Hilarious! |
| Next time you’re in a bind, consider making rice krispy treats. I know technically they aren’t a cookie but I consider them cookie adjacent. And you can assemble a batch in 5 minutes. |
They’re a fine substitute for cookies as a dessert. They’re not okay for a cookie exchange, except maybe if you decorated them individually in an especially adorable way. |
Agree, it’s not fair. |
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https://www.mybakingaddiction.com/snickerdoodle-blondies/
These snickerdoodle bars are my go to for a very fast easy dessert people rave about. I usually have the ingredients on hand too. |
Why not? Genuine question. I’ve never done a cookie exchange. |
| I guess "not having time" buying cookies is the baking version of "the dog ate my homework." |
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Do not participate in a cookie exchange with non-homemade cookies!!
I think rice crispie treats are fine as the “cookie” though. |
Meh: I’d eat them but I see the point. This is also why I don’t do cookie exchanges: I know I’m not willing to put in the effort required. There should be some pride and effort, you’re bringing YOUR special homemade cookie. The same way you really shouldn’t bring just a regular chocolate chip cookie, you shouldn’t bring Rice Krispies treats. The idea is everyone get a bag of special, seasonal cookies that they otherwise would never have the time to bake themselves. Anyone can throw together Rice Krispies treats. They’re not special. |
| I'm fine with a "regular" homemade chocolate chip cookie but someone who brings Rice Krispie treats to a cookie exchange didn't understand the assignment and wouldn't be invited back next year. |
Now that I have a young dog, I believe that the dog ate the homework, the sneakers, the toothbrush, the pen, couch leg, the everything. |
It’s like showing up at a fancy dinner party with a bag of Lays potato chips as your hostess gift. Something that’s perfectly fine for you to eat at home, but not elevated enough for a special occasion. A lot of Christmas cookies require extra effort. They’re special because they’re not baked goods you make the rest of the year. They’re doughs that you have to chill before handling or they’ve got an expensive nut filling or you’re taking the time to roll, cut, decorate them individually. I’ll eat Oreos, but if I’ve spent a long time mixing, rolling out, cutting, baking and decorating adorable gingerbread men, I’m not going to want to trade them for Oreos. |
My first, and last, cookie exchange resulted in store bought cookies, one batch of burned on the bottom cookies, and the rest were a bland, cheap selection of cookies. All of the cookies went into the trash. "Anything less than..." is subjective. Cookie exchange at work, hard pass. Cookie exchange among good home cooks out to impress each other, yes! |
| Buy a large tin of great quality caramel corn and divide to smaller portions. Pretty ribbon. No one expects caramel corn to be made from scratch. |
Even better, just dump some Nilla wafers in a Ziploc bag. Seriously, don’t sign up for a cookie exchange and do this. This kind of baking takes time, effort, money. Nobody wants caramel corn you bagged into plastic in exchange for some time intensive family cookie they spent hours making. |