Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies aka Neiman Marcus Cookies - made September 29, 2012 from
The Dessert Bible by Christopher Kimball
Remember the urban legend of the woman who had lunch at a Neiman Marcus cafe and asked for the recipe of their chocolate chip cookie only to find out they charged her $250 for it on her credit card? There's also a version where this is supposedly the secret recipe for Mrs. Fields' cookies. Having been an early (and frequent) connoisseur of Mrs. Fields' cookies, I'll debunk that one because I don't think her chocolate chip cookies had ground up oatmeal in it. Don't ask how many cookies I tried to be sure of that - one has to be thorough in research. So I still refer to this kind of cookie as the Neiman Marcus cookie: ground up oatmeal to thicken the dough and grated chocolate for added flavor and texture. I think the appeal this cookie had for most bakers back when it first surfaced is it helped cookies stay thick and not spread so much. At least that's why I was fascinated by it when I first discovered it many years ago as those were my flat-cookie baking days.
Now, I just thought I'd try this recipe because it's been in my "Still Need to Make" folder for eons and, much like my pin board of baking recipes to try, I go back to that folder regularly in an attempt to get the number of recipes I've put in it through the years tried and filed away in a different folder of stuff I've actually made. Never mind that I would need to bake until I'm 180 years old to get through them all. It's about the journey, not the destination.
This was a good cookie but one where you really need to make sure you don't overbake it. The proportion of dry ingredients to wet ingredients is high so this could easily be dry if you bake it too long or even until "just done". The taste will still be good but the texture is better if you underbake it. By that I mean bake it until the edges are pale golden and the middles are just barely no longer raw and shiny. I omitted the nuts, not just because I don't like nuts in my cookies, but also because I wanted the cookies to be about the grated chocolate and the chocolate chips. Pecans or walnuts are just distracting and I don't like their texture in cookies. These are best eaten the day they're made. I wouldn't go longer than a day before consuming them as they do seem to dry out easily given the amount of dry ingredients in it. Best case scenario is to only bake as much as you're going to eat/serve that same day and freeze the rest as cookie dough balls until you need to bake more.
1
½ cups rolled oats (ground)
½
pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened but still firm
¾
cup granulated sugar
¾
cup packed brown sugar
2
large eggs, at room temperature
1
teaspoon vanilla extract
2
cups all-purpose flour
1
teaspoon baking powder
¾
teaspoon salt
12
ounces chocolate chips
4
ounces grated semisweet chocolate
1
½ cups chopped pecans or walnuts (optional)
1.
Adjust
oven rack to the middle position and heat oven to 350˚F. Place oats in a blender or food processor and
blend until very fine. Set aside,
2.
With
an electric mixer, beat the butter and both sugars in a large bowl until light,
about 3 minutes. Add the eggs one at a
time and beat 20 seconds after each addition.
Add the vanilla and beat for 15 seconds to blend.
3.
Whisk
together the flour, processed oats, baking powder and salt. With a large rubber spatula or wooden spoon,
blend the dry ingredients into the butter mixture. (This will be difficult since the batter is
very stiff.) Add the chocolate chips,
grated chocolate and nuts.
4.
Form
dough into balls about 2 inches in diameter and place on a baking sheet covered
with parchment paper. Bake 14 to 15
minutes, or until the bottoms are lightly browned. The cookies should still feel a bit soft at
this point. (They will not spread very
much and will look undercooked. Do not
overcook or they will become hard and dry when they cool.) They will harden as they cool. Remove from oven and let cookies cool for 2
minutes on the baking sheet before removing to cooling racks. Cool cookies at least 30 minutes before
serving.