Mock Macaroons

  3.7 – 6 reviews  • Macaroon Recipes

The crispy rims and chewy center of “marinated” oatmeal made with brown sugar and vegetable oil.

Servings: 30
Yield: 5 dozen

Ingredients

  1. 2 cups rolled oats
  2. 1 cup packed brown sugar
  3. ½ cup vegetable oil
  4. 1 egg
  5. ½ teaspoon salt
  6. ½ teaspoon almond extract

Instructions

  1. Combine oatmeal, brown sugar and oil in a bowl. Stir to mix well. Cover and let stand at least 5 hours, or overnight.
  2. Pre-heat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Grease cookie sheets – use non-stick if possible.
  3. Add the egg, salt and almond extract to oatmeal and stir well until blended.
  4. Drop by rounded teaspoonfuls about 1-1/2 inches apart on greased cookie sheets. Bake 7 or 8 minutes or until edges are browned and center is golden. Remove from cookie sheet and cool on racks.

Nutrition Facts

Calories 83 kcal
Carbohydrate 11 g
Cholesterol 6 mg
Dietary Fiber 1 g
Protein 1 g
Saturated Fat 1 g
Sodium 44 mg
Sugars 7 g
Fat 4 g
Unsaturated Fat 0 g

Reviews

Anna Mills
I mixed the sugar, oats and oil, covered the bowl and waited 6 hours to complete the recipe. Since there seemed to be excess liquid in the bottom of the bowl and they didn’t hold their shape on the baking sheet and the outer edge was mostly liquid which burned before the center baked I guess waiting overnight may be necessary. I baked half on a silpat and half on a well greased cookie sheet. The silpat released fairly easily it was a struggle to get them off the other sheet. I ended up trimming the dark edges offhand shaping them more or less into balls while they were still warm. The taste was okay warm, we’ll see how they taste tomorrow. Thanks for sharing something different.
Paul Cook
I have FIXED the crumbling/reshaping issue after trial and error. Simply add 1-2 tablespoons of flour (white/almond/etc) to your mix. It will help them stick without losing the oat-y texture of these great cookies. BTW, my grandmother started making these in the 50’s or 60’s, and always made them true to the recipe (with the odd vanilla extract batch). A few years ago I learned this recipe was published in Awake! magazine – my grandmother would save recipes from everywhere!
Cody Nunez
I have a newborn with food allergies so I am not able to eat wheat, dairy, soy, or nuts. This was a welcome dessert. The cookies are chewy and caramel-like when baked. I swapped vanilla for the almond extract and added a few soy-lecithin free chocolate chips. The hardest part was getting them off the cookie sheet. If cooled, they were stuck. If removed when warm, they broke apart and had to be reformed on the rack, but then were fairly solid when completely cooled. Tasty and I would make again.
Amber Blake
These are ok…They taste fine but do not hold together well. I had issues getting them off the greased non-stick pan. I don’t think I will make these again :S
Sydney Mathews
I have been searching for this recipe for years!! It is just like an oatmeal cookie at a famous Cheese Shop in La Jolla. I only made a few changes. I used peanut oil, vanilla extract, added 1/3 cup of toasted slivered almonds, and used rounded tablespoons of dough and baked them at 375 for 10-12 minutes. Thanks so much!
Teresa Webb
These were not that good. I had to make food for my social studies class, and everyone went for the sugar cookies and not one person went for these. They were okay, but only because they had a good amount of sugar in them. I wouldn’t make these again.

 

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