Birth of an American Cookie (2024)

Birth of an American Cookie (1)

America's first cookie recipe begins by telling you to scum the sugar. This gives you some small sense of how far the world has moved since 1796, when Amelia Simmons published American Cookery, the first cookbook ever written by an American. In our age of processed, over-refined foods, the idea of having to boil your sugar to skim off impurities is totally alien. But that's what Simmons and her contemporaries did, scumming away to ensure clean sugar even when the cone it came from was made from the dregs of a hogshead.

Cookies had been eaten in the colonies from very early on, especially in areas settled by the Dutch; the word is derived from the Dutch koekje, meaning "small cake." But the first printed recipe (and also the first appearance of the English word "cookie") had to wait for Simmons:

Cookies

One pound sugar boiled slowly in half pint water, scum well and cool, add two teaspoons pearl ash dissolved in milk, then two and a half pounds flour, rub in 4 ounces butter, and two large spoons of finely powdered coriander seed, wet with above; make roles half an inch thick and cut to the shape you please; bake fifteen or twenty minutes in a slack oven--good three weeks.

No eggs. A single stick of butter to two-and-a-half pounds of flour. A cookie that lasts three weeks. This all sounds--let's be honest--completely awful, more like hardtack than pastry.

Still, this was America's First Cookie Recipe. Trying to reproduce an earlier American koekje is pure guesswork, since we have references but no recipes; Simmons's formula lets us taste an old flavor, one that we know people appreciated and worked to make. So however spare the recipe seems now, the idea of making America's First Cookie was interesting enough to recruit my six-year-old soon and send us both to the kitchen.

We had to make adjustments and judgment calls the whole time we were baking. Though we didn't need to skim foaming impurities from our sugar, we still melted ours down with water to keep the proportion of liquid the same, and used a blend of brown and white sugar to approximate an older product. We used two teaspoons of baking powder in place of potash, dissolving it in a best-guess two tablespoons of milk. We "rubbed" butter in by pinches, working each until it vanished.

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As we worked, I started getting hopeful; it was all coming together into a recognizable cookie dough. Maybe there was something alchemical at work here, something that would transcend what seemed like major missteps and produce our nation's ubercookie, something to be produced at potlucks for years to come. That? Oh, nothing, just America's First Cookie. Yes, I agree that it is ungodly good.

But no, it was not. Or at least, not really. America's First Cookie was more like a floury shortbread--a shortbread that lacked shortening. The relative lack of fat made it seem very sweet, as though it was intended as a pure carrier for sugar. In a blind tasting I think most would find it dry, and sweet enough that it demanded tea or something equally astringent. Still we liked it, if only because, hey, America's First Cookie. It was a cookie you can imagine enjoying after a long day of casting tankards or dipping candles or scumming sugar.

Having made it, the original recipe reads differently to me. Simmons could have included eggs, or more butter (she had plenty of both in other recipes). Instead, it seems to me, she wrote with an eye towards hospitality, towards sharing something she thought luxurious. There's plenty of sweetness in our cooking today (too much, in fact) now that sugar, and especially corn syrup, are cheap. But the first cookie recipe--the recipe for a dry, sweet cookie, still very much like a little cake--made me think of a time when sweetness wasn't a cheat, or a mask. It was sugar, and in humble households that was special.

Sugar, the recipe says. We have sugar. Have some yourself; here it is.

Amelia Simmons's Cookie
(I cut the original recipe by half)
3/4 cup white sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 cup water
4 cups flour
4 oz butter
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 Tablespoon milk.
Coriander seed

Simmer sugars in water to dissolve. Dissolve baking powder with milk and mix in, then stir liquid into flour. Cut cold butter into small pieces and mix into dough; working quickly, rub each bit of butter between your fingers until it disappears. Roll out dough on a floured surface to 1/2" thick, cut into whatever shape you want, and sprinkle with coriander seed. Bake in a 325 degree oven until golden, about 15 minutes.

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Birth of an American Cookie (2024)

FAQs

Birth of an American Cookie? ›

The roots of American cookies can be traced back to the 18th century when Dutch immigrants brought their baking traditions, including koekies, to the New World. Over time, American bakers added their own twists, leading to the creation of an array of cookie varieties.

Where did the American cookie come from? ›

The earliest reference to cookies in America is in 1703, when "The Dutch in New York provided...'in 1703...at a funeral 800 cookies...'" The modern form of cookies, which is based on creaming butter and sugar together, did not appear commonly until the 18th century.

What was the first cookie in America? ›

In the Southern colonies, every housewife knew how to bake tea cakes that had no extra flavoring except butter and sometimes a couple drops of rose water. The first American cookies that showed up in cook books had creative names like Jumbles, Plunkets and Cry Babies which gave no clue to what was inside the cookie.

What is the famous cookie in America? ›

The chocolate chip cookie is far and away America's favorite cookie This should come as no surprise to anyone who enjoys the tasty treat. More than 53% of American adults prefer the cookies over the next most popular kind, peanut butter.

What is the 1 cookie in the US? ›

America's favorite cookie and the one dubbed “the American cookie” is the Chocolate chip cookie. Chocolate chip cookie is simply tantalizing both in flavor and in texture. The chips of both milk and dark chocolate provide you with a rich and strong flavor while the butter makes the cookies velvety.

What is the national cookie of America? ›

Sixty two percent of respondents said that chocolate chip was their favorite type of cookie, followed by peanut butter, brownie/double chocolate and oatmeal raisin. By the way, National Chocolate Chip Cookie Day is celebrated annually on Aug. 4.

What are American cookies called in England? ›

American cookies are baked desserts, often sweet, that range in texture and density. Hard or crisp cookies are called biscuits in the U.K. while the chewier dessert can be identified as a cookie.

What is the #1 best selling cookie in America? ›

Oreo is the best-selling cookie in the world. It is now sold in over 100 countries. Oreo was first produced in 1912 by the National Biscuit Company, now known as Na-Bis-Co.

What is the oldest cookie in history? ›

Pizzelles are the oldest known cookie and originated in the mid-section of Italy. They were made many years ago for the “Festival of the Snakes” also known as the “Feast Day of San Domenico”.

Who brought cookies to America? ›

"Early English and Dutch immigrants first introduced the cookie to America in the 1600s. While the English primarily referred to cookies as small cakes, seed biscuits, or tea cakes, or by specific names, such as jumbal or macaroon, the Dutch called the koekjes, a diminutive of koek (cake)...

Who invented Oreos? ›

Samuel J. Porcello (May 23, 1935 – May 12, 2012) was an American food scientist who worked at Nabisco for 34 years. He is particularly noted for his work on the modern Oreo cookie. Porcello held five patents directly related to the Oreo.

What is America's favorite cookie slogan? ›

The Oreo was originally had a less sexy name: the Oreo Biscuit. A lemon filled variety was available briefly during the 1920s, but clearly it didn't compare to the chocolate kind. Oreo's original slogan "America's Favorite Cookie" was changed to "Milk's Favorite Cookie" because clearly it's all about the dunk!

What is in cowboy cookies? ›

They really are fantastic. Basically, for Laura Bush's Famous Cowboy Cookes you take traditional chocolate chip cookie dough and stuff it with oats, coconut, pecans and a sprinkling of cinnamon. Resulting in these oh-so-chewy, flavorful and delicious cookies!

Where did Great American cookie start? ›

Great American Cookie Co was founded in 1977 in Atlanta.

What is the slang cookie mean? ›

Informal. dear; sweetheart (a term of address, usually connoting affection). Slang.

Why do Americans call biscuits cookies? ›

When continental Europeans began to emigrate to colonial North America, the two words and their "same but different" meanings began to clash. The words cookie or cracker became the words of choice to mean a hard, baked product.

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