homemade orange milano cookies recipe – use real butter (2024)

homemade orange milano cookies recipe – use real butter (1) Recipe: homemade orange milano cookies

It snowed this weekend. It.Finally.Snowed. I don’t mean a dusting of white stuff either, because when I say snow I mean “skiable” snow. At first it came down in big fluffy flakes all day Friday.


at first kaweah didn’t notice

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then it started to accumulate on her schnoz

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sniffing the air – winter is here!

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There were some strong winds blowing which sent most of the snow into the next county for a couple of days. But Sunday morning we woke to a familiar glow through our windows – the glow of freshly fallen snow covering everything. It was 8°F and completely calm. Magical conditions. The snow was feathery and dry. I’ve been waiting since September (okay, really since May) to feel the familiar glide of skis on snow under my feet. I am recharged.


perfect snow

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ski touring our local mountains

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Two summers ago, Jeremy and I were in Washington state to visit with good people and backpack in Olympic National Park. We enjoyed an amazing lunch at Sitka and Spruce with my friend, Lara Ferroni. She told us about a book she was working on – making all of those favorite snacky junk foods of our youth from scratch without all of the junk. I told her I would love to see a copy when she was finished.


my review copy arrived in the post a few months ago courtesy of sasquatch books

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Lara’s book was a traipse through my childhood memories of Twinkies, Chocolate Cupcakes, Ding Dongs, Oreos, Doritos, Goldfish crackers, Hot Pockets, potato chips, tater tots, and so much more. She manages all of these with normal ingredients and without preservatives, artificial colorings, or artificial flavors. In addition to the healthier recipes for these snacks, she provides gluten-free, as well as vegan, versions. At the back of the book she includes recipes for some basic pantry staples like confectioner’s sugar, sweetened condensed milk, marshmallow crème, and even sprinkles! I let Jeremy choose the recipe to make, since he was going to be eating them. He went with the Chocolate and Orange Wafers (aka orange milanos).


flours, powdered sugar, chocolate, salt, baking powder, butter, eggs, cream, orange (zest), vanilla extract

homemade orange milano cookies recipe – use real butter (8)

zest and juice the orange

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sift the flours, salt, and baking powder

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Lara gives lots of options on ingredients like white whole wheat flour, spelt flour, ground millet, all-purpose flour, and cake flour. I went with what I had on hand at the time (all-purpose and cake flours) for the cookies, but there is a good deal of flexibility so you can experiment with healthier mixes.


beat the powdered sugar and butter together

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adding egg whites

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beating in the orange juice

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add the dry mix, beating until just combined

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Making the cookie dough is pretty straightforward. Once it is ready, place the dough in a pastry bag (with a plain #806 tip) and let it chill in the refrigerator for a few minutes. Piping the dough isn’t difficult, but getting the right shape consistently was a bit challenging at first and took me some practice runs (i.e. mess ups) before I got the hang of it.


a disposable pastry bag with pastry tip #806

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set the bag in a tall glass and scoop the dough in

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piping oblong fingers onto parchment-lined baking sheets

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The cookies will spread and rise in the oven, so be sure to give them plenty of room to avoid unsightly collisions. While the cookies bake, you can make the chocolate ganache – basically chocolate, cream, and orange zest.


stir the chocolate and hot cream together

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add the orange zest

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The cookies are done when they turn golden at the edges. After the wafers have cooled on a cooling rack, I like to play a little game of matching them up so that you have similarly-sized pairs. I do that with my French macarons too, because I’m not a good enough pastry baker to get them all the same size. It gives the illusion that I know what I’m doing. Let the ganache cool to a spreadable, but not overly fluid consistency (this is temperature dependent). Use a knife to spread the chocolate filling over the flat side of a cookie and then sandwich the filling with the matching cookie.


different shapes and sizes – that bottom middle one was sacrificed for quality control

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paired up

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spread the love chocolate

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Here’s the thing about these cookies compared to the store-bought variety – these aren’t exactly like the commercial versions because they taste so much better. The flavors are real. The texture is light and delicate, not hard and brittle. The quality is superior. Of course, the shelf life of this cookie is far far shorter than its Pepperidge Farm counterpart, but I’m fairly certain it won’t be around long enough to determine that shelf life.


looks the same, but tastes a million times better

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Chocolate and Orange Wafers (Homemade Orange Milano Cookies)
[print recipe]
from Real Snacks by Lara Ferroni

1/2 cup (60 g) white whole-wheat flour or all-purpose flour
1/2 cup (60 g) white spelt flour or all-purpose flour
1/2 cup (60 g) ground millet or cake flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp kosher salt
8 tbsps (1/2 cup) unsalted butter, room temperature
1/2 cup (110 g) powdered sugar, sifted
2 large egg whites (about 66 g)
2 tsps vanilla extract
1/4 cup (2 oz.) orange juice (or use milk if making mint milanos)
1/4 cup (2 3/8 oz.) heavy cream
6 ounces semi-sweet or milk chocolate, chopped
1 orange, zest of (or use 2 drops of peppermint oil if making mint milanos)

Preheat oven to 350°F. Sift the flours, baking powder, and salt together in a bowl and set aside. Place the butter and powdered sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer and beat with the paddle attachment until smooth and creamy (give it 2 minutes). Beat in the egg whites for about a minute until light. Beat in the vanilla and orange juice. Pour the sifted flour mixture into the butter mixture and beat on low speed until just combined.

Line two baking sheets with parchment paper. Put the cookie dough into a pastry bag fitted with a #806 plain tip and refrigerate for 5 minutes. Pipe 1/2-inch by 2-inch ovals onto the parchment, giving yourself at least an inch between each oval as the cookies will spread and rise in the oven. Bake 8-12 minutes or until just golden at the edges, rotating the baking sheets halfway (I forgot to do this). Mine took 12 minutes. Remove the cookies to a cooling rack. [Jen’s OCD step: match your cookies into pairs of similar size.]

To make the chocolate filling, heat the cream in a small saucepan over medium flame until it just starts to steam. Remove from heat and whisk the chocolate into the hot cream until smooth. Stir in the orange zest (or if you want mint milanos, stir in peppermint oil).

Spread 1/2 tablespoon of filling on the flat side of one cookie and then sandwich the chocolate with the flat side of another cookie. Repeat until done. Makes 16-20 cookies.

Wanna make these gluten-free? Lara suggests replacing the white whole-wheat and white spelt flours with an equal amount of gluten-free all-purpose baking mix.

Wanna make these vegan? Lara says to replace the butter with an equal amount of coconut oil; the egg whites with 1 teaspoon freshly ground chia or flaxseed mixed with 1/4 cup water; and the heavy cream with an equal amount of coconut cream.

December 9th, 2012: 11:42 pm
filed under baking, chocolate, confections, dessert, eggs, fruit, recipes, sweet

homemade orange milano cookies recipe – use real butter (2024)

FAQs

What happens if too much butter is in cookies? ›

Too much butter makes cookies turn out just as you'd expect: very buttery. This batch of cookies was cakey in the middle, but also airy throughout, with crispy edges. They were yellow and slightly puffy in the middle, and brown and super thin around the perimeter.

What does butter do to cookies? ›

The job of butter in baking (besides being delicious) is to give richness, tenderness and structure to cookies, cakes, pies and pastries. We alter the way butter works in a recipe by changing its temperature and choosing when to combine it with the other ingredients.

What are the ingredients in Milano cookies? ›

MADE FROM: ENRICHED WHEAT FLOUR (FLOUR, NIACIN, REDUCED IRON, THIAMINE MONONITRATE, RIBOFLAVIN, FOLIC ACID), SEMI SWEET CHOCOLATE (SUGAR, CHOCOLATE, CHOCOLATE PROCESSED WITH ALKALI, COCOA BUTTER, MILKFAT, SOY LECITHIN, VANILLA EXTRACT), SUGAR, VEGETABLE OILS (PALM AND/OR SOYBEAN AND HYDROGENATED SOYBEAN), EGGS, ...

Is melted butter or softened butter better for chocolate chip cookies? ›

Key Ingredients for Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies

It's the ratios and temperature of those ingredients that make this recipe stand out from the rest. Melted butter: Melted butter produces the chewiest cookies.

What happens if I don't use enough butter in my cookies? ›

Adding too little butter can cause the cookies to be tough and crumbly. You should use unsalted butter to control the salt content, but if you only have salted on hand, reduce the amount of added salt accordingly. Sugar sweetens the cookies and makes them an enticing golden brown.

What happens if you use too much butter? ›

Over time, eating butter in excess could negatively impact heart health. “Butter has saturated fat which, in large quantities, may increase your risk of high cholesterol and heart disease,” Rumsey says. This is exactly why the American Heart Association recommends minimizing it.

What are the disadvantages of using butter in baking? ›

Disadvantages of Using Butter

Cookies made with butter can spoil more quickly than those made with shortening. If you want your cookies to last as long as possible (and who doesn't?), you should opt for Shortening.

What type of butter is best for cookies? ›

Unsalted butter gives you complete control of the overall flavor of your recipe. This is especially important in certain baked goods where the pure, sweet cream flavor of butter is key (butter cookies or pound cakes). As it pertains to cooking, unsalted butter lets the real, natural flavor of your foods come through.

Is it better to use oil or butter in cookies? ›

Baking with oil not only requires less work, and results in fewer dirty dishes, than butter, but it also produces tender, moist baked goods that get better with age and boast an impressively long shelf-life.

What is the bump on Milano cookies? ›

Why Do Milano Cookies Have a Bump? Milano cookies get their signature bump on one side from the piping of the dough. It is left behind when the tip is raised.

Are Milano cookies soft or hard? ›

Sold commonly in grocery stores across the US, Milano cookies are deliciously buttery oval-shaped cookies, sandwiched together with a layer of chocolate. Based on Italian-style cookies, the cookie itself is a little crisp and somewhat shortbread-like in texture.

What is the difference between Milano and Monaco cookies? ›

Each cookie consists of a thin layer of chocolate sandwiched between two biscuit cookies. The cookie is marketed as the Monaco in Canada; local company Milano Bakeries had established prior rights to the "Milano" brand for cookies sold in that country.

How many sticks of butter is in 1 cup? ›

One stick of butter is 1/2 (half) cup. Two sticks of butter is 1 cup.

What happens if you use melted butter instead of soften butter for cookies? ›

In cookies, softened butter will result in a cakier and airier cookie than using melted butter. This is due to the fact that softened butter will create air bubbles that expand in the oven during baking. Melted butter will make your cookies delightfully dense on the inside and crisp on the edges.

What makes cookies taste the best? ›

When you think cookies, you likely think of sweet ingredients, but salt is essential. It balances the flavor of caramelized sugars. We even love sprinkling a little extra flake salt on our cookies to awaken the tongue and complement the sweetness.

Does more butter make cookies softer? ›

Also, underbaking them by a minute or 2 will help them retain a dense, chewy bite, explains Jenny McCoy, pastry baking arts chef-instructor at the Institute for Culinary Education in New York. Adding more moisture to your dough in the form of extra butter, egg yolks, or brown sugar will make your cookies even softer.

What to do if melted butter too much? ›

When heated to the melting point, however, these crystals are destroyed. They can be reestablished but only if the butter is rapidly chilled. (Returning it to the refrigerator will cool it too slowly and fail to reestablish the tiny crystals.) To quickly cool down partially melted butter, we mixed in a few ice cubes.

How do you fix butter bleeding in cookies? ›

Once the cookies are completely cooled after baking, put them on a clean baking sheet with a paper towel underneath them. This helps to absorb any extra butter and prevent butter bleed (more on that below).

Why are my butter cookies chewy? ›

White sugar creates crispier cookies and brown sugar creates chewier cookies. Why use melted butter? Melted butter creates cookies with a different texture compared to cookies made with softened or creamed butter. When butter is melted, it coats the flour more evenly, resulting in cookies that are chewier and denser.

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