Cookies and cakes have essentially the same ingredients at their core (flour, sugar, egg, and some sort of fat). It is the proportion of these which determines the result. This is why putting too much liquid in your brownie mix will result in a cakey brownie.
"We feel safe when we read what we recognise, what does not challenge our way of thinking.... a steady acceptance of pre-arranged patterns leads to the inability to question what we are told."
~Camilla
Ghavrel is Ghavrel is Ghavrel
*MySmiley*
~Camilla
Ghavrel is Ghavrel is Ghavrel
*MySmiley*
What ingredients do cookies require to be a cookie?
- 20/10/2011 10:59:31 PM
1135 Views
Baking is more generally a study of proportion.
- 20/10/2011 11:08:04 PM
803 Views
so I'm missing
- 20/10/2011 11:12:22 PM
1029 Views
Cookie dough is one part sugar, two parts fat, and 3 parts flour.
- 21/10/2011 12:49:32 AM
894 Views
I was always told that a cookie over a certain size would be characterized as a cake anyway.
- 21/10/2011 01:07:00 AM
780 Views
Hm. I've always been told the difference was a matter of consistency and proportion. *NM*
- 21/10/2011 03:47:11 AM
380 Views
It seems to me that a cake is spongier, while a cookie will become crisp after it cools
- 21/10/2011 05:18:01 AM
710 Views
Re: Baking is more generally a study of proportion.
- 21/10/2011 01:28:26 AM
893 Views
Generally. Yes, you can do all sorts of miraculous things with applesauce and oatmeal. *NM*
- 21/10/2011 03:35:28 AM
328 Views
Butter/egg yolk to keep the dough intact and very little moisture (water)
- 21/10/2011 08:11:12 AM
764 Views
Oh! I've figured out the riddle now.
- 21/10/2011 07:29:54 PM
921 Views
I put 'drop' chocolate chip cookie dough on a baking tray and into the oven.
- 23/10/2011 02:17:55 PM
795 Views
You've got a problem...
- 22/10/2011 10:49:57 AM
875 Views

*NM*