I can't remember
when I first heard about Swig - but it was definitely after the fact. As in
everyone else knew about them and loved them. I heard about them when I started
hearing about Dirty Coke's last year and then I
heard about the cookies.
By the time that
I heard about them last year there were Swig locations outside of St. George so
Don and I went and and got Dirty Coke's and the pink swig sugar cookies. They
were good, huge, but good. Just in case you were confused by that last statement
- this is goofy, but I like smaller cookies. I'd rather eat 2 smaller cookies
than one large cookie, but that's just me, ha! :) Apparently the current
version of cookies are different from when they originally started serving them in
St. George. The one that everyone initially fell in love with. Not to say that people don't still
love their cookies - they're just a different recipe now. All the pictures I had seen of them previously had cracked edges
etc and when I went to Swig they were clean edges and I had read in a couple of
places that they didn't taste like they did before.
And that made me curious to try the 'original.' Or at least try a cookie recipe based off of the original. I looked up recipes for 'swig' cookies - and I found a TON. Like I said, late to the bandwagon. I'm going to say this right off. I've never been the biggest fan of sugar cookies. Something about the texture? But I like 'swig' style sugar cookies. They're kind of like a cross between a sugar cookie and shortbread? But I'd say they're less finicky to make than shortbread cookies. I like them.
I've seen quite a few adaptations that have made lemon or lime ones, even chocolate versions. For the basic recipe you can add a little extract, which I'll be honest I don't always add, but I like the reminder to maybe put it in. I also separated out the wet and dry ingredients. I accidentally added the powdered sugar with the dry ingredients once and it did not turn out as well as when you mix it with the wet - the dough was super crumbly.
I'm not listing a frosting recipe just yet
and that's simply because I haven't found one that I'm in love with. I need to
experiment with a few others before I commit to one. But FYI, the 'original'
recipe calls for a sour cream frosting.
INGREDIENTS:
Wet:
Wet:
- 1 cup butter - room temp, soft
- 1¼ cup sugar
- ¾ cup powdered sugar
- 2 eggs
- ¾ cup vegetable oil
- 2 Tbsp water - on recipes with flavored variations I've seen this replaced with lemon or lime juice and then adding the zest of one lemon or lime
- 1/2 - 1 tsp vanilla or almond extract (optional)
- 5½ cups of flour
- ½ tsp baking soda
- ½ tsp cream of tartar
- 1 tsp salt - sometimes I half this or leave it out because I use salted butter
- Cream butter and sugars together. Mix in eggs, oil and water and mix until smooth.
- Mix all dry ingredients in another bowl and add a cup or so of dry ingredients at a time into the wet ingredients.
- Preheat the oven to 350° F.
- Form into balls and flatten with the bottom of a glass that has been dipped in sugar (and a teensy bit of salt if you like - that's from Vintage Revivals, I don't always do it because of the whole salted butter thing)
- Bake for 7 - 12 min. This will vary depending on how chewy you want the inside of the cookie. The longer the bake time the dryer the cookie.
No comments:
Post a Comment