine. When she isn’t in the bakery or on horseback, Rebecca enjoys the sweet life in Fredericksburg, where she tends to her beloved backyard garden and menagerie, and eagerly awaits visits from her college-age daughter, Frances. Alison Oresman has worked as a journalist for more than twenty years. She has written and edited for newspapers in Wyoming, Florida, and Washington State. As an entertainment editor for the Miami Herald, she oversaw the paper’s restaurant coverage and wrote a weekly column as a restaurant critic. After settling in Washington State, she also covered restaurants in the greater Seattle area as a critic with a weekly column. A dedicated home baker, Alison is often in the kitchen when she isn't writing. Alison lives in Bellevue, Washington, with her husband, Warren, and their children, Danny and Callie.
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