This recipe is just the basic Toll House cookie with a couple modifications: soy yogurt for eggs and doubled-up brown sugar for an extra molasses chew that matches well with the butterscotch chips. Buttery pecans finish things off with a smooth crunch.

Butterscotch pecan cookies
2 1/4 cups whole wheat pastry flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup margarine, softened
1 1/2 cup lightly packed brown sugar
3 tbs. plain soy yogurt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 1/2 c. butterscotch chips
3/4 c. chopped pecans
Preheat oven to 375F. Line cookie sheets with parchment.
Whisk together the flour, baking soda, and salt, and set aside.
Cream the margarine and sugar together until slightly fluffy, then add the yogurt and vanilla and beat until combined. Slowly stir in the flour mixture, then once combined, stir in the chips and nuts.
Drop rounded tablespoons onto your prepared cookie sheets and use a dampened finger to flatten slightly. Bake for 8-10 minutes until just barely turning golden. Remove from oven and let cookies cool on the sheet for about 2 minutes, then slide the entire parchment sheet to a wire rack to cool completely.
Wow, what a kick-ass combo! I have a whole lot of these butterscotch chips kicking around and can't figure out what to do with them, so this might be a perfect solution...
ReplyDeleteYour cookies look good, I think I will make them w/ white chocolate chips as I have never seen butterscotch chips in Aust.
ReplyDeleteThese look fantastic!
ReplyDeleteI am really curious about those butterscotch chips and in this case I could do without the chocolate :D
these look so good and I've got some butterscotch chips just begging to be used in the cupboard.
ReplyDeleteMan, these sound good & I'm not even a pecan person!
ReplyDeletethese sound awesome! they look good too :D
ReplyDeletebutterscotch = childhood favorite... these look so delicious!
ReplyDeleteHey, who'd have thunk it? Just when I'm lamenting about how I wish I had access to Teese I come across this article telling me I can get vegan butterscotch chips at the Food Lion (it's a pretty pathetic grocery store but it's the only one in my teeny tiny town so in a pinch it works). I am definitely going to sacrifice my "no partially hydrogenated oils" rule for these cookies. Yum!
ReplyDeleteThis butterscotch chips looks so beautiful, I'm sure it'll be a big hit with the kids!Although I'm to a big fan of butterscotch chips, this sure looks yummy! I'm normally the one that will say no to butterscotch chips.
ReplyDeleteI just made these tonight because I wanted to use up the butterscotch chips and pecans I still had left over from desserts I made for Thanksgiving, and I was looking for something to take for Memorial Day weekend. I had french vanilla yogurt that I wanted to finish soon, so I used that instead of the plain yogurt and just didn't use vanilla. I didn't have whole wheat pastry flour, so I used two cups of whole wheat flour and 1/4 cup AP flour.
ReplyDeleteThese turned out delicious and smell so good! I tried one right out of the oven, and they're a little too rich for me, but I think that keeping them in the refrigerator and eating them cold might calm them down a little. However, if you love rich cookies and really love the taste of butterscotch, these are wonderful! Next time I might decrease the chips and increase the pecans.
Also, I'd be curious to know if anyone tried to cut down on the butter and use something else instead.
ReplyDelete