
Is there anything better than a soft, flavorful cookie fresh from the oven, served with a glass of milk or cup of tea? These cookies fit the bill. Unfortunately, they happened to come out of the oven right around lunchtime today, which means I had four oatmeal-cranberry cookies for lunch. (Shh...don't tell my kids.) Hey now, don't judge me - you know you've done it, too. Besides, these have oatmeal and cranberries. That makes for a lunch of champions. Right?
My dad (aka our "Cookie King") introduced me to this recipe, which he found on the America's Test Kitchen website.




I've showed you my nifty little nutmeg grinder before, right? Well, here it is again. I love my grinder! If you don't have one of these, grate fresh nutmeg on a rasp (you know, one of those skinny graters). You promise to use fresh nutmeg. Okay, pinky swear.

Whisk together these dry ingredients with a whisk.

In a large bowl, beat ½ pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter with a hand-mixer (or by hand if you want a little extra exercise) until the butter is creamy.

Add 1 cup granulated sugar...

...and 1 cup packed brown sugar.

Beat until the mixture is creamy and fluffy, about 3 minutes.

Add 2 eggs, one a time, beating after each addition.

Stir the flour mixture into the butter/sugar mixture with a wooden spoon until combined.

Stir in 3 cups rolled oats and 1 ½ cups dried cranberries. You can also use raisins or dried cherries.

Scoop out 2 tablespoon of the dough at a time, form into a ball, and put on the parchment paper.

When I make cookies, I can't do without my mini ice cream scoop. It scoops out balls that are just about 2 tbsp. Perfect!

Place the balls about 2 inches away from each other on the parchment paper.

Bake the cookies until the edges turn golden brown. The original recipe calls for 22-25 minutes. My cookies only took 16-18 minutes. Maybe it's the altitude. Halfway through baking, switch the positions of the baking sheets, plus turn them around (what was the front is not the back and vice-versa).
After removing the cookies from the oven, let the cookies cool on the cookie sheets for 2-3 minutes and then slide the parchment papers, with the cookies on them, onto cooling racks. Repeat with the rest of the dough. I was able to re-use the parchment paper for the next batches.

Okay, now eat one. Quick - before your kids see them.

Oatmeal & Dried Cranberry Cookies






Bread and Jam
Oooh, I agree! A cup of tea and those cookies - what a perfect escape in the day. LOVE that nutmeg grinder!
raquel
i'm trying this recipe! my husband loves oatmeal cookies...looks delicious!!!
Jan @ Pantry Connection
Yum! I love dried cranberries. I put them on my salad quite often. These cookies look delicious! Thanks for sharing.
Jan ~ Founder, PantryConnection.com
hurstbeanblog.com
These look awesome, can't wait to try!
koshercamembert
Love the mini scoop - I have 2 in different sizes and use them for EVERYTHING! I still, however, use choc chips in my oatmeal cookies...old habits are hard to break!
- Zahavay
Cookin' Canuck
Thanks to all of you for the positive comments.
Sock Monkey (love the name) - I will definitely try them with dried blueberries next time. Good tip!
Lauren
Craisins are my new secret stash of snack food at work - I will have to try these!
s. stockwell
Good and healthy. Fabulous "how to photos"! best, s
Sock Monkey
I've made oatmeal raisin cookies before, substituting craisins for the raisins. They are sooooo delish! Try them with dried blueberries sometime. YUM.
Shannon B
Yum! I love dried cranberries-these look excellent. Great pictures as well.