There are a lot of annoying quotes and proverbs out there.
These are the folly of motivational posters and angry newspaper editorials and weepy
folk tunes and awkward mother-daughter talks; these are the phrases that have
been embedded into our collective moral consciousness since childhood, whether
or not they actually fit with our religion or reality in general. We tend to
not think about these sayings too much, lest we discover that hey, maybe they
don’t make sense worth a damn, and maybe we shouldn’t keep saying them time and
time again.
Yep. source |
That's right. source |
You guessed it. source |
Okay, first of all: why does everyone insist on attributing
this quote to Tom Hanks? Sure, he’s a great actor (well that wins the award for
“pointless sentence of the year”), but he’s still an actor. He didn’t write the
script of A League of
Their Own.
And yes, I did watch the movie. I felt bad that all of these
people were doing all of this hard work to play baseball, of all things. Why not soccer? Why not a sport that is
actually fun and interesting, goddamit?
So that was frustrating in of itself. But that quote—oh. my.
god. It has been abused and mangled and employed as reason for the existence of
all kinds of things.
Like running, for instance. Running is great, and there are
many reasons to do it, but not because it is hard. Being difficult is not a
good reason to do something. You know what’s difficult? Robbing a bank. That’s
pretty fucking hard, and you don’t see people going around saying “If it wasn’t
hard everyone would do it” as they wave bags of illicit cash in the air.
source |
And this is coming from a runner.
Okay, a former runner, before I got depressed and fat and
fell out of shape. But that’s a whole ‘nother long-ass story.
Point is, that ain’t how you justify the practice of a pointlessly
repetitive exercise. Same thing with lifting or Crossfit or whatever the fuck
else you do to make sure you have bulging muscles in all the wrong places and
premature wrinkles.
The converse side of this quote is even worse—the implication
that, if something is easy, everyone does it. You know what’s really easy?
Farting in the middle of a crowded room. You don’t see people doing that every
day.
Because it's a mortal sin, dumbass. |
I swear; next time I see this quote on some inspirational
Pinterest board or fitness blog, imma fuck shit up. Sort of. Maybe. In theory,
at least.
In the meantime, I’ve taken to consoling myself with some
homemade cookies. Confetti cookies, that is. Inspired by Momofuku Milk Bar. Without animal products.
I can feel the rage dissipating already. |
These cookies are, as you can see, not the soft and fluffy
and oh-so-chewy cookies you see around Pinterest these days. For one reason
or another, it seems thin, crispy cookies have been relegated to the depths of
culinary obscurity and scorn—and personally, I’m not crying, since I find that
cracker-like cookies are not the most appetizing things in the world. But those
near-spherical undercooked masses of dough are not what you will find at
Momofuku Milk Bar, a modern pastry shop famous for its enormous, addicting, and
totally unique cookies. Their cookies are crisp on the edges and chewy in the
middle, perfect for dipping in milk and shoving into one’s mouth with reckless
abandon. They don’t try to reinvent the wheel; instead, they make their own
wheel. Okay that made no sense, but you get my drift. I hope.
Basically: cookies. |
The Milk Bar’s confetti cookies are not your ordinary
sugar-cookies-with-sprinkles. They are reminiscent of a snickerdoodle, as
revealed by the cream of tartar, and include a unique “birthday cake crumb”
(which is awesome on pancakes) to infuse them with funfetti
flavor. I mean, wow. That’s cool, right?
Now be warned: the cookies I have made here are not exactly
like the cookies at the Milk Bar, for a number of reasons. First of all, I have
veganized them by 1) using a combination of Earth Balance and coconut oil; 2)
substituting milk powder with almond meal and 3) substituting eggs with
bananas. After all that, of course they taste a bit different. But they are
still a hell of a cookie.
And one more thing: I recommend making the cookies a bit
larger than I did with this batch. The last time I made this recipe, I used
massive 1/3-cup chunks of dough instead of little tablespoon-sized bits like
this time. The larger cookies were a bit more complex and better textured,
whereas these were slightly more uniform. So yeah, bigger is better. Who would’ve
thunk it?
__________
Momofuku confetti cookies
Adapted
from Momofuku Milk Bar Cookbook
Ingredients
Birthday
cake crumb
50 grams • granulated sugar • ¼ cup
17 grams • light brown sugar • 2 teaspoons
45 grams • cake flour • ¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons
1 gram • baking powder • ¼ teaspoon
1 gram • kosher salt • ¼ teaspoon
10 grams • rainbow sprinkles • 1 tablespoon
20 grams • canola oil • 2 tablespoons
6 grams • vanilla extract • 1 ½ teaspoons
Cookie
dough
113 grams • Earth Balance, softened • ½ cup
113 grams • coconut oil, softened • ½ cup
300 grams • granulated sugar • 1 ½ cups
25 grams • corn syrup • 1 tablespoon
100 grams • bananas, mashed • ½ cup
8 grams • vanilla extract • 2 teaspoons
400 grams • all-purpose flour • 2 ½ cups
50 grams • almond meal • 2/3 cup
9 grams • cream of tartar • 2 teaspoons
6 grams • baking soda • 1 teaspoon
5 grams • kosher salt • 1 ¼ teaspoon
40 grams • rainbow sprinkles, vegan if desired • ¼ cup
Instructions
To make birthday cake crumb, start by preheating oven to 300
degrees F. Stir together sugars, cake flour, baking powder, salt, and
sprinkles. Add canola oil and vanilla and combine once more. Spread on a parchment
lined baking sheet and bake for 20 minutes, stirring every five minutes to
prevent clumping. Let cool completely on sheet pan before making cookies.
To make cookies, combine Earth Balance, coconut oil, sugar,
and corn syrup in the bowl of a stand mixer and cream on medium-high for 2 to 3
minutes. Scrape down sides of bowl, add bananas and vanilla and beat for 7 to 8
more minutes until light and fluffy.
Reduce mixer speed to low and add all-purpose flour, almond
meal, cream of tartar, baking soda, salt, and sprinkles. Mix just until dough
comes together, no longer than one minute. On low speed, add birthday cake
crumbs and mix for about 30 seconds just until incorporated.
Scoop dough onto a parchment-lined baking sheet in whatever
portion you desire—the Milk Bar does it in 1/3-cup measures, but I chose to go
a little smaller for this batch. Pat dough down so the tops are flat and place
in the refrigerator for at least one hour. You can refrigerate the dough for up
to one week.
In the meantime, preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Arrange
chilled dough about 4 inches apart on parchment and bake for 18 minutes, or
less if you have smaller portions of dough. Let cool completely on sheet pans.
The cookies will stay fresh at room temp for about five days and in the freezer
for a month. Not that they would ever
last that long.
PRINT RECIPE
PRINT RECIPE
___________
But no matter how you make these bitches, they are fabulous.
I woke up lyke dis. |
That stack is a single serving, I might mention. The amount
of time it took for them to disappear after taking these photos is between me,
myself, and my holy deity of choice.
Yummey!
ReplyDeleteI totally agree with you on the whole thetricksomefiddlystupidlydifficultwayistheBESTwayandwillmakeyoubetterthaneveryoneelse is utter rubbish... Seriously, back in the days when grannies all over the world made buttery biscuits with big chunks of chocolate, and they came out perfect everytime, now those were the days :D
But, I do appreciate you veganising some of the good "almost-old-enough-to-be-traditional" recipes as well as making your takes on other delicious treats, like the Boston Cream Pie pancakes ^ ^
These look fantasmic June :D The crumble intrigues me, but I have no sprinkles *sob* Gonna make me some ricotta and strawberry pancakes for dinner today though, because that's what little Julie and lots of other children dreamed of doing when they grew up, I'm sure..plus, pancakes! I hope you're having a great weekend so far! Thanks for always inspiring, and putting a smile on my face :) x
Strawberry ricotta pancakes sound awesome! Almost makes up for no sprinkles :) And well I'm glad you like the post! :D
DeleteI am sure kids will love it:)yummy
ReplyDeleteYes I agree! :)
DeleteThe cookies look amazing, and thank you for calling out the motivational quote bullshit. :-) I don't go on Pinterest very much anymore because I am afraid my eyes will get stuck in roll position a la Liz Lemon!
ReplyDeleteHaha you and me both! :) Glad you like the cookies!
DeletePahahaha, laughed quite a bit at this. I like rainbow colours in anything, I am pretty much a 4 year old girl. yus.
ReplyDeleteMe too!! :) Happy to hear you liked it!
DeleteI need to go and check but I don't think I have any motivational crap posted on Pinterest. I do have a board full of sarcasm and the like, but that's different. I want these cookies. I love stuff with sprinkles--They're just fun. :)
ReplyDeleteHaving a sarcasm board sounds like a great idea. Maybe I'll steal that. :) Glad you like the cookies too!
Delete