Tag Archives: cookies

ritz-rolo cookies

Okay, I made these a long time ago and got other people hooked on them, too… so this is a must-share!

There are no Rolos in Ecuador that I know of, buuuut I had Mike bring down a bag on his last Stateside trip a few weeks ago so I totally need to make these again soon.

I couldn’t find where I found these originally so I went on a hunt. I’m annoyingly careful about giving credit where its due but it’s also in turn annoying to find blog after blog that credits the next that credits the next, etc. I THINK the original creator was ‘s? Good grief. This is why I like cookbooks. Oh I miss my cookbooks…

Anyway! I’m not kidding about these! All skeptics shut their mouths after they experience the perfect blend of chocolate-y sweet and cracker-y salty. Plus, I only share recipes I like on here, so just trust me.

All you do is:

  1. Preheat to 350 F.
  2. Place crackers (salty side down) on baking sheet.
  3. Put a rolo in center of each cracker.
  4. Bake in oven until soft enough to easily squish down but not too melted or that just gets messy.
  5. Remove from oven and place another cracker (salty side up) on each. 
  6. Press down until Rolo reaches edge of cracker.

You can even make one at a time, but who would do that. ;) You need at least 20 at a time, ha.

One note – the couple times I made these we preferred them hardening for much longer than says (till they’re cool). It really can be eaten at any time, but we enjoyed it more after several hours (I know, torture, right). Whatever you prefer!

P.S. These will totally work for high-altitude dwellers. Nothing to it!

no-bake cookie bars

Looking Back: Originally posted on Sept 12, 2013.

Original post:

Spurred by the ever-broken oven in this house, I find myself discovering more and more crockpot, stovetop, and no-bake recipes out there! I’ve tried several this year but thought I’d share this one for fun.

All I can say about these is that they were incredibly easy to produce and were well-loved. Even Mike brought them up again later and he’s not a huge “sweets” fan {except me, of course!}. 

……………….I drafted the above a few days ago, had an interruption and forgot to come back. #storyofmylife. So here I am with a potentially exciting update. Since Monday morning, I’ve been a little sick to my stomach the way I get with any conflict. Mike finally laid it out to our landlords (lovingly, of course) and basically said, hey the contract said you’d provide an oven and we haven’t had one all year. Here are some option ideas, how can we have an oven this week? Fortunately, it produced action and they accepted one of our options. We were allowed to go out, do the leg work, and buy a new oven insert!! We purchased it last night, it will be delivered on Saturday and {crossing my fingers} the hook-ups will happen early next week. There has to be some adjustments due to it being gas and the previous one being electric, so please pray that is an easy switch. Nothing really ever is down here on this continent…. ;)

Anyway, I’m letting my hope actually go up this week and am praying that I’ll be baking away in a week!

You can find the cookie bar recipe .

Ecuador Note: for the “white chocolate bars,” I could only find ones with “crocante” in Quito. Worked just fine but I bet it’d be better as the recipe calls for. ;)

 

high-altitude oatmeal chocolate chip cookies

For years I’ve tried to adjust my own “tried & true” recipes for high-altitude. They work so beautifully at sea level but at the elevation we live at, I can’t ever seem to perfect them with the suggested adjustments.

Well, I got tired of flat cookies and other issues related to living at 9800 feet (yes, that number is correct…oof). So I searched out a brand new recipe that someone had had success with. And is what I found.

It really worked! It was so fun having “normal” cookies to serve guests who came over later that day.  Now if I can just import in a suitcase full of chocolate chips, we’ll be good…

.

P.S. Really do use parchment paper if you have it. It’s not available here (except sometimes in a fancy store for outrageous prices) so I used greased foil. It helps but the cookie bottoms darken quickly, so watch them!