These Orange Chocolate Chip Ricotta Cookies are something special. Orange and chocolate is such a classic combo, and it works very well with a soft, cakey cookie and sweet glaze.
This recipe of mine makes a LOT of cookies, whether you shape them to be big or small. The great news is that the dough is wonderful to freeze, so really, you can do a half batch or the whole thing whenever you want. Then on baking day, you just need to bake and glaze!
These are traditionally Italian Christmas cookies, but we are restricted by no season here at Bready or Not. Good things can and should be enjoyed all year long. Makes these ASAP, and just make more again later in the year!
Bready or Not Original: Orange Chocolate Chip Ricotta Cookies
This recipe makes a big batch of soft, tender cookies. The dough is great to freeze, too, so half could even be baked fresh, the other half frozen. The whole batch makes about 65 large cookies or 100 small ones.
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: Italian
Keyword: cheese, citrus
Author: Beth Cato
Ingredients
Dough
15ouncesricotta cookies
1 3/4cupswhite sugar
1cupunsalted butter(2 sticks) room temperature
2large eggs
2Tablespoonsvanilla extract
zest from 3-4 navel oranges
4cupsall-purpose flour
1teaspoonbaking powder
1teaspoonbaking soda
1bagsemisweet chocolate chips
Glaze for full batch
2 3/4cupsconfectioners’ sugar
4-5Tablespoonsorange juice
Instructions
Make the dough
In a large mixing bowl, combine ricotta, sugar, butter, eggs, vanilla, and orange zest until smooth and creamy.
In another bowl, stir together flour, baking powder, and baking soda. Gradually combine with the wet mixture, scraping the bottom to incorporate everything. Fold in the chocolate chips.
At this point, the dough can be divided, if desired, to freeze half or all. If baking soon, wrap and chill the dough for about two hours or overnight.
To begin baking, preheat oven at 350 degrees. Line baking sheet with parchment paper.
Use a large or small scoop or spoon to dole out dough balls spaced out on cookie sheet. Large cookies will bake in about 15 to 18 minutes; small cookies will need 11 to 13 minutes. The edges should be golden brown. Let cookies sit for about 3 minutes before transferring them to a cooling rack. Cool completely.
Make the glaze
Mix confectioners’ sugar and orange juice until thick and smooth. Use the back of a spoon to spread atop a cookie. Continue with the rest of the batch.
Let cookies rest until glaze is set, about an hour or so, then transfer to a sealed container. Place waxed paper between layers if stacking the cookies. Store at room temperature.
I’m not going to lie: this cake has so many of my favorite things all in cake form, and it made me very happy. I hope you love this Chocolate-Almond Bundt Cake with Almond Glaze, too.
First of all, you can do your own from-scratch almond paste for this recipe. I did not. I used a tube from Trader Joe’s. You can also find it at Walmart and many other places.
Almond flavor carries through every bite of this recipe, in different forms, with different textures. There is sweetness here, but not hardcore. Really, it’s about how the almond and chocolate complement each other.
Bready or Not Original: Chocolate-Almond Bundt Cake with Almond Glaze
If you love chocolate and almond together, this bundt cake will be your slice of heaven. The cake looks beautiful, too, with a crown of glaze and sliced almonds.
Course: Breakfast, Dessert
Keyword: almond, bundt cake, chocolate
Author: Beth Cato
Equipment
10-cup bundt pan
baking spray with flour
Ingredients
Cake
1cup unsalted butter (2 sticks) room temperature
7ouncesalmond paste
1 1/4cupswhite sugar
3large eggs room temperature
2teaspoonsvanilla extract
3/4teaspoonalmond extract
3cupsall-purpose flour
2 1/2teaspoonsbaking powder
1teaspoonkosher salt
1 1/4cupshalf & half (or milk) warmed to 70 degrees
6ouncessemisweet chocolate chips
Glaze
1 1/2cupsconfectioners’ sugar
1/2teaspoonalmond extract
3+ Tablespoons half & half or heavy cream
sliced almonds
Instructions
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Coat the interior of a 10-cup bundt cake with baking spray with flour.
Beat butter and almond paste together until smooth and creamy. Add sugar, beating until light and fluffy. Add eggs one at a time followed by the extracts. Scrape the bottom of the bowl to mix in everything.
In another bowl, combine flour, baking powder, and salt. Gradually add the dry ingredients to the wet alternatively with the half & half/milk. Scrape the bottom of the bowl again, mixing until just combined. Fold in chocolate chips.
Scoop the batter into the prepared pan, leveling out the top.
Bake for 1 hour 10 minutes to 1 hour 30 minutes. A thermometer plunged into the cake should read over 205 degrees.
Let cake cool in pan for 10 minutes, then carefully invert onto a cooling rack. Cool completely, speeding in fridge, if desired.
For the glaze, mix together the confectioners’ sugar, almond extract, and half & half, adding more sugar or liquid as needed to reach a good thick, oozy consistency. Dollop onto the cake so that it dribbles down the sides. Sprinkle sliced almonds on top.
Store in a sealed container in the fridge or at room temperature. Cake can also be individually sliced and frozen for later.
These chewy Ciabatta Rolls are perfect for hot sandwiches or as big buttery rolls on the side! They do take some planning, though. Modified from Bake from Scratch May/June 2024.
Author: Beth Cato
Equipment
stand mixer
paddle and dough hook attachments
parchment paper
bench knife
Ingredients
Poolish
1 1/4cupsplus 3 tablespoons bread flour
3/4cupplus 1 tablespoon waterabout 70 degrees
2Tablespoonsall-purpose flour
1/16teaspooninstant yeast
Dough
1cupwaterabout 60 degrees
2Tablespoonsolive oil
1/2teaspooninstant yeast
2 1/2cupsbread flour
1/2cupall-purpose flour plus more for dusting
1Tablespoonkosher salt
Instructions
Poolish:
In a medium bowl, stir together bread flour, the water, all-purpose flour, and yeast. Get everything moist. Cover with plastic wrap, and let stand at room temperature for 14 to 16 hours. Don’t stir. Just let it do its thing for half a day.
Dough:
Place the poolish in the large bowl of a stand mixer, paddle attachment on. Add the 1 cup water, oil, and yeast. Follow that up with the two flours and salt. Beat for a few minutes.
Switch to the dough hook attachment. Beat at medium speed until dough gathers around dough hook and begins to pull away from sides of bowl, 8 to 10 minutes. Pry it off the hook a few times, too, to make sure everything is well kneaded.
Oil a large bowl. Dump the dough into that, pivoting the dough around to coat the whole surface with oil. Cover with plastic wrap.
Let rise in a warm (75ish degrees), draft-free place. After 30 minutes, knead dough using a greased or floured hand to take turns folding all four sides over the middle.
Let rise another 30 minutes. Fold again. Set the timer for another 30 minutes.
Near the end of that rise, line a baking sheet with parchment.
Lightly flour a level surface. Turn out dough, then pat it out into a thick 12×6 rectangle. Use fingertips or a butter knife to lightly demarcate the dough into 3-inch squares, then use the bench knife to slice them apart.
Set the 8 portions spaced out on prepared pan. Pick up each and gently stretch as needed to even out the sides, tucking excess dough underneath.
Cover with plastic wrap or a floured towel to let rise in a draft-free spot for another 1 hour to 1 1/2 hours, until puffed. The dough should hold an indentation if poked with a finger.
Preheat oven at 425 degrees.
Remove cover from rolls. Bake until golden brown, about 12 to 18 minutes. An instant-read thermometer plunged into the center of one from the side should read 205 degrees at minimum.
Let cool somewhat before eating fresh, or reheat at meal time. Store in a sealed container up to 5 days. They can also be frozen as long as a couple months.
Back in April, I had to cancel my signing in Duluth because a snowstorm had the audacity to strike that same weekend. I re-scheduled, and now the new date is almost here: come see me at the Bookstore at Fitger’s in Duluth this Saturday, June 27th, from noon to 2pm!
I’ll be parked at a table. Come by and talk books, cheese, cats, and all kinds of stuff with me. The store has my latest books in stock, and also feel free to bring copies you already own. I look forward to seeing folks there!
I'm being impersonated on TikTok and in an AI-generated spam campaign. I'm not solicting writers to sell marketing techniques (pfft like I know what I'm doing). I AM NOT ON TIKTOK AT ALL. My legit accounts are linked here on my website. Please report any fake Beths on social media, and if you get spam that claims to be from me, please report and block!
NEW NOVELS:
Brie My Valentine, a cozy mystery novel published by Datura Books; in print, ebook; February 2nd, 2027A Manor Beyond the Mist, a cozy fantasy novel published in 47North; in print, ebook, audiobook; late 2027