Peanut Butter & Jam Cookies & Life Altering Moments
These peanut butter jam cookies are simple and satisfying. This peanut butter and jelly sandwich as a cookie is for everyone who loves the classic PB & J.
Easy Thumbprint Cookies
There are only a handful of things you come across in your life which change how you live everyday. Connecting with an extraordinary person. Discovering a dream job. Having a baby or in our case, bringing home a puppy for the first time. Maybe a life altering moment which sends you in an unforeseen direction.
Or maybe it was something less dramatic. Something you picked up as a hobby or started learning for any number of reasons, but you found yourself deeply drawn into it. It quietly changes you little by little, embedding itself into your life. You start thinking about it all of the time. In the shower, while driving, standing in line at the grocery store. Your daily culture is now infused with it.
For me there have been a few instantly altering moments; meeting Diane so many years ago, us raising our pups together, buying homes together. And for the less dramatic events, there are only a couple which have fully become a part of me. Cooking and aikido.
Peanut Butter Jam Cookies
Cooking began as a young teenager on our cattle ranch. We always had a freezer full of beef, and since we tended to be a very self sufficient set of individuals in the family, I started fixing my own meals. It started out teenage boy basic – monster sized burgers. Then I started making sauces, then cooking trout caught in the creek running through our property. It continued to blossom and the joy and curiosity in cooking has never strayed from my soul.
Aikido began much later. One night I stumbled across a dojo after watching a movie with Diane. I had been casually looking for something to help stay fit and maybe develop some skills. I had heard of aikido and it seemed like a good fit to my personality, but I didn’t know much. We watched from the window as their class went on, a mix of several races and ages of people all in white uniforms, many with traditional black Japanese hakama. There was a calm yet powerful presence to the class.
Aikido
I recognized one of the gentlemen with a hakama on. He was one of our regular customers at the restaurant where I managed at the time. I liked him. He was “good people”. Next time he was in I chatted with him about aikido and felt myself being drawn in towards it. It wasn’t long before I had my first intro class. He was too humble at the time to mention it, but I soon discovered he was the head instructor at the dojo.
This a video we filmed and produced for dojo.
Fast forward to thousands of hours at the dojo later, and it is hard to remember life before aikido. Our Sensei, or head teacher, is one of the kindest most sincere people I know. He is also able to disable any attacker with core shaking power, like a massive wave instantly and effortlessly sweeping you up in its motion. And even though the dojo has produced many amazing and powerful martial artists, it is also welcoming to nearly all ages and abilities. From the old to the young, the fit to the initially uncoordinated, from the stocky to the petite, man or woman.
For me, through the dojo, I have found another home and family. I move through crowded rooms differently now, more aware and with greater body control. Life’s difficulties somehow seem less unsettling and are often met with a calmer head. I have become more patient with myself and gradually become more aware of my weaknesses and in doing so, I’m able to lessen them. Aikido has become a great influence in the quality of a person I try to be. And have come to know and trust a great group of people in which we meet with a smile and dude hug.
For the food fixated, I am amazed if you have made it this far through the post. You must be wondering what in the hell does any of this have to do with peanut butter cookies. Where’s the sweets?!
Every year Diane and I try to make the time to have the dojo and their families over to the house. It is always a great afternoon with everyone chatting away, kids playing, Sierra nudging her way into constant affections. Just before 4th of July it was the dojo’s anniversary so we freed up our schedule and put our party hats on.
We smoked up an 11 hour Texas brisket. Grilled sliced pork shoulder to throw into sliders. Made a curried noodle salad and a refreshing cucumber-jicama mint salad. Fried Vietnamese egg rolls. Put out the house-made pickles and kim chi. Froze up a bunch of zero-proof and adult ice pops. Made mini cupcakes using Joy the Baker’s amazing frosting recipes. It was good eating.
One of the dessert favorites was a PB&J cookie and they have become another house favorite. We’ll often use blackberry jam and it is so good, but we’ll also play with different jams. For the party I used up the last of my strawberry jam from this spring and it was quite delicious. Marmalades have been a surprisingly great addition as well.
Hope you enjoy these peanut butter jam cookies. We’d love for you to share any of your own life altering passions or moment. Thanks for listening!
Todd
Peanut Butter & Jam Cookies
Ingredients
- 1 1/4 cups (156 g) All-Purpose Flour
- 1 teaspoon (5 ml) Baking Powder
- 1/2 teaspoon (2.5 ml) Kosher Salt
- 1 cup (220 g) packed Brown Sugar
- 1/2 cup (114 g) Butter (1 stick) , at room temperature
- 1 cup (260 g) Creamy Peanut Butter , at room temperature
- 1 large Egg
- 1 teaspoon (5 ml) Vanilla Extract
- 1/4 cup (85 g) Blackberry Jam (or jam of choice) *see note 1
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F. Line 2 baking sheet pans with parchment paper.
- Whisk together flour, baking powder, and salt for at about 30 seconds or until fully blended. Set aside.
- In stand mixer using a paddle attachment or hand mixer with the beater blades, beat the brown sugar, butter, and peanut butter until fluffy (about 2 minutes), scraping down sides of bowl as necessary. Add the egg and vanilla and beat until incorporated.
- With the machine on the lowest speed, slowly pour the flour mix into the batter. Mix until incorporated, stopping occasionally to scrape bowl sides and bottom.
- Roll the dough into balls or use a cookie scoop to form the balls and arrange apart and evenly on the prepared baking sheet pans.
- Press a 1/2" divot into each ball. Spoon or pipe the jam (*see note 2 below) to fill each divot.
- Bake for 11-14 minutes or until the dough is just set (I'll usually give the nearest one a little push test to feel if it seems too soft or if it feels like it has set up). If like, add a little extra fresh jam on top of the cookies. Cool on a wire rack.
Notes
Note 2: For a quick piping bag, place jam in a quart size ziplock bag and snip one of the bottom corners off of the bag to create your piping hole.
Hi- I’m excited to try these next time I entertain! Quick question – I have unsalted creamy peanut butter – did you use salted in the recipe (I’ll compensate with more salt)
Thanks!
So many things to say!
First, amazing looking cookies (I am a major sweet tooth, you know that had to come first! ๐ I need to try them out. Loved reading about Aikido too – how it has permeated you, your life, and loved finding out about your dojo. Thank you again for a beautiful post.
Need to try these Peanut Butter Cocoa Jam Cookies by @WhiteOnRice http://t.co/5Kr3HkEL
Wow! You’ve managed to combine two of my favorite cookies into one! And thanks for pairing such great writing with your lovely photos…your blog is always a joy to read!
Love this post. The cookies look delicious and beautiful. Thank you for helping at EVO. I loved your class and felt inspired to do and be a little better in photography and believing in myself. Thank you so much!
PB&J is one of my all-time favorite treats, whether on bread, graham crackers or straight from the spoon. Can’t wait to try this recipe. (And keep the stories coming–they make recipes that much sweeter.)
Loved the life-altering moments story–thanks for sharing. I will have to sift through and savor some of mine–they should not be taken for granted. As usual, wonderfully tasty pics–you guys seem very experienced at shooting cookies ๐ (BTW-page proofs look great!)
nancy- thank you. and would love to get a sneak peak at the proofs!
The visual image of 11-hr brisket has left me drooling, even after a delish Indian food lunch. Thanks so much for sharing your love of aikido and finding belonging and creating community through the dojo. Gorgeous photographs as usual!
I love aikido too, though I practised it for a really short time…
and it was nice to read your personal story, Todd!
As for the recipe, these cookies look really mouthwatering, I would love to try with wholemeal flour, any suggestion to adapt the recipe in this direction? (should I add some extra wet ingredients to balance the wholemeal flour?)
Kisses
Roberta
On Fridays, I share my favorite food finds in a series called Food Fetish Friday – and I love this post so I’m featuring it as part of today’s roundup (with a link-back and attribution). I hope you have no objections and I’m happy to be following along with your creations…
I was drawn to this article via Pinterest – the photography is a winner! I will admit that I didn’t expect such a beautifully written, compellingly personal article. Thank you for sharing. I have also found resonance with martial arts, and cooking. And yes, I often think of both whilst in the shower, or when waiting in line at the supermarket!
You have such a wonderful talent for story telling. Beautiful photos.
Terrific post Todd. Reading about your experience I found myself thinking about yoga. Just a few months ago a friend talked me into going. I was hooked. I’ve joined the studio and go 2-3 days a week. Like your martial arts practice, it brings me calm and peace through the intense physical demand (hot yoga). I was the one who always shook my head when anyone mentioned yoga and just didn’t get it. Until I went. We’ll see where I am in a few years. Sounds like you treated the dojo to a wonderful day! You guys are the best. Lovely cookies shots. I’m always studying what you are doing. Hugs to you and D.
What a wonderful story and equally wonderful recipe. The photos are always stunning.
Wonderful and inspiring story telling, Todd. I can imagine the love and soulfulness that circled among the laughs at that party. Thank you for sharing the good!
For me it was understanding that it’s okay to admit I have a passion, and even more okay to relentlessly pursue that passion even if it doesn’t fit in a neat little box, or follow the “You should, you will, you must” mantra of the East Coast. My food blog is coming alive, and I couldn’t be happier!