Cookie
Chocolate Chip and Banana Ice Cream Sandwiches
A chocolate-dipped frozen banana meets an ice cream sandwich.
By Sarah Tenaglia
Espresso Blackberry Macarons
These cookies should set for a while before serving. The fillings help soften the meringue—and your patience will be rewarded with a wonderfully chewy texture.
By Shelley Wiseman
Honey "Tree Bark" Biscuits
The trees of Hansel and Gretel's forest surely had bark like this, sparkling with sugar crystals and tasting of sylvan honey. Though the biscuits pair wonderfully with blueberries in gin syrup, they also make an excellent accompaniment to a cheese course—particularly with a nice triple-crème.
By Ian Knauer
Peanut Butter Buckeyes
The recipe and introductory text below are reprinted with permission from Gameday Gourmet by Pableaux Johnson.
An insanely easy-to-make candy that looks a lot like the famous nut of Ohio's state tree as well as Ohio State's symbol.The actual buckeye is a form of horse chestnut that, when eaten, might result in all kinds of unthinkable intestinal troubles. It's probably wiser to go for these sweet, bite-size globes with the famous peanut butter/chocolate flavor combo instead.
By Pableaux Johnson
Soft Lady Fingers
Ladyfingers may play only a supporting role in charlottes, but these delicate, small spongecakes are well worth perfecting. Folding in the egg whites requires a light but confident hand. Also, be careful not to overbake. Gaston LeNôtre's son Alain warns: "Thirty seconds too long, and it could be too late."
By Gaston LeNôtre
Pumpkin Brownie Pops
Dylan's Candy Bar owner Dylan Lauren created these brownie pops as a fun way to use leftover Halloween candy. To watch Lauren create these brownies, and to take a tour of Dylan's Candy Bar, check out our videos.
The instructions below are just for inspiration—feel free to experiment with different kinds of candy and decorating supplies. Most of the candy can be found in the candy aisle of supermarkets or at Dylan's Candy Bar.
By Dylan Lauren
Cherry Almond Shortbread Cookies
Serve a platter of cookies alongside the pears and ice cream. The night before you make the cookies, place the dried cherries in a small bowl of crème de cassis. The soaking will infuse the fruit with the flavor of the black-currant liqueur.
By Amelia Saltsman
Chocolate Dulce de Leche Bars
Fudgy cookies go Latin with an infusion of dulce de leche, a sweet milk caramel similar to cajeta and arequipe. These cool treats are happily portable on their crisp shortbread crusts.
By Shelley Wiseman
Peanut Brittle Brownies
By Ruth Cousineau
Walnut Cherry Brownies
By Ruth Cousineau
Deep Chocolate Brownies
By Ruth Cousineau
Coconut Blondies
By Ruth Cousineau
Deep Dark Chocolate Cookies
Made without butter or flour, these dense, chewy cookies will satisfy even the most intense chocolate craving.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Chocolate Hazelnut Spiced Cookies
For the moistest, most intense mostaccioli imaginable, Miraglia Eriquez increased the cocoa, hazelnuts, and spices. And these little frosted cookies only get better with age, so feel free to bake them up to four days ahead of when you plan to serve them.
By Gina Marie Miraglia Eriquez
Lemon-Almond Tuiles
Olive oil is a perfect (and extra-flavorful) nondairy alternative to butter for these tuiles, which defy logic by being both gossamer (potato starch gives them a melt-in-your-mouth quality) and sublimely crisp.
By Melissa Roberts
Toasted-Almond Cookies
Ultra-thin and wonderfully crisp, these cookies pack plenty of flavor into a slim package. We like to pair them with the prunes in wine or the orange tapioca pudding, but they're also wonderful on their own or with a hot cup of coffee.
By Ruth Cousineau
Whole Wheat S'more Cookies
Whole wheat flour gives these clever cookie S'mores a graham-cracker flavor. Leave the marshmallows out for a day or two on a plate to get stale—they'll hold their shape better during baking.
By Susan Reid
Caramel Macadamia Rice Crispie Treats
By Todd English
Pecan Shortbread Cookies
By Paul Grimes