Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a really odd post. I have no problems with someone buying the cookies/baked goods at a bakery. I love a good bakery as much as the next person. But, to say makes such a broad, sweeping generalization that it's better to buy cookies at the bakery, is just wrong. Sure, it's convenient and you sometimes get specialty cookies that aren't easy to make at home. But, it's also more expensive and a lot of pleasure and rituals can surround the baking of cookies.
I just did a calculation of what a base sugar cookie recipe would cost me - less than $6 for a batch without chocolate chips. You don't have to even use 'good butter'. I didn't include the cost of using the oven because it's just pennies. Nor did I include the cost of mortgage or utensils because those are sunk costs - I'd pay for them whether I made cookies or not. I also didn't include the cost of my time because it wouldn't take me any longer to bake cookies than to run to the store to get them and I'm also avoiding the cost of gas.
^^PP here. I calculated the costs using the prices on Costco's website. I didn't include the cost of salt/soda because the amounts are so small and cheap. I also use the imitation vanilla recommended by America's Test Kitchen and it's just as cheap. It's only pennies that are missing from here and not worth wasting my time to calculate.
1.17 Eggs
0.20 flour
1.67 sugar
2.25 butter
5.28 Total
Imitation vanilla? As if!
I have more confidence in ATK than an anonymous DCUM poster
https://www.americastestkitchen.com/articles/6229-vanilla-extract-vs-imitation-vanilla
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a really odd post. I have no problems with someone buying the cookies/baked goods at a bakery. I love a good bakery as much as the next person. But, to say makes such a broad, sweeping generalization that it's better to buy cookies at the bakery, is just wrong. Sure, it's convenient and you sometimes get specialty cookies that aren't easy to make at home. But, it's also more expensive and a lot of pleasure and rituals can surround the baking of cookies.
I just did a calculation of what a base sugar cookie recipe would cost me - less than $6 for a batch without chocolate chips. You don't have to even use 'good butter'. I didn't include the cost of using the oven because it's just pennies. Nor did I include the cost of mortgage or utensils because those are sunk costs - I'd pay for them whether I made cookies or not. I also didn't include the cost of my time because it wouldn't take me any longer to bake cookies than to run to the store to get them and I'm also avoiding the cost of gas.
^^PP here. I calculated the costs using the prices on Costco's website. I didn't include the cost of salt/soda because the amounts are so small and cheap. I also use the imitation vanilla recommended by America's Test Kitchen and it's just as cheap. It's only pennies that are missing from here and not worth wasting my time to calculate.
1.17 Eggs
0.20 flour
1.67 sugar
2.25 butter
5.28 Total
Imitation vanilla? As if!
Anonymous wrote:Do large glass baking dishes make better chocolate chip cookies? Whenever I use baking sheet pans, it seems like half the time they get too hot too quickly and overcook the bottom.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am good at baking and make really good cookies. And I can make them for a lot less than $3 a cookie, even with inflation costs of groceries.
It sounds like you just aren’t very good at baking and don’t like it, which is fine. But other people feel differently.
Sure, a (potentially mediocre) home recipe produces more than 4 cookies, but what family needs a dozen+ cookies? Diminishing returns, you know. And gluttonous. Between the potential for mediocre cookies and too many sweets and all the time and cleanup, wiser to just go buy 4 really spectacular cookies. Support a local business, too.
NP. Ohhh you’re a troll. Got it.
You weirdos with your troll snark need to go for a walk and breathe fresh air. I’m sorry I don’t want my family wolfing down dozens of cookies. Or even want the mere temptation of them in our freezer (as if frozen and thawed cooked cookies are ever good anyways). It’s just pure gluttony.
Wow, your whole family can’t resist the temptation of frozen cookies in the freezer, that you don’t even think are that good? Do you all have a binge eating disorder? That would be really hard to deal with, I’m sorry. I understand why you can’t keep cookies in the house now.
ok, everyone on this thread is acting crazy now
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am good at baking and make really good cookies. And I can make them for a lot less than $3 a cookie, even with inflation costs of groceries.
It sounds like you just aren’t very good at baking and don’t like it, which is fine. But other people feel differently.
Sure, a (potentially mediocre) home recipe produces more than 4 cookies, but what family needs a dozen+ cookies? Diminishing returns, you know. And gluttonous. Between the potential for mediocre cookies and too many sweets and all the time and cleanup, wiser to just go buy 4 really spectacular cookies. Support a local business, too.
NP. Ohhh you’re a troll. Got it.
You weirdos with your troll snark need to go for a walk and breathe fresh air. I’m sorry I don’t want my family wolfing down dozens of cookies. Or even want the mere temptation of them in our freezer (as if frozen and thawed cooked cookies are ever good anyways). It’s just pure gluttony.
Wow, your whole family can’t resist the temptation of frozen cookies in the freezer, that you don’t even think are that good? Do you all have a binge eating disorder? That would be really hard to deal with, I’m sorry. I understand why you can’t keep cookies in the house now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a really odd post. I have no problems with someone buying the cookies/baked goods at a bakery. I love a good bakery as much as the next person. But, to say makes such a broad, sweeping generalization that it's better to buy cookies at the bakery, is just wrong. Sure, it's convenient and you sometimes get specialty cookies that aren't easy to make at home. But, it's also more expensive and a lot of pleasure and rituals can surround the baking of cookies.
I just did a calculation of what a base sugar cookie recipe would cost me - less than $6 for a batch without chocolate chips. You don't have to even use 'good butter'. I didn't include the cost of using the oven because it's just pennies. Nor did I include the cost of mortgage or utensils because those are sunk costs - I'd pay for them whether I made cookies or not. I also didn't include the cost of my time because it wouldn't take me any longer to bake cookies than to run to the store to get them and I'm also avoiding the cost of gas.
^^PP here. I calculated the costs using the prices on Costco's website. I didn't include the cost of salt/soda because the amounts are so small and cheap. I also use the imitation vanilla recommended by America's Test Kitchen and it's just as cheap. It's only pennies that are missing from here and not worth wasting my time to calculate.
1.17 Eggs
0.20 flour
1.67 sugar
2.25 butter
5.28 Total
Um, the good dark or semi sweet chocolate chips?
As noted, the cost above is a base sugar cookie recipe. A bag of Ghirardelli Semi Sweet Chocolate Chips is $3.99 at Wegmans. A bag of Toll House is $2.50. So, a batch of chocolate chip cookies with 'good' chocolate chips is still less than $10. If you were to buy chocolate chips in bulk or with coupons, it'd be a bit cheaper.
There's also risk involved with at-home cookies. No risk involved buying at bakery you're a repeat customer at.
Yes ... no risk at all buying a product made at a commercial outlet, as that "never" goes the wrong way, does it?
Contamination doesn't occur often at commercial bakeries, that's true. In the US, they are pretty safe to buy from. But you know where contamination occurs even less frequently? My own kitchen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am good at baking and make really good cookies. And I can make them for a lot less than $3 a cookie, even with inflation costs of groceries.
It sounds like you just aren’t very good at baking and don’t like it, which is fine. But other people feel differently.
Sure, a (potentially mediocre) home recipe produces more than 4 cookies, but what family needs a dozen+ cookies? Diminishing returns, you know. And gluttonous. Between the potential for mediocre cookies and too many sweets and all the time and cleanup, wiser to just go buy 4 really spectacular cookies. Support a local business, too.
NP. Ohhh you’re a troll. Got it.
You weirdos with your troll snark need to go for a walk and breathe fresh air. I’m sorry I don’t want my family wolfing down dozens of cookies. Or even want the mere temptation of them in our freezer (as if frozen and thawed cooked cookies are ever good anyways). It’s just pure gluttony.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am good at baking and make really good cookies. And I can make them for a lot less than $3 a cookie, even with inflation costs of groceries.
It sounds like you just aren’t very good at baking and don’t like it, which is fine. But other people feel differently.
Sure, a (potentially mediocre) home recipe produces more than 4 cookies, but what family needs a dozen+ cookies? Diminishing returns, you know. And gluttonous. Between the potential for mediocre cookies and too many sweets and all the time and cleanup, wiser to just go buy 4 really spectacular cookies. Support a local business, too.
NP. Ohhh you’re a troll. Got it.
You weirdos with your troll snark need to go for a walk and breathe fresh air. I’m sorry I don’t want my family wolfing down dozens of cookies. Or even want the mere temptation of them in our freezer (as if frozen and thawed cooked cookies are ever good anyways). It’s just pure gluttony.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am good at baking and make really good cookies. And I can make them for a lot less than $3 a cookie, even with inflation costs of groceries.
It sounds like you just aren’t very good at baking and don’t like it, which is fine. But other people feel differently.
Sure, a (potentially mediocre) home recipe produces more than 4 cookies, but what family needs a dozen+ cookies? Diminishing returns, you know. And gluttonous. Between the potential for mediocre cookies and too many sweets and all the time and cleanup, wiser to just go buy 4 really spectacular cookies. Support a local business, too.
NP. Ohhh you’re a troll. Got it.
You weirdos with your troll snark need to go for a walk and breathe fresh air. I’m sorry I don’t want my family wolfing down dozens of cookies. Or even want the mere temptation of them in our freezer (as if frozen and thawed cooked cookies are ever good anyways). It’s just pure gluttony.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am good at baking and make really good cookies. And I can make them for a lot less than $3 a cookie, even with inflation costs of groceries.
It sounds like you just aren’t very good at baking and don’t like it, which is fine. But other people feel differently.
Sure, a (potentially mediocre) home recipe produces more than 4 cookies, but what family needs a dozen+ cookies? Diminishing returns, you know. And gluttonous. Between the potential for mediocre cookies and too many sweets and all the time and cleanup, wiser to just go buy 4 really spectacular cookies. Support a local business, too.
NP. Ohhh you’re a troll. Got it.