Does anyone have the recipe for Rosedale golf club’s gingersnap cookies?

That fancy golf club on Mount Pleasant Rd has the best gingersnap cookies. I’m not a member. I only went a few times with my ex. I asked thier old pastry chef (she has a cake shop in Burlington) but she wouldnt give me the recipe (said it wasnt hers to give) If you know anyone who works there, their kitchen takes students interns, Please give me the recipe. Every year before the holidays I try to find it. Though I never tried actually calling the place and asking. (Too embarassed) I don’t think they’d give it to me.

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One Response to “Does anyone have the recipe for Rosedale golf club’s gingersnap cookies?”
  1. Asawa says:

    here it is..

    Gingersnap Cookies Recipe

    Ginger snaps are just about my favorite cookie in the world, next to oatmeal raisin. So imagine my delight in finding this recipe from a woman who got it while interviewing for at job at Chez Panisse. They are thin and crispy, and truly addictive. By the way, in place of parchment I’ve started to use silicone baking sheets for cookie making; nothing sticks to these mats and clean-up is a breeze.

    8 oz unsalted butter
    1 1/4 cup + 2 Tbsp. granulated sugar
    1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
    2 small eggs or 1 1/2 large eggs
    1/3 cup molasses
    3 cups all-purpose flour
    2 1/2 tsp. baking soda
    1/2 tsp. salt
    2 1/2 tsp. cinnamon
    2 1/2 tsp. ground ginger
    1/8 tsp. ground black pepper

    1 Cream butter until soft; add sugar, and beat until light and fluffy. Add vanilla and eggs, and beat until fluffy. Add molasses and beat until well-mixed.

    2 Sift the dry ingredients; add to the mixture, 1/3 at a time. Mix only until the dry ingredients become incorporated.

    3 Line a 9″ x 5″ loaf pan with plastic wrap, so that some hangs over the outsides. Press the dough into the bottom of the pan. Pack it tightly, and try to make the top as level as possible. Cover the dough with the plastic overhangs. Freeze until very firm, preferably overnight.

    4 Unwrap and remove dough from the pan. Slice brick into thin slices, no more than 1/8″. Place on a parchment-lined sheetpan (space at least an inch apart) and bake at 350 degrees until the edges turn dark brown, about 12 minutes.

    I tried out our convection setting on the oven with these cookies, baking them at 325°F for 10 minutes and they came out perfect. I didn’t use up all the dough with this batch, but because it’s a frozen block, it makes it easy to store and bake the rest later. posted by elise

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