Which cookie will win the White House?
For the past 20 years, Family Circle magazine has held a cookie recipe throw down between the candidates' spouses. Their contest has only been wrong once in predicting the actual outcome of the election. Which cookie will you vote for in 2012?
Michelle Obama's "White and Dark Chocolate Chip Cookie" (l.) beat out Ann Romney's "M&M Cookies" (r.) by a slim margin. Readers of Family Circle tested and voted on their favorite cookie. Over the past 20 years, the election contest has accurately predicted who will proceed to the White House –Ìýexcept once.
Courtesy of Family Circle
If you are one of the scores of independent voters yet to decide how you will cast your vote come November, here's a taste test that could tip your ballot: the great Presidential Cookie Bake-Off.ÌýA recipe for success is what this country needs, after all.Ìý
For the past 20 years,ÌýFamily Circle'²õÌýÌýhas squared-off the mixing bowls of the candidates' spouses and asked their readers to decide: Who has the better cookie recipe? The editors at Family Circle claim their contest, in which readers test the dueling recipes and vote for their favorite, has resulted in correctly calling the actual elections outcome since 1992 – except once.
In 2008, Cindy McCain's Oatmeal Butterscotch Cookies beat out Michelle Obama's Shortbread Cookies, only to have John McCain lose to Barack Obama in the general election. It's just the way the cookie crumbled. (Bill Clinton even got in the act that year with a healthy Oatmeal Cookie recipe when Hillary Rodham Clinton was dueling for the Democratic nomination.)
After four years in the White House, Michelle Obama is leading a nationwide campaign centered on cooking healthy food at home. Has she departed from her war on obesity to dole out cookies? We wonder about these things and if they may just give the upper oven mitt to Ann Romney's M&M Cookies overÌýMichelle's inclusive-sounding White and Dark Chocolate Chip Cookies.
The future can only declare if cookie history will repeat itself. Family Circle readers have already decided that it is Michelle Obama who will be heading back to the White House with more than 9,000 readers weighing in. "Just 287 votes separated the two women, our smallest margin ever," say the editors at Family Circle.
Ìýa few blocks from the White House at theÌýOccidental Grill & Seafood, where diners are given a sample of each cookie and asked to vote on their preferred choice. Weekly tallies are shared through the restaurant's social networks. The most recent results as of Sept. 29:Ìý56 percent for Michelle;Ìý41 percent for Ann;Ìý3 percent are undecided.
Other retailers are getting into the election spirit with their own spin on things: ParticipatingÌý7-Eleven chain stores are running the fourthÌýÌývoting campaign by having customers select either a red (Romney) or blue (Obama) coffee cup. The chain claims that their previous results have not only closely mimicked those of the past two elections, they have accurately predicted the winners. At the moment, the blue coffee cups are carrying most of the country on the campaign's . (We don't know how many of those coffees were decaf.)
With such a close election, here in the newsroom we held our own cookie ballot to gain an edge on election night coverage. Since all journalists like to hide their political stripes, party affiliations were left off the ballots, er, cookies, so the votes were based on taste alone (and also size). An election monitor made sure it was one person, two cookies; and any remaining uncast ballots were eaten immediately. A few broken cookies were tossed out for not having proper IDs.
Michelle's recipe has a surprising amount of butterÌýandÌývegetable shortening but also an unexpected mint finish. She packed a lot in with three kinds of chips. The cookies seemed to spread thin in the oven, however, even though there were a lot of them. There were fewer of Ann's cookies although they were rich, colorful, hefty, and a little dry. They also called for the use of corn syrup, which could be problematic with the rising cost of corn. Voters were either drawn to or repulsed by mint and/or peanut butter flavors. Absentee ballots for the bureaus were not counted due to a mess-up at headquarters. Exit polls were too close to call.
Our newsroom results:
M&M Cookies: 55 percent
White and Dark Chocolate Chip: 45 percent
Ann Romney's M&M Cookies carried the newsroom! Now, anyone got milk?
Cast your vote!
The following recipes are reprinted with permission from .
Michelle Obama's Mama Kaye's White and Dark Chocolate Chip Cookies
Yield:Ìý5 dozen cookies
Prep:ÌýÌý 15 minsÌý
Bake:ÌýÌý 12 minutes 375 degrees F.Ìý
2-1/4ÌýcupsÌýall-purpose flour
1ÌýteaspoonÌýbaking soda
1Ìý³Ù±ð²¹²õ±è´Ç´Ç²ÔÌý²õ²¹±ô³Ù
1Ìý³¦³Ü±èÌý(2 sticks) unsalted butter, softened
1Ìýstick Crisco butter-flavored solid vegetable shortening
3/4ÌýcupÌýgranulated sugar
3/4ÌýcupÌýpacked brown sugar
1ÌýteaspoonÌývanilla extract
2Ìý±ð²µ²µ²õ
1Ìý³¦³Ü±èÌýeachÌýwhite chocolate chips, milk chocolate chips and mint chocolate chips (or Andes mint pieces)
2ÌýcupsÌýchopped walnuts
Directions
1.ÌýHeat oven to 375 degrees F. In a small bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda and salt. In a large bowl with an electric mixer, cream butter, vegetable shortening, granulated sugar, brown sugar and vanilla extract.
2.ÌýAdd eggs, 1 at a time, beating well after each addition. On low speed, beat in flour mixture. By hand, stir in white and milk chocolate chips, mint chips and walnuts.
3.ÌýDrop rounded tablespoons of dough onto ungreased baking sheets. Bake at 375 degrees F for 10 to 12 minutes or until golden brown. Cool on baking sheets for 5 minutes; remove to wire racks to cool completely.
Ann Romney's M&M's cookies
Yield:Ìý3 dozen cookies
Prep:ÌýÌý 15 minsÌý
Bake:ÌýÌý 18 minutes Ìý325 degrees F.Ìý
Ìý
1Ìý³¦³Ü±èÌýgranulated sugar
1Ìý³¦³Ü±èÌýpacked light brown sugar
1/2ÌýcupÌý(1 stick) unsalted butter, softened
1-1/2ÌýcupsÌýcrunchy peanut butter
1ÌýtablespoonÌýlight corn syrup (such as Karo)
3Ìýeggs
1/2ÌýteaspoonÌývanilla extract
4-1/2ÌýcupsÌýold-fashioned rolled oats
2ÌýteaspoonsÌýbaking soda
6ÌýouncesÌýchocolate chips
2/3ÌýcupÌýM&M's candies
Directions
1.ÌýHeat oven to 325 degrees F. In a large bowl, cream sugars, butter, peanut butter and corn syrup on high speed until well combined. Beat in eggs 1 at a time. Beat in vanilla extract.
2.ÌýIn a separate bowl, mix together oats and baking soda. Stir into peanut butter mixture until combined. Mix in chocolate chips and M&M's.
3.ÌýUsing a standard-size ice cream scoop, drop dough onto baking sheets (about 9 per sheet). Bake at 325 degrees F for 18 minutes or until lightly browned. Cool 2 minutes, then transfer cookies to a wire rack to cool completely.