I bake cookies. Good ones too. Heres what u do. Instead of making little drops 
of batter, make the "lumps" larger and bake one or 2 minutes less. You'll still 
have to experiment with this, but they will come out softer, yet still fully 
baked.

--- On Sun, 7/12/09, S. Nicole Campbell <[email protected]> wrote:

From: S. Nicole Campbell <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: The Talk2 List FW: an expensive cookie recipe
To: "talk2" <[email protected]>
Date: Sunday, July 12, 2009, 11:55 PM



 
Lol glad you said something.
Lol I don't like crunchy cookies.
 
BTW, anyone ever had those  mats cookies Farhan's 
always talking about? Was contemplating getting some but I'm afraid to for the 
same reason that I mentioned above.
lol.
 



From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Doug Langley
Sent: 
Sunday, July 12, 2009 8:00 PM
To: talk2
Subject: Re: The 
Talk2 List FW: an expensive cookie recipe


I tried that recipe, and if you dont like crunchy cookies dont make 
it. they always come out too crunchy for my liking 

On 7/12/2009 4:58 PM, 
S. Nicole Campbell wrote: 

  
  I saw a snipes article claiming the same 
  thing.
   
  But in any case, have some awesome sounding 
  cookies.
   

  
  
  From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
  Behalf Of Venison88a
Sent: Sunday, July 12, 2009 6:11 
  PM
To: talk2
Subject: Re: The Talk2 List FW: an expensive 
  cookie recipe


  
    
    
      Unfortunately, its an "urban legend", but the recipe is 
        valid. 


The store is featured in 
        an urban legend involving a supposed recipe for its popular chocolate 
        chip cookie.[30] In the legend, a woman and her daughter enjoy a cookie 
        while shopping at Neiman Marcus in Dallas, Texas, and ask for the 
        recipe. The waiter informs her there will be a "two-fifty" charge, 
which 
        the woman interprets as a modest $2.50. Upon receiving her VISA 
        statement, she is shocked to discover she has been charged $250.00 
        instead. In revenge, she photocopies the recipe and urges her friends 
to 
        distribute it for free to everyone they know so that the store will 
make 
        no further profit on its sale. Because the story typically was passed 
        along as a photocopy, it falls in the legend subcategory of Xeroxlore. 
        

Folklorists have pointed out three chief holes in the story: 
        

    * Prior to the emergence of the legend, the 
        store did not have a chocolate chip cookie;[31] 
    * 
        A similar story has been around since the 1940s, originally involving a 
        red velvet cake recipe from the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. It wasn't until 
        the 1980s that the story's focus shifted to cookies. The cookie version 
        of the story originally was attached to Mrs. Fields cookies, causing 
        that company eventually to post disavowals of the notices at all its 
        stores. 

Although the story is untrue, Neiman Marcus nonetheless 
        published the cookie recipe to quell rumors. It was perfected in 1995 
by 
        Kevin Garvin and is featured on the company's website for free. It also 
        is in the Neiman Marcus Cookbook (Clarkson Potter, $45) by Mr. Garvin 
        and John Harrisson.



--- On Sat, 7/11/09, 
        S. Nicole Campbell <[email protected]> 
        wrote:

        
From: 
          S. Nicole Campbell <[email protected]>
Subject: 
          The Talk2 List FW: an expensive cookie recipe
To: "talk2" <[email protected]>
Date: 
          Saturday, July 11, 2009, 11:23 PM


          
          

           

          
          
          From: ravenia [mailto:[email protected]] 
          
Sent: Saturday, July 11, 2009 3:37 PM
To: Coco; 
          Lorie Allen; [email protected]; carmelo 
          >; GF Portable:; Mario; monique; Sharon Hales; Jenkins, 
          Audrey
Subject: an expensive cookie 
          recipe


          

   When decent people 
          get screwed over, this is the result!
  
           
   A little background: 
          
   Neiman-Marcus, if you don't know 
          already, is a very expensive store;
I.e., they sell 
          your typical $8.00 T-shirt for
  
           $50.00.
   
  
           THIS IS A TRUE STORY !
  
           
   My daughter and I had just 
          finished a salad at a Neiman-Marcus Cafe
In Dallas, 
          and we decided to have a small dessert. Because both of us 
          are
such cookie lovers, we decided to try the 
          'Neiman-Marcus cookie..' It was So
excellent that I 
          asked if they would give me the recipe, and the 
          waitress
said with a small frown, 'I'm afraid not, but 
          you can buy The Recipe.' Well,
I asked how much, 
          and
   she responded, ' Only two fifty - 
          it's a Great deal!' I agreed to
that, and told her to 
          just add it to my Tab.
  
           
   Thirty days later, I received my 
          VISA statement, and the
Neiman-Marcus Charge was 
          $285.00! I looked again, and I remembered I had
only 
          spent $9.95 for two salads and about $20.00 for a 
          scarf.
   
   As I 
          glanced at the bottom of the statement, it said, 
          'Cookie
Recipe-$250.00.' That was Outrageous! I called 
          Neiman's Accounting
Department and told them the 
          waitress said it was 'two-fifty', which clearly
does 
          not mean 'two hundred and fifty dollars' by any 
          reasonable
interpretation of the 
          phrase.
   
  
           Neiman-Marcus refused to budge. They would not refund my 
          money
because, according to them, 'What the waitress 
          told you is not our problem.
You have already seen the 
          Recipe. We absolutely will not refund your money
at 
          this point.' 
    
           
   I explained to the Accounting 
          Department lady the criminal statutes
which govern 
          fraud in the State of Texas. I threatened to report them to 
          the
Better Business Bureau and the Texas Attorney 
          General's office for engaging
in fraud. 
          
     
   I 
          was basically told, 'Do what you want. Don't bother thinking 
          of
how you can get even, and don't bother trying to 
          get any of your money
Back.'
  
           
   I just said, "Okay, you folks got 
          my $250, and now I'm going to have
$250 worth of fun." 
          I told her that I was going to see to it that 
          every
   Cookie Lover in the United States 
          with an e-mail account has a $250
cookie recipe from 
          Neiman-Marcus...for free. 
    
           
   She replied, 'I wish you wouldn't 
          do this.' I said, 'Well, perhaps
you should have 
          thought of that before you ripped me off!' and slammed 
          down
the phone.
  
           
   So here it is! Please, please, 
          please pass it on to everyone you can
possibly think 
          of. I paid $250 for this, and I don't want Neiman-Marcus 
          to
EVER make another penny off of this 
          recipe!
   
  
           
   NEIMAN-MARCUS COOKIES (Recipe may 
          be halved) 
   
  
           2 cups butter
   24 oz. Chocolate 
          chips
   4 cups flour
  
           2 cups brown sugar
   2 tsp. 
          Soda
   1 tsp. Salt
  
           2 cups sugar
   1 8 oz. Hershey Bar 
          (grated)
   5 cups blended 
          oatmeal
   4 eggs
  
           2 tsp. Baking powder
   2 tsp. 
          Vanilla
   3 cups chopped nuts (your choice) 
          
    
   Measure 
          oatmeal, and blend in a blender to a fine powder. 
             
   Cream the butter and 
          both sugars. Add eggs and vanilla. 
   Mix 
          together with flour, oatmeal, salt, baking powder, and soda. 
          
     
   Add 
          chocolate chips, Hershey bar, and nuts. Roll into 
          balls,
   and place two inches apart on a 
          cookie Sheet.  
    
          
   Bake for 10 minutes at 375 degrees. 
          Makes 112 cookies.
    
          
   
  
           
   PLEASE SEND IT TO EVERY PERSON YOU 
          KNOW WHO HAS AN E-MAIL ADDRESS!
THIS IS REALLY 
          TERRIFIC!!
   
  
           Even if the people on your e-mail list don't eat sweets send it 
          to
them and ask them to pass it on. Let's make sure we 
          get this lady's $250.00
worth. Enjoy the cookies, they 
          really are 
        good.    







      

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