Oatmeal Coconut Pecan Blueberry Cranberry Nutrition Packed Cookies
Look at that pretty smile… someone likes these cookies….
I use my Thermomix for almost all of my cookies and cakes, anymore. Creaming the butter and sugar is easy once you know your machine: add the eggs, and whip. I get excellent consistency. Then I just continue out of the Thermomix folding in the dry ingredients the traditional way. I have all of my ingredients ready. This is such an important step for me that I really learned later in life. I used to get things out as I needed them throughout the making. Getting everything out an in place, then putting all of the boxes and bags away makes for such a pleasurable cooking experience.
I added the wet to the dry (below, left) and folded them together (below, right).
All of the other dry ingredients are well mixed and folded into the batter at this point.
It is a dense, but moist batter plump with chewy goodness.
I have found that one cookie is never enough. So, I make them big enough so that one cookie is plenty. I use my 1/4 cup measuring cup and it works perfectly.
If I only want to bake a few (and really, how often does one need 36 cookies this size?) I freeze them just like this on the cookie sheet and place them in freezer bags. They freeze perfectly, then when unexpected company calls, I take them out, and have freshly baked (no fuss at all) cookies coming out of the oven when they arrive. I love this. I usually have a couple of kinds on hand in the deep freeze. This time, however, I needed all of them.
It is important to turn the pan in the oven after 6 minutes. No one’s oven cooks evenly and it really does make a difference. These continued to bake 7 to 8 more minutes after the turn then onto the cooling rack. Cooling racks are important as the bottom of the cookie will continue to cook if left in the pan and the racks cool cookies perfectly.
I baked these for the Slow Food Edmonton Dairy Farm Fieldtrip that I organized and enjoyed so much Sunday! (Will post that trip, soon.) The people who came were so much fun! The farmers were terrific! I also made a chocolate cookie, and will be posting the recipe for that one, next!
I think they were a hit. I didn’t find any half eaten ones in the trash. These are sure a favourite of ours and I hope you try them!
Breakfast Cookies
makes 36 cookies
Ingredients:
- 2 cups butter, room temperature
- 1 cup sugar
- 2 cups brown sugar
- 4 large eggs
- 1 tbsp vanilla
- 3 cups flour
- 1 tbsp baking soda
- 2 tsp salt
- 2 tsp cinnamon
- 1 tsp mace (Bosch Kitchen Centre, Edmonton)
- 1 tsp nutmeg
- 1 tsp cloves
- 4 cups rolled oats
- 2 cups coconut, unsweetened
- 2 cups dried blueberries
- 2 cups dried unsweetened cranberries
- 2 cups whole pecans, gently toasted
Instructions:
- Preheat oven to 350°F
- Cream butter and sugars until fluffy
- Beat in eggs and vanilla
- In medium sized bowl mix: flour, soda, salt , cinnamon, mace, nutmeg and cloves
- Slowly add dry ingredients to creamed mixture
- Mix in oats, coconut, nuts and dried fruit
- Place parchment paper on cookie sheets, and measure 1/4 of dough per cookie, carefully placing the portions on the paper to allow for spreading
- Flatten each mound slightly
- Bake at 350°F for 6 minutes, then turn sheet in the oven; bake for 7-8 minutes more
- Cool on wire rack; should be firm, but soft and chewy on the inside
stella says
Sweet, Valerie! I mean the post and the cookies;) They do look delicious and very wholesome. I would eat one for breakfast even if they are a bit sweet. I could use some sugar about right now…
Angie's Recipes says
Cool! A cookie breakfast….no wonder everyone on the picture were grinning. :-))
Joy says
I got to make some. That is perfect when I’m on the way to work.
lequan says
I’m always learning something when i visit your blog Valerie, and that’s why i love visiting. whether it be a short post or one of your monster posts, there’s always something. you love to share your abundant knowledge and talented skills, and i love to learn (well i know you do too); don’t we make the perfect bloggie couple? lol.
i wasn’t kidding when i told you i didn’t know a thing about baking. so the part about the cokies continuing to bake on the cookie sheet totally makes sense, thank you. now i need to get me some cooling racks. so much to get hahaha.
these cookies look and sound delicious Valerie. these are the perfect snack for K to take to school. can i ask what mace is and what it does? off to read your next post.
Valerie says
Mace is a spice, like cinnamon, LeQuan. And the best cookie racks EVER are from epicurian something or other. Colleen sells them. Let me know if you are interested and I will hook her up with you so you can see what they are and how much. I can’t even recall – but they are bigger and better than any I have ever seen in a store, and cannot be too expensive, or I wouldn’t have bought them.
🙂
Kelley says
Hook us up with those racks – I have never seen screen-like ones before.
I can’t wait to read about your slow-food trip.
Also, thanks for the tip about freezing them uncooked – I have never thought of that. I always freeze them baked – but warm out of the oven cookies….. YUM
lequan says
Thank you Valerie, now I know what mace is. Yes please on the rack hook up! Those look like huge racks. Thank you!!! Ok now it sounds like I’m talking to myself. Haha.
Heavenly Housewife says
I am so curious about the thermomix. I know you use it all the time. I’m kind of shocked it even does cookies. Is there anything it doesn’t do??? Does it mow the lawn by any chance? If yes, Im buying it 😀
*kisses* HH
Valerie says
Ha ha – HH!!! It does NOT mow the lawn, but you have seen it crush apples in 2 seconds, mak ice cream in 30 seconds (did you see that post, maybe not – it is older), knead bread, mill wheat, saute veggies, boil and puree soup, steam mussels (also an older post). It “almost” does it all. I’ll have to talk to the company about getting a set of wheels on the thing so it can mow the bloody lawn!
🙂
Valerie
sweetlife says
i love your cookies, and my girls would to chomp on these for breakfast, great ingridients and perfect tip on using your 1/4 cup…yes freezing the extra always make for a quick treat, especially if someone stops by…great recipe
sweetlife
ps…everyone looks like they LOVED them!!
Nirmala says
I can get behind breakfast cookies! Yummy.
Barbara @ Modern Comfort Food says
These look to be perfect summer-moves-into-fall cookies, Valerie. Have you tried making these with less sugar so they’d work better for breakfast? Results? I might just give that a go using a half-batch approach to see what happens. It’d be great to wake up to these.
FOODESSA says
Valerie…how did I miss these? I’m so glad I took the time to dig a little further. These treats sound amazing and are B.marked to be made very soon ;o))
Flavourful wishes,
Claudia
Michelle says
WOW…never thought to make a Breakfast Cookie before. What a fab idea! My mind is spinning with the possibilities!
suzanne dennis says
valerie,
just wanted to document the FABULOUS reviews i got on this recipe.
i made one batch of these cookies and got enough to supply my office, and to deliver treats to the office across the way, as well as a couple of friends.
over a week later and i am STILL getting compliments on these cookies!!!!!!
‘the most AMAZING cookie i have ever had’ was the nicest comment but it didnt end there! i actually had people stop me in the hallway to comment on these cookies. we get LOTS of treats where i work and i’ve never had the shear volume of positive comments on anything else i have made.
i have passed out the recipe upon request and have taken the liberty of renaming it:
THE CANADIAN FOODIE
AMAZING BREAKFAST COOKIE
thanks for the great recipe…
cheers
su 🙂
Valerie says
SU!
I am DEEPLY touched. My heart sings. When you wrote me to tell you that you made them and I asked you to post the positive experience you had to encourage others to try them, I didn’t expect such a gift. And now, you are the company baker! Kudos to you for adhering to one of the most precious traditions within our culture: gifts of homemade food. That, too, is a dying art. I cannot tell you how deeply gratified I feel reading these kind, kind words.
BIG HUG!
Thank you for making these cookies!!!
🙂
Valerie
Devaki@weavethousandflavors says
These look absoluely wonderful Val – I can’t get over the texture and flavors! Just beautiful and the farm trip sounds like so much fun.
I must make these soon 🙂
ciao, Devaki @ weavethousandflavors
JWolff says
I was just wondering if anyone has tried to make these with gluten-free flour and if it works. These look amazing and I really want to try them!
Valerie says
JWolff:
Go for it!
They are delish!
🙂
V
Arlyn van dyke says
One instruction step said to “bake at 350 for 6 minutes, then turn sheet in the oven”. What does that mean? To just reverse the entire cookie sheet? Or to turn each cookie on the sheet over ro bake evenly? Or……..
Cookies are delicious, regardless!!!!
Valerie Lugonja says
Hi, Arlyn!
It means to turn the cookie sheet with the cookies on it around in the oven as most ovens have a hot spot and don’t bake as evenly as cookies need! Glad you liked the cookies! Thanks for asking!!!
🙂
Valerie
Charity says
Is it 3 cups of flour or 3 1/2? There seems to be an odd A symbol character in the flour and baking soda (see below) that I don’t understand. Thanks!
•3Â cups flour
•1Â tbsp baking soda
Valerie Lugonja says
Thanks for that, Charity!
It is three cups. When my site was relaunched Oct 12 2012, many little surprises like this appeared, sadly – so I appreciate you letting me know.
Corrected now.
🙂
Valerie
Needful Things says
I may never stop browsing this blog! *love* this idea – have been looking for a good recipe for breakfast cookies and the list of ingredients in this one tells me this one will turn out pretty good. I’m going to try these very soon & post back here how my kids liked them.
petit4chocolatier says
These are amazing cookies! I love all the goodies in them. Delicious 🙂
lisa g. says
Those look yummy and Ive been wanting a breakfast cookie! Can these be made into a bar cookie? If so, what size pan, oven temp and bake time do you recommend? Thank you!
Valerie Lugonja says
HI LIsa
Sure you could make them into a bar! I would cut a piece of parchment paper the exact size as the bottom of my cookie sheet and push the dough onto the sheet until it was 1/3 inch high over the entire pan. Then I would make the rest in cookies. It is a big batch. You could try dividing the dough in half, and doing two pans of it, but finish the first and see how much dough it uses. I bet you could do two with this amount of dough.
🙂
Valerie
CoastalKitchen says
Wow! These look awesome… I’ll definitely have to add them to my “to bake” list!
🙂
Valerie Lugonja says
Dear Jessie,
Please do let me know if you make them and how they worked out for you.
🙂
Valerie