Homemade Oreos
/I originally published this post in April 2013. It was my second post in the history of Take A Bite. Nostalgia! This recipe was originally not my own. I first saw them on my favorite bloggerβs site back in the day and she too was sharing them from another blogger I used to love. Along with updated blog copy and photos, I also updated the recipe making them even more quintessential to the classic Oreo flavor. Enjoy!
My cousin Clay loves these Homemade Oreos. Like brings them up about every other time he is with our family. For good reason, they are great. We were altogether about a month ago and they came up in conversation. I hadnβt made them in forever, and Iβve been loving updating old TAB archive recipes (see here and here so far), so this was a must on the βto bakeβ list.
Switching gears a little, but does anyone else watch Bon Appetitβs YouTube series Gourmet Makes? Being the food freak that I am, I fall asleep to Claire Saffitz episodes remaking nostalgic junk food dishes. Her episode on Oreos was one of the first few episodes she filmed, but still one of my favorites. Long story short, but I felt like Claire Saffitz for a second while I re-made these! Maybe I should be calling them Gourmet Oreos?
Homemade Oreos
yields 40 sandwich cookies
Wafer Ingredients:
1 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 cup white sugar
2 tsp. salt*
2 eggs
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 ΒΌ cup unsweetened cocoa (you can use Hersheyβs Extra Dark cocoa to resemble the dark color of a true Oreo wafer, but regular dutch process cocoa works great)
Β½ tsp. baking soda
Filling Ingredients:
ΒΌ cup unsalted butter, room temperature,
ΒΌ cup shortening, room temperature*
2 cups powdered sugar, sifted
1 teaspoons vanilla extract
Wafer Directions:
In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa, and baking soda and set aside.
In an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream softened butter, sugar and salt on high until light and fluffy, about 1 minute. Scrape the sides down and then beat in the eggs one at a time until incorporated.
With the mixer on low, slowly add in the dry ingredients. Mix until the dough is combined.
Turn the dough onto a clean surface. Divide into two and form flat discs. Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate the dough for 30 minutes to an hour.
Preheat your oven to 325 degrees. To roll out the dough, take one disc of the dough between two sheets of parchment paper (the dough can be rolled out on a lightly floured surface, but the parchment prevents any additional flour from altering the color/appearance of the dark cookies). Roll the dough between the two sheets of parchment to ΒΌ-inch thickness.
Using a 1Β½ inch round cookie cutter, cut out each wafer. Place on a parchment-lined baking sheet leaving only Β½ inch between each (they donβt spread much). Repeat until all dough has been used. Bake for 15 minutes, rotating pans halfway through. Remove cookies from oven and let cool on a cooling rack.
Filling Directions:
In an electric mixer, beat the room-temperature butter and shortening, powdered sugar and vanilla until light and fluffy.
Assembly:
Using a pastry bag full of filling or a dinner knife, add a dollop of filling to one cookie. Top with another cookie and lightly squeeze together.
Serve with a glass of milk and enjoy.
Notes:
*When it comes to salt: Oreos cookies are not that sweet when you think about them. Itβs the filing that makes them sweet. Donβt be alarmed by the low amount of sugar and a high amount of salt. Itβs the balance you need to make the perfect bittersweet cookie to stand up to the filling.
*When it comes to shortening: you can easily use Β½ cup unsalted butter instead of the butter/shortening combo. However, I think the shortening really gives you that nostalgic Oreo cream flavor.
My favorite part of these updated posts are sharing the original photography. Letβs all just take a moment to observe the Instagram filters being used here. I think these were maybe Amaro or Lof? What a time to be alive.
With Valentineβs Day on the horizon, I couldnβt help but make a pink cream-filled version! I cut a little heart out of a few βtopsβ so more pink was revealed. Xoxo!
Annie