Recipe Roots™ - Grandma Appolonia's Travel Cookies (2024)

by Tina Verrelli 21 Comments
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Our Favorite Old Fashioned Sugar Cookies!

I just love recipes with some history. When you make them, it feels like you are connecting to the past and sharing traditions with the future. I’m going to share some legendary family recipes with you in a series called Recipe Roots™ – Great recipes worth digging up and sharing!

Recipe Roots™ - Grandma Appolonia's Travel Cookies (1)

Grandma Appolonia (on left) on a white water rafting trip in the Grand Canyon, 1963, at age 68.

First up, are Grandma Appolonia’s Travel Cookies! Grandma Appolonia or “Lonia” as she was called, was my Dad’s mother and I used to love visiting her apartment in Cincinnati, Ohio. She was a widow and used to babysit for some wealthy families to earn money to travel. She had amassed a great collection of travel souvenirs on her adventures and I can remember oogling them all! I’m sure she loved when all six of us came and touched her stuff with our sticky little fingers!

When Lonia would come from Ohio to visit us in Pennsylvania (12+ hours on a Greyhound Bus – yikes!), she would often make these sugar cookies on her visit. Now, we were a large family and I don’t recall having cookies and treats around very often, so when they did appear, they wouldn’t last long! In an attempt to make the cookies last until dessert time, Lonia would hide them in my Mom’s roasting pan. My brothers caught on to that hiding trick pretty quickly and would hunt down that old roaster no matter where she had tucked it away.

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Mom’s roasting pan AKA the Travel Cookie hiding spot.

Those cookies became the treat we would bring with us in the big ol’ family station wagon on the long treks to visit family in Cincinnati. Eventually, they became our “travel cookies.” The travel cookies are still made frequently. They are my go to sugar cookie for any season. I just add some sprinkles to match to the occasion. My girls love to help make them! When the family gets together for Christmas, I still have to hide them or they would disappear before dessert!

I’ve spent some time trying to figure out the exact origins of the recipe, but I haven’t come up with anything. The recipe from my Mom’s recipe box (below) appears to be clipped out of a magazine. The recipe has to be at least 40 years old. I’d love to know what magazine it comes from. If you recognize it, let me know!

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Recognize this recipe from anywhere?

Grandma Appolonia’s Travel Cookies:

These are my favorite sugar cookies! They are buttery, soft and have great vanilla flavor. Grandma Appolonia always added a little white icing to the top of them. I find it really keeps the cookies moist! The icing is just a simple combination of a tiny bit of butter, confectioner’s sugar, vanilla and milk. Keeping the butter amount small helps the icing firm up a little bit on the outside. You still have to be gentle when packing them up as the icing does not totally harden as royal icing would.

Make the Cookie Dough:

Cream together butter and sugar. Mix in eggs and vanilla. Add your dry ingredients.

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Form the Cookies:

Scoop and roll balls of dough. Butter the bottom of a flat-bottomed drinking glass. Dip the glass in some sugar. Use the glass to flatten the cookie balls. Bake your cookies!

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Recipe Roots™ - Grandma Appolonia's Travel Cookies (9)
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Make the Icing:

Beat together butter, vanilla, confectioner’s sugar and milk.

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Ice the Cookies: Video

You can swirl the icing on by hand or you can pipe it on. I find the piping to be quicker. I just use a Wilton disposable pastry bag and snip off the end. I start around the edge and swirl inward. Add your sprinkles after icing a few cookies as the outer part of the icing tends to firm up quickly.

Thanks for spending some time in the cloud with me!

I hope you like the story and recipe! Tina ( :

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Grandma Appolonia’s “Travel” Cookies

These are my favorite sugar cookies! They are buttery, soft and have great vanilla flavor. Grandma Appolonia always added a little white icing to the top of them.

Tina Verrelli – epicuricloud.com

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Course: Dessert

Keyword: cookie, Dessert

Servings: 4 dozen cookies

Ingredients

  • 3 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter softened (plus extra for greasing pan and glass)
  • 1 1/2 cups granulated sugar (plus extra for flattening cookies)
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract

Icing:

  • 1 tablespoon unsalted butter softened
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 6 cups confectioners’ sugar
  • 1/2 cup + 1 tablespoon milk

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 400 degrees.

  • In medium bowl, mix together flour, baking powder and salt.

  • In large bowl, cream together butter and sugar. This will take several minutes – it should be fluffy and lighter in color. Beat in eggs and vanilla.

  • Mix the flour mixture into the butter mixture until just combined.

  • Scoop rounded tablespoons of dough and roll into balls.

  • Place the balls 2-inches apart on greased baking sheets. (I use the shiny half-sheet pans)

  • Butter the bottom of a flat-bottomed drinking glass. Spread some sugar on a small plate.

  • Dip the buttered glass in the sugar and use to press down on the cookie balls.

  • Hold the glass level and press until the cookie is a little thicker than a 1/4-inch. Repeat until all the balls are flattened.

  • Bake the cookies for 7-12 minutes or until just golden around the edges. Time may vary depending on oven.

  • Let cool on baking sheet 1-minute before removing to cooling rack.

Icing:

  • In large bowl, beat together butter, vanilla, 3 cups of confectioner’s sugar and 1/4 cup milk.

  • Gradually add more sugar and milk until you reach desired consistency.

  • If you want to ice the cookies by hand, make a little thicker like peanut butter.

  • If you want to pipe the icing on the cookies, make a little thinner like ketchup.(I used the exact measurements for the icing I piped on my cookies.)

Notes

Cookie Baking Tips: I use shiny metal cookie sheets lined with parchment paper. If you use darker colored cookie sheets you may want to drop your oven temperature by 25 degrees. Darker baking pans get hotter. Cookie scoops are handy for portioning the cookie dough for even cookies. You can even weigh the cookie dough balls with a kitchen scale. For 3 1/2-inch diameter cookies, I made each dough ball 1 1/2 ounces and flattened them to about a 3-inch diameter. (1 batch made 2 1/2 dozen cookies.) I bake my cookies 1 tray at a time and make sure the cookie sheet is cool each time. It’s helpful to have several cookie sheets you can rotate.

Tried this recipe?Share it! Tag @epicuricloud – Please Leave A Comment & Rating Below! TY!

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Recipe Roots™ - Grandma Appolonia's Travel Cookies (2024)

FAQs

What are the ingredients in grandma cookies? ›

Ingredients
  • 340 g. butter.
  • 170 g. Soft brown sugar.
  • 1 tbsp. Vanilla essence.
  • 1½ tsp. baking powder.
  • 85 g. caster sugar.
  • Beaten egg.
  • 468 g. Plain flour.
  • 340 g. chocolate chips.

How to make store bought cookies like homemade? ›

Here's how you can improve premade cookie dough or dough from a mix.
  1. Add spice to your dough. ...
  2. Punch up the flavor of your cookies by adding extracts. ...
  3. Before baking, roll the dough in a garnish of your choice. ...
  4. Stir nuts right into the dough for an added crunch. ...
  5. Add in your favorite savory snacks, like chips or pretzels.
Aug 3, 2020

Does Costco have Grandma's cookies? ›

Grandma's Cookies, Variety Pack, 2.5 oz, 33-count | Costco.

What grandma cookie is on recall? ›

Frito-Lay has issued a US-wide voluntary recall on two lines of its Grandma's cookie range due to undeclared milk and egg content. The snack titan has recalled its Grandma's Peanut Butter Sandwich Crème and Grandma's Peanut Butter Mini Sandwich Crème lines.

Why do homemade cookies taste better than store-bought? ›

Have you ever read some of the ingredient labels for your favorite store-bought cookies? They can have a lot of additives, preservatives, and hydrogenated fats. When you make homemade cookies the ingredient list is pretty straight forward - butter, eggs, flour, and sugar, which results in higher quality cookies.

What can you add to store-bought cookie dough to make it better? ›

No one will even suspect they're store-bought (and we won't tell anyone!).
  1. Add brown sugar. ...
  2. Experiment with extracts. ...
  3. Mix in different candies and snacks. ...
  4. Add espresso or coffee grounds. ...
  5. Deepen the flavors by refrigerating the dough. ...
  6. Salt before baking the cookies. ...
  7. Reduce baking time for extra soft cookies.

What ingredient makes cookies spread out? ›

Excess Sugar and Fat

If your cookie contains excess sugar or fat, it will spread while baking.

What are the allergens in grandma's cookies? ›

Grandma's Cookies is not an allergen-free environment. Although not all of our products contain food allergens, all of our products are baked or prepared in an environment where eggs, milk, wheat, soy, peanuts and/or tree nuts are present.

What are the allergens in Grandma's chocolate chip cookies? ›

CONTAINS MILK, SOY, AND WHEAT INGREDIENTS. ALLERGY INFORMATION: MADE ON EQUIPMENT THAT MAKES PRODUCTS CONTAINING PEANUTS AND TREE NUTS.

Is Grandma cookies Indica or Sativa? ›

aka Grandma Cookies

Bred by Humboldt's Redwood Roots Family, Grandma Anderson's Cookies was created by crossing an unknown Kush with GSC. This indica-dominant hybrid smells like fresh cookies with sweet citrus undertones, while the flavor offers a smooth, earthy sweetness with sharp chocolate notes.

What are the ingredients in Pepperidge Farm cookies? ›

MADE FROM: ENRICHED WHEAT FLOUR (FLOUR, NIACIN, REDUCED IRON, THIAMINE MONONITRATE, RIBOFLAVIN, FOLIC ACID), MILK CHOCOLATE (SUGAR, COCOA BUTTER, SKIM MILK, CHOCOLATE, MILKFAT, DEXTROSE, SOY LECITHIN, VANILLA EXTRACT), FRUCTOSE, VEGETABLE OILS (PALM AND/OR SOYBEAN AND HYDROGENATED SOYBEAN), BROWN SUGAR (SUGAR, INVERT ...

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