Chocolate Moose Cookies

"Children will get a big kick out of just one of these oversized glazed cookies, and adults will be amused by the play on words."
 
Download
photo by a food.com user photo by a food.com user
Ready In:
1hr 8mins
Ingredients:
8
Yields:
2 dozen
Serves:
12
Advertisement

ingredients

Advertisement

directions

  • 1. Make the cookies: Whisk to combine flour, cocoa powder, salt, and cinnamon in a bowl. In a separate bowl, beat butter and confectioners’ sugar with an electric mixer on medium-high speed until pale and fluffy, 3 to 4 minutes. Mix in egg and vanilla. Reduce speed to low. Gradually mix in flour mixture. Divide dough in half; wrap each in plastic, and chill 1 hour or up to 1 day.
  • 2. Roll out dough between 2 sheets of parchment to ⅛-inch thickness. Transfer to a baking sheet. Chill 15 minutes.
  • 3. Preheat oven to 350°. Using a 5-inch moose-shaped cookie cutter, quickly cut out shapes from dough (if dough begins to soften, chill 5 minutes more). Reroll scraps and cut out more shapes. Transfer shapes to parchment-lined baking sheets, spacing 2 inches apart. Chill 30 minutes.
  • 4. Bake, rotating sheets halfway through, until cookies are crisp, about 8 minutes. Let cool completely on sheets on wire racks.
  • 5. Make the glaze (see below).
  • 6. With an offset spatula, spread glaze on cookies. Allow glaze to set for 30 minutes before serving. Glazed cookies can be stored between layers of parchment in an airtight container at room temperature up to 3 days.
  • Chocolate Moose Glaze.
  • 2 cups confectioners’ sugar, plus more if necessary.
  • 3 tablespoons unsweetened Dutch-process cocoa powder.
  • ½ cup milk.
  • 1. Whisk to combine confectioners’ sugar and cocoa in a bowl. Stir in milk, and whisk until smooth.

Questions & Replies

Got a question? Share it with the community!
Advertisement

Reviews

Have any thoughts about this recipe? Share it with the community!
Advertisement

RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

<p>If I could only figure out how to make a living cooking... I cook with passion, care and patience, I am thinking that might be a bit hard to make a living only cooking for 10 people at a time :) <br />It's all about texture and flavors blending for me. I think I make people a little nervous because I don't really eat the things I cook. I am a "taster". I cook with only real ingedients, refuse to deal with low fat, low flavor, low calorie. Food is life, everything in moderation.</p>
 
View Full Profile
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Find More Recipes