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.
Anonymous wrote:Nothing like fresh baked cookies straight out of the oven. I’ll bake cookies any day over the week as opposed to getting them at a bakery. There are some really great baking blogs out there.
Anonymous wrote:I think if you find a small business that makes something perfectly, it's actually silly to try and compete with it at home. We're not taking about a large sum of money. A good fresh chocolate chip cookie as good as they make it should probably be $5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t like most of those giant bakery cookies. Can’t they just be normal sized?
I tend to agree but these are in-between the too large ones (which are visually unappealing) and regular sized. They're perf.
Wow, it would take my 14-year-old about 10 minutes to come up with a recipe to yield a good-quality homemade cookie that size. She wouldn’t call them “perf,” though, she’s too mature for that. We’d have fun baking them, too, because we are good bakers and we don’t balk at kitchen clean-up.
I picture OP with flour all over her face, sweating and wringing her hands in the kitchen, as an infomercial announcer asks, “Has THIS ever happened to YOU?” Close-up on OP as she cries, “There’s GOT to be a better WAY!”
There is!
Step 1: Call bakery.
Step 2: "Hi! Have you sold out of chocolate chip cookies? No? Maybe I reserve 4 of them. I'll be right over."
Step 3: Pay $12.
Anonymous wrote:I think using shortening makes better cookies than butter (for the texture). Also, we get the tub of cookies at Giant for $4.00 and those taste good enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t like most of those giant bakery cookies. Can’t they just be normal sized?
I tend to agree but these are in-between the too large ones (which are visually unappealing) and regular sized. They're perf.
Wow, it would take my 14-year-old about 10 minutes to come up with a recipe to yield a good-quality homemade cookie that size. She wouldn’t call them “perf,” though, she’s too mature for that. We’d have fun baking them, too, because we are good bakers and we don’t balk at kitchen clean-up.
I picture OP with flour all over her face, sweating and wringing her hands in the kitchen, as an infomercial announcer asks, “Has THIS ever happened to YOU?” Close-up on OP as she cries, “There’s GOT to be a better WAY!”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think if you find a small business that makes something perfectly, it's actually silly to try and compete with it at home. We're not taking about a large sum of money. A good fresh chocolate chip cookie as good as they make it should probably be $5.
Anonymous wrote:Our bakery charges $3 for big, amazing chocolate chip cookies. They're literally perfect. $12 when I buy 4 for the family.
To bake a batch of cookies requires time, cleanup, $6 in good butter and $6 in good chips. And they NEVER taste as good as the bakery. Often a lot worse. And the batch is more than we ever want.
What's the point?
Anonymous wrote:I think if you find a small business that makes something perfectly, it's actually silly to try and compete with it at home. We're not taking about a large sum of money. A good fresh chocolate chip cookie as good as they make it should probably be $5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t like most of those giant bakery cookies. Can’t they just be normal sized?
I tend to agree but these are in-between the too large ones (which are visually unappealing) and regular sized. They're perf.