
I posted on Instagram yesterday about my adventures in baking. I promised the kids cookies, but after consultation with my pantry and fridge, I lacked butter, coconut oil, or Crisco. I quickly searched the google machine and found a bunch of different recipes for chocolate chip cookies with olive oil!
Looking over the various recipes, combined with what we had on hand, and I cobbled together a pretty decent batch of cookies. This recipe made 3 1/2 dozen decent sized cookies.
They are fluffy, chewy, and soft. They can burn easily, due to the amount of sugars used. Remember to take them out of the oven before they look done. They will continue to cook on the cookie sheet after they are removed from the oven.
Ingredients:
- 2 1/2 cups AP Flour
- 2 t. Salt
- 1 t. Baking soda
- 1/3 cup Olive Oil
- 3/4 cup Brown sugar, packed
- 3/4 cup White sugar
- 2 eggs
- 2 T. Milk (whatever kind you use, non-dairy is cool)
- 2 4oz bars of Semi-sweet chocolate, rough chopped
Directions:
- In a medium bowl, combine flour, salt, and soda. Set aside.
- In a large mixing bowl, mix oil and sugars together, until mixture is fluffy. I use an electric mixer.
- Add eggs one at a time until well combined.
- Slowly add flour mixture until well incorporated, add milk as needed to give dough desired texture.
- Stir in chopped chocolate pieces.
- Drop rounded teaspoons onto a greased cookie sheet (or use Silicone baking pads like I do). Bake at 375 degrees for 7-9 minutes.
The kids were so happy they got cookies, and I was happy to be able to make them!My 2019 motto: Use it up, improvise, make do!
Talk Back: What is your motto or mantra for 2019?

As far as noodles, you can get regular ramen noodles at any Asian grocery store (or most 99 Cents Only locations). I’m not talking about the kind that come in a little bag with a pouch of salty broth, those are fried so they cook super fast and aren’t really all that healthy.
I love enchiladas. I seldom get them when we get Mexican take-away because they aren’t baked, so the cheese isn’t melty. And really, life is primarily about melty, gooey cheese.
This is of of those family recipes that I think everyone has had, but never realized was so dead simple to make.
Brussels Sprouts have a bad rap… Stinky, weird texture, gross. All of these things can be true if you boil them whole.
Cook the bacon- I bake mine at 350 degrees for 10-15 minutes. Then I drain it on paper towels. Once it has cooled, I take my super sharp knife and chop it up.
Caramelize the onions. Cook onions in butter on low for several hours, stirring occasionally. Scrape the yummy brown bits off the bottom of the pan, adding water or wine to help loosen the brown bits.
Add in the chopped Brussels Sprouts and cook on medium for about 10-15 minutes. Season with Salt and pepper as needed. Pour into a serving dish and top with cheese.