Date and Walnut Cookies

- Total Time
- 2 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2½cups/350 grams all-purpose flour
- 1teaspoon/5 grams salt
- 1teaspoon/3 grams cinnamon
- ½teaspoon/1½ grams ground cloves
- 8ounces/2 sticks/227 grams soft unsalted butter
- 1½cups/300 grams light brown sugar
- 3large eggs, lightly beaten
- 1tablespoon/13 grams baking soda
- 1pound/450 grams chopped pitted dates
- 1pound/450 grams chopped walnuts or pecans
- Confectioners’ sugar
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Line one or more baking sheets with parchment. Place flour in a bowl and whisk in the salt, cinnamon and cloves. Set aside.
- Step 2
Cream butter and brown sugar together by hand or in an electric mixer. Beat in eggs. The mixture will not be smooth. Dissolve the baking soda in 1 tablespoon hot water and stir it in. Stir in the dates and nuts. The batter will be heavy and not easy to mix. Work in the flour mixture, about a third at a time. If your electric mixer has a dough hook, use it for working in the flour.
- Step 3
Scoop heaping teaspoons of batter onto prepared baking sheet or sheets, making craggy mounds about 1½ inches in diameter. Space them about 1½ inches apart; the cookies will not spread very much. (Alternatively, for neater cookies, you can roll the batter into balls between your palms, then lightly press them down with the back of a spoon or the tines of a fork.) Allow to sit at room temperature 30 minutes to 1 hour before baking. Depending on the size of your oven and your baking sheets, you can form the cookies ready to bake on sheets of parchment paper on your countertop, then transfer them to baking sheets in shifts.
- Step 4
Bake 15 to 20 minutes, until nicely browned. Let cool, then dust with sifted confectioners’ sugar. If you plan to freeze some of the cookies, do not dust them with confectioners’ sugar; wait until after they thaw.
Private Notes
Comments
Halved the recipe, used 2 eggs. Substituted pastry flour and organic sugar. Result: chewy, moist, mmmmm.
I halved the recipe, using 2 full eggs, and used pecans. I brought them on a hike and handed them out to my fellow hikers. A very successful reception, including a request for the recipe. Even my husband, not a dessert person, liked them because they are not over-sweetened -- most of it comes from the dates.
I threw in an extra egg after reading Patti's comment. I also added a handful of dried cranberries. Loved the result.
There is no reason to pre-heat the oven in step one if you then have to let the cookies sit at room temp for 30 minutes to an hour before baking. This should be step 3.5
Yummy, soft cookie more like an Aussie slice base.
My whole batch came out super soft after baking x 12 mins. I was super nervous they'd get burned. However, the last 6 cookies I baked x 14 mins: they were much darker but not burned and they are holding up better and still taste great.
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