After I got a really good laugh in the parking lot (I was the only one laughing of course), I had to remind her that their twin toddler niece and nephew would be here next month and needed a place to sit and eat and a crib to sleep. "Oh yeah", she sighs in relief.
Back at home, the other teenager needed some assistance with extra credit for her history presentation. She studied the Country of Austria and interviewed their Uncle Rudi (our brother-in-law), who immigrated to the United States from Austria when he was just three years old, with his parents. Truly a wonderful and fascinating story that she was delighted to share with her class.
So, for that extra credit I (I mean she) decided to make shortbread cookies. Since most Austrian shortbread recipes have nuts in them, I had to be on the lookout for other recipes, to respect anyone with food allergies...That would be just our luck - make a cookie, someone has an allergic reaction, say good-bye to the extra credit. At any rate, we got very lucky and found a super easy, buttery, yummy shortbread that I will definitely make again.
Chocolate Chip Shortbreads
Courtesy of Woman's Day
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 stick (1/2 cup) cold, unsalted butter, diced in cubes
1/4 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup semisweet mini chocolate chips
(Makes 16 wedges)
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Have baking sheet ready and covered with a piece of parchment paper.
Mix flour and granulated sugar in a medium bowl. Cut in butter with a pastry blender (or rub butter in with fingertips) until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Stir in mini chocolate chips.
Gently press crumbs together to form a dough (the heat from your hands will help this happen). Place on baking sheet; pat into an 8-inch disk. With a sharp knife, score into 16 wedges, cutting about halfway through dough. Lightly prick wedges twice with a fork.
Bake 25 minutes, or until shortbread looks dry and golden at edges. Immediately cut through score lines. Cool 5 minutes on baking sheet before removing to a wire rack to cool completely.
* For the purpose of our classroom assignment and needing to share with 40 students, I took the recipe measurements (x 4) and spread all the dough out over a cookie sheet. I then scored it into diamond shapes and baked it for about 30-35 minutes, checking often to make sure the edges didn't burn. Worked perfectly if you are looking to feed a large group.