This is a simple recipe for old-fashioned chocolate chip cookies, which were then called chocolate drops. It’s from my first cookbook and is easy enough for young children to make.
This post is a bit of indulgence. I have a whole heap of posts that I need to write or publish. But rather unexpectedly, I was able to lay my hands on my first cookbook last night and couldn’t resist baking something from it this morning.
Claire at Foodie Quine is to blame for this little renaissance. She was rather excited to find a copy of her first cookbook recently and wrote a post about it highlighting a few other first cookbooks. As a consequence, she’s now hosting an event this month for bloggers to post about theirs.
My First Cookbook
It just so happens that Janice of Farmergirl Kitchen has the very same book as mine – My Learn to Cook Book: a children’s book for the kitchen by Ursula Sedgwick with fabulous and much loved illustrations by Martin Mayhew. We both still have our original copies, although mine resides at my mother’s. And coincidently, it was our respective great aunts that gifted us our books.
No sooner did I receive mine, as a Christmas present when I was eight, than I immediately set to and cooked my way through the entire book. I don’t think there’s a recipe there I didn’t attempt, although some with more success than others.
You can tell which recipes I used a lot by the copious staining on some pages. The page for zoo biscuits is almost completely blue from the food dye I used to paint the biscuits. Some recipes such as the chocolate mousse I carried on using well into my adulthood.
Some recipes are frankly, a little bizarre. The fruit fried sandwich, which is two slices of bread sandwiched together with bramble jelly and grated apple and then fried in butter is not something I find immediately appealing. On the other hand, I’ve just made some bramble jelly and I have a house full of apples. So watch this space.
What are your first cookbook memories? I’d love to hear them.
Chocolate Drops
A couple of years ago, I made crispy crackolates from the book for the first time in many a long year. This time, I decided to have a go at the Chocolate Drops – more commonly recognised nowadays as choc chip cookies.
My version is a little bit more sophisticated than the original. I used wholemeal spelt flour and Willie’s Venezuelan 72% chocolate drops for an added wow factor and because I’d just managed to get some on special offer. If you’re making these with kids, you may want to use milk chocolate drops instead.
Although the book gives fairly explicit instructions most of the time, it does let you down on occasion. I had no clue as to how many biscuits the mix was meant to make. As I was in a bit of a hurry and didn’t want to have to prepare more than one baking tray, I heaped mine up into 12 mounds which made for crispy edges and a chewy middle.
Sixteen would have made a better and flatter size, but you live and learn or at least that’s what you’re meant to do.
Other Chocolate Chip Cookies You Might Like
- Chewy apricot cookies with white chocolate chips
- Coffee chocolate chip cookies
- Malted choc chip cookies
- Oaty ginger chocolate chip cookies
- Peanut butter chocolate chip cookies
- Tiger nut chocolate chip cookies
Keep in Touch
Thanks for visiting Tin and Thyme. If you make these chocolate drops or have memories of your first cookbook, I’d love to hear about it in the comments below. And please rate the recipe. Have you any top tips? Do share photos on your preferred social media site and use the hashtag #tinandthyme, so I can spot them.
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Choclette x
Chocolate Drops – The Recipe
Chocolate Drops
Ingredients
- 2 oz unsalted butter
- 2 oz golden caster sugar
- 1 medium egg
- ¼ tsp vanilla extract
- 3 oz wholemeal spelt flour
- 1 pinch sea salt
- 2 oz dark chocolate drops or chopped chocolate (I used 72%)
Instructions
- Cream the butter together with the sugar until light and fluffy.2 oz unsalted butter, 2 oz golden caster sugar
- Beat in the egg and vanilla extract until combined.1 medium egg, ¼ tsp vanilla extract
- Sift in the flour and salt, then stir until just combined.3 oz wholemeal spelt flour, 1 pinch sea salt
- Stir in the chocolate drops.2 oz dark chocolate drops
- Spoon heaped teaspoonfuls onto a line baking tray to make 12 mounds
- Bake at 180℃ (350℉, Gas 4) for 12 minutes until brown around the edges and golden on top.
Penny says
I had this cook book when I was about 8 and I still make the chocolate drops. In my opinion one of the best cookie recipes around and they rival the beautiful Bens Cookies found in London and Bath. Soft and delicious. It’s lovely that others remember the book xx
Choclette says
Oh how splendid, you have made me smile. I do so every time I think of that cookbook and I love to hear that others have fond memories of it too. It’s been a long time since I made those chocolate drops, so I think I’d better get on and make some more.
Shelley Edwards says
This was my first cookbook, I was 8/9 in1967/8! A gift from my aunt and uncle! Does this copy have a Swiss roll recipe?
Choclette says
I’ve come across so many people who say it was an aunt who gave them this, there first cookbook. Such a great gift for a child. I really loved it. My copy is residing with my mother at the moment, so I can’t check it, but I don’t remember a Swiss roll.
charlotte@divinechocolate.com says
Aaah what a blast from the past – I remember that book so well!
Choclette says
Oh lovely, another one. I think we ought to start a club 😉
Ruth Ellis says
Mine was the Usborne First Cookbook – the one with the tiny chef army being hoisted into place to stir, mix, grate etc.
I LOVED it. I used to sit and imaging making all the recipes (and I did make a fair few). I also used to spend hours leafing through my Mum’s proper grown up cook books. I think Mum still has my original at home…
Choclette says
Oh go get it Ruth and bake something for a real nostalgic trip down memory lane.
What Kate Baked says
Lovely post that has bought lots of great memories of my own first experiments in the kitchen, thanks to the Usborne ‘My First Cookbook’ book!
Choclette says
Do you still have it Kate? I think these books have a lot to answer for and have made us all baking mad.
Janice Pattie says
You were obviously a lot more dedicated and industrious than me! I used to look at the pictures and dream of Baked Alaska, oh come to think of it, nothing much has changed, I still read cookbooks more than I actually cook from them. Lovely to see your copy is still around too, I think we probably kept it as it was such a beautiful book.
Choclette says
I think I kept it, because I’m rubbish at throwing things out, but it is a lovely book and the illustrations are fantastic. Do you mean to say, you never attempted that Baked Alaska Janice?
Kath says
Oh how lovely. What a great book.
Choclette says
I don’t know if it was a great book Kath, but it was a much loved and a much used book.
anna @ annamayeveryday says
I too have this book and the follow up My Fun to Cook Book – they are fabulous and I loved them dearly as a child (still do). Many of my first cooking attempts were from these books!
Choclette says
Lovely to hear this Anna. I have a feeling I might also have My Fun to Cook Book too> I will have to do some investigating.
Galina Varese says
I didn’t have a specific children’s cook book as a kid, but loved my Mum’s well-used cooking encyclopedia. I know Mum still keeps it, though it has lost the front cover many years ago.
Choclette says
Good to hear your first cookbook is still in use Galina and the fact it has lost it’s front cover shows how well used it is, which is the best compliment you can pay a book. I guess you don’t get to see it very often.
hungryhinny.com says
Love the idea of going back and baking from your first ever cookbook – although it sounds like quite an odd one!
When I was very young I baked from my mum’s books, but I think the first one I had that was properly mine was Roald Dahl’s Revolting Recipes which was brilliant – I might need to get another copy to have another go at Mr Twit’s beard food…
Choclette says
But not as odd as Mr Twit’s beard food. I think you should definitely find a copy and make this Nat – whatever it is!!!
hungryhinny.com says
I googled it, apparently it involves mashed potato, hard boiled eggs, mushrooms, hotdogs and a load of other random ingredients! I’m not too tempted, have to be honest… Bruce Bogtrotter’s chocolate on the other hand, that could be worth revisiting!
Choclette says
Hmm, OK, maybe not then 😉
Johanna GGG says
What a cute cookbook – I love the cat and dog on the cover and I love that they are called chocolate drops rather than choc chip cookies. Sadly I don’t remember having cookbooks when I was young – I can’t think where our recipes came from – probably my mum’s cookbooks or the women’s weekly
Choclette says
The illustrations are great in this book and the dog and cat appear regularly throughout. Sorry you didn’t get ot have your own cookbook as a child, I was so proud to have my very own one. Something to think about for Sylvia.
Gloria Baker says
this cookbook look sweet and beautiful!!
Choclette says
Thank you Gloria. I think it would be just as useful today as it was way back then!
Susan Lindquist says
Going back to one’s cooking roots and that first cook book is such a trip down memory lane isn’t it ?! My first cookbook was Betty Crocker’s … and I still use it!
Choclette says
That’s so good to hear you are still using your first cookbook Susan. I really must dig out my first “adult” cookbook.
Baking Addict says
That looks like a good first cookbook. I read a lot of books growing up but didn’t have a cookbook like this. The recipes sound great and these chocolate drops look delicious!
Choclette says
Thanks Ros. It felt very grown up to have my own cookbook.
Rachel Cotterill says
I recently gave my first recipe book to a friend’s daughter. I can only hope she learns to love cooking as much as I did by it 🙂
Choclette says
The book obviously has good karma Rachel, so fingers crossed.
Alida says
Sweet! So nice to get children into baking! Looks like a nice and cute book!
Choclette says
Thanks Alida – getting kids interested in cooking is so important.
Foodycat says
My first cookbook was My Fairytale Cookbook, which had stories and then recipes (apparently Sleeping Beauty ate crisps and dip when she woke up…) but I can’t remember making any of the dishes!
Choclette says
You mean you didn’t make loads of gingerbread houses?
Christian Halfmann says
Hm, lovely. My first cookbook doesn’t look that good anymore, although it is not that old … I dare say. It’s about Mexican food.
Choclette says
But what a great first cookbook to have. I love Mexican food. Do you still use it Chris?
vohnmcg.com says
I think I must have had this book too at some point ’cause I vividly remember making apple & bramble jelly fried sandwiches! I my head, 30 years on, they taste great – I might just give them a go again! Vohn x
Choclette says
Haha, great stuff Vohn. Let me know how you get on and whether it’s worth me having a go 😉