Potato Chip Cookies for Fools

The ''before'' picture of Kettle Brand Baked Potato Chips.

You’ve heard of  “Girls Gone Wild”?

Think of this as “Potato Chips Gone to Hell.”

This is the story of when bad things happen to good potato chips.

Or the tale of a thoroughly foolish recipe for April Fool’s Day.

You see, when I spied a recipe for Potato Chip Cookies in a new cookbook, I got all intrigued. I mean, who wouldn’t at the thought of something as unlikely as potato chips being incorporated into cookie dough?

I’ve decided to let the cookbook go unnamed, since it’s not fair for me to judge the entire cookbook by only one recipe. I’ve also decided not to print the recipe here, because I’m never making it again, and I sure wouldn’t want any of you to.

The "after'' photo of the first bad batch.

The cookies are described in the recipe as being like Mexican wedding cake cookies. I tell ya, look at these photos. Do these look anything like Mexican wedding cake cookies? I think not!

The recipe called for 3/4 cup of crushed potato chips, and 3/4 cup of finely chopped toasted pecans. The first batch spread like crazy as it baked. This could not be right, I thought. Maybe the author actually meant to pulverize the pecans so that they were as fine as nut flour. So, I to the next batch, I added an extra cup of pecans that had been ground in the food processor. The cookies didn’t spread as much, but they still spread quite a bit.

The second disappointing batch.

As for the taste? Greasy. And with not a lot of there there in the flavor department.

Later, I looked through other cookbooks for other Mexican wedding cookies. The other recipes all had more flour in them than this one, and no egg yolk as this one called for. No wonder these were so thin and crumbled so easily that I could barely get them off the baking sheet.

Which is a crying shame because the potato chips I used were so darned good to begin with. They were Kettle Brand’s Baked Potato Chips. I used the Lightly Salted variety I had received a sample of, which were quite crispy and wonderfully potato-ish in flavor. If only I had just eaten them as is out of the bag instead.

I should have. I could have.

Sigh.

Print This Post



9 comments

  • oh no, that sucks about the failed recipe. it sounded so interesting though! oh well, at least you had a good story to tell. though I would mourn for the good potato chips, too.

  • I get frustrated when recipes don’t turn out well because I hate wasting ingredients. The do NOT look like Mexican Wedding Cookies. Wonder where that ever came from?? I guess all we can do is try….

  • Yikes! But I think you have just started a new trend–to post failed recipes on April Fool’s day! I have definitely had my share, and felt like I had a prank played on me!

  • Wasting perfectly good potato chips is completely unacceptable! Those poor chips (and poor you for the bad recipe!)

  • How frustrating! I was totally intrigued by the thought but I’m disappointed they didn’t turn out. What a waste of a delicious potato chip 🙁

  • It was a waste of some wonderful potato chips, not to mention a lot of pecans, too, which believe you me, are not an inexpensive nut. Oy!

  • Wow, I could where potato chips might be good in cookies, kinda like the salted caramel craze – that salty sweet combo that can work so well.

    I agree its hard to waste a good potato chip much less pecans – sorry to hear about the less than positive experience.

  • Well, failed cookie recipes are what Cuisanart was invented for

  • Pingback: food confessions of a registered dietitian

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *