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Whole Grain Thin and Crispy Oatmeal Cookie Recipe

Posted by Monica Matheny on Friday, September 10th, 2010
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Thin and Crispy Oatmeal Cookies

There is a wide range of opinions about what defines a good oatmeal cookie. Chewy or crisp, thick or thin, raisins or no raisins, nuts or not nuts. I'm in the crisp, thin, nuts, no raisins camp. 

In St. Louis, and certainly in our family, oatmeal cookies are defined by Dad's Original Scotch Oatmeal Cookies. They are a simple, delicious, thin and crispy cookie. This brand by a local St. Louis bakery is commonly served in big glass cookie jars on the counters at corner grocery stores and delis. We used to get them as we were checking out groceries at a little neighborhood store--the kind with a butcher (ours was named Stan) who knew our name and exactly what kind of meat we liked. The kind of store that let regular customers have an account and pay their grocery bill monthly. What my boys remember about this store is the big jar of Dad's Original Oatmeal Cookies by the cash register--a common treat on our way out the door.

Through the years, I tried many recipes in search of one that tasted like Dad's Originals. And, finally I found one in Cook's Illustrated magazine--no surprise there--it's one of my favorite cooking magazines. It was as close to Dad's Original as I'd ever found.

I couldn't resist the temptation to mess with this recipe just a bit. A few tweaks. The spirit of the original recipe remains (thin and crispy), but I switched the white flour for whole wheat pastry flour. This substitution doesn't always work without radically changing the taste and texture of the cookie, but in this case it tasted even better with the whole wheat pastry flour.  I also added some walnuts, because I'm in the like-nuts-in-my-oatmeal-cookies camp. Walnuts are particularly nutritious. These can easily be omitted if you live in a different camp.

Did you know? Whole wheat pastry flour is a whole grain flour, but is softer and has a lighter texture than regular whole wheat flour. This often makes it a suitable substitute for all or part of the white flour in a recipe, while adding more nutrition. Whole wheat pastry flour is available at many grocery stores.

Throwing a little nutrition in with all that butter and sugar is my feeble attempt to rationalize eating cookies. Here's my line: "They're healthy! They have whole grain flour, whole oats, and walnuts in them--loaded with nutrition!" They also have lots of butter. Shhh. Don't tell.

In another post I show you how I also dip these oatmeal cookies in chocolate. You heard me. Chocolate. If there is a possible chocolate detour in a recipe, this girl will take it. This has nothing to do with nutrition and everything to do with my chocolate addiction. 

Back to today's recipe.

Here are the step-by-step photos for Whole Grain Thin and Crispy
Oatmeal Cookies.


First assemble the ingredients. Sugar, brown sugar, whole wheat pastry flour, white flour (oops, didn't use that), old fashioned rolled oats, baking soda, baking powder, walnuts, vanilla, egg, salt, butter. (The chocolate chips are for the follow up recipe for chocolate dipped oatmeal cookies.)

ingredients 

In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.

flour mixture

Put the butter and 2 sugars in a mixer bowl and cream it with an electric mixer. You want it light and fluffy.

butter sugar  creamed

Add the egg and vanilla, mix it in.

eggs van  eggs van mixed

Gradually add the flour mixture in half cup increments. Mix into batter with each addition.

flour  flour mixed

Gradually mix in the oats. Then mix in the nuts.

oats mixed  nuts

The dough is ready!

final mixed

Use a 2 tablespoon scoop to put rounds of cookie dough on a baking sheet. If you don't have a scoop, roll the dough into balls with your hands. Space the dough balls about 2-1/2 inches apart. Flatten each one with your fingers to about 3/4" thick. 

scoop  flatten

Prepare 2 baking sheets to bake at one time in the oven.

all on pan

Bake for 14-16 minutes until they are lightly browned, crispy on the outside and slightly soft in the middle. Rotate pans half way through cooking time. Let cookies cool completely on the pans.

close up pan 2

Enjoy your freshly baked, thin and crispy oatmeal cookies. Just like the good 'ol days eating Dad's Originals. You may need a glass of milk or cup of coffee to go with them.

basket closeup

Make sure you check out my post explaining how to dip these oatmeal cookies in chocolate for a delectable treat:

Click here for Chocolate Dipped Oatmeal Cookies post and recipe

choc dipped thumbnail

Make it a yummy day!

Link directly to this recipe Print this recipe
Whole Grain Thin and Crispy Oatmeal Cookies
By Monica              Servings: Makes 32 cookies
Ingredients
  • 1 cup whole wheat pastry flour
  • 3/4 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 14 tablespoons unsalted butter (1-3/4 sticks), softened
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1/4 cup light brown sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2-1/2 cups old-fashioned rolled oats
  • 1 cup chopped walnuts (optional)
Directions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. In large bowl, use mixer to cream the butter and sugars until fluffy. Add egg and vanilla. Beat until well mixed. Gradually add the flour mixture to the wet ingredients until mixed. Gradually add the oats until everything is combined. Mix in the nuts. Use a 2-tablespoon scoop to drop rounded portions of cookie dough onto a parchment-lined baking sheet. (If you don't have a scoop, roll 2 tablespoons of dough into a ball with your hands.) Space cookie dough about 2-1/2 inches apart on baking sheet. Flatten them slightly with your fingers. Bake 2 sheets at a time, rotating and switching pans half way through cooking time. Bake for 14-16 minutes, until lightly browned and crispy around edges, but still slightly soft in the middle. Cool completely on pans before removing.
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Tags: Desserts


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6 Comments
Sandy 2 years ago
I know first hand - these are GREAT!

Reply
Monica 2 years ago
I think we had those cookies for the first time for a picnic at the Sheryl Crow concert in front of the Arch on the 4th of July. Last year, I think? I remember that I'd dipped them in chocolate and they were a melty mess--but a tasty mess. Nick brought good beverages, as I recall.

Reply
Emily Koch 2 years ago
Monica -
These look delicious. I love oatmeal cookies! I have whole wheat flour (not pastry) - what would I need to change about the recipe if I used it? I actually have two kinds of whole wheat flour - I'll use the one that's less grainy and more smooth, so it's more like white flour. Could I just swap it in for the pastry flour?
Emily

Reply
Monica 2 years ago
Emily. You can definitely use regular whole wheat flour. I'm sure it will taste good. The only thing it might effect is the crispiness of the cookies. The heartier the whole wheat flour, the chewier the cookie may be. So, I would either use half white flour, half whole wheat; or, as you suggest use the whole wheat flour that is finer. Let me know how they turn out. (I love oatmeal cookies, too!)

Reply
Anonymous 9 months ago
What if I want to make it with honey? Can I? Can you share the measurements then?

Reply
Monica 9 months ago
I have never made these with honey, so I can't give you specific measurement equivalents. Honey is sweeter than sugar, so you wouldn't need as much. Also, it may change the texture of the cookies to use honey--maybe not as crispy? I'm guessing they'd still taste good, but I don't know if the texture will change. Hope that helps. :-)

Reply



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