I'm very grateful to this guy for always having captions on his videos. As someone with issues with audio processing it helps me a lot. I think all video creators who write scripts should feel morally obligated- if not want to- just take the minute to convert those into captions for their vids. I only have minimal issues and I can manage without but having captions opens up your creations to a far wider audience that includes those that are deaf/HOH, don't have english as a first language and find it easier to read, etc. Thank you!
Yes! Too many creators naively go “aren’t there automated ones for that?”, seemingly not realising they’re not truly fit for purpose (even though laughing at wrong ones also seems fairly common among the crowd who seem to think they should be fine? Which… is an odd thing.)
I cannot believe I never realized that these were just cakes 😂. These were my absolute favorite "cookies" growing up and it was such a treat getting these from my local bakery or bagel shop. So enjoyed this video :)
Someone has probably said this before....but you can add almond extract to the white icing to give it a flavour beyond just tasting like "sugar". It is colourless, so the icing will remain white. Also McCormick's makes a colourless vanilla extract. That will also work. I use it when I want things to have that special commercial bakery/packaged baked goods taste most of us have gotten used to from buying cakes and cookies.
In Upstate NY we have a version of this called Half Moon cookies with more of a buttecream white frosting, and usually a fluffier chocolate cake cookie. I'm not used to Adam's version but I'll give it a try.
Hi Adam. I just wanted to say you’ve inspired me to get into cooking. I wasn’t incompetent before but now I try new things and I can make a few recipes that I think are better than restaurants. Thanks for keeping your videos informative and I hope you and your family have a great day!
Whenever you taste raw dough, you mention the raw eggs being a health risk that you're taking, but the raw flour is just as much if not more of a health risk as the eggs. See the FDA guidance on flour as a raw product that may have been exposed to Salmonella or E.Coli.
I've read you can just microwave the flour for raw use, but I'd love to hear actual science summarized in an easily digestible form. Seems like a great topic for a youtube video :)
Yeah, couple years ago I was out of work for almost a week when that King Arthur contamination happened. Didn't know about it til after I already got sick and went looking for information on why.
@@catmeat2059 most people treat the flour by evenly dispersing it across a tray and putting it in the oven, the microwave might not heat the flour evenly as it doesn't contain any fluid
I can see the risk of e.coli being a real thing, but I can't seen to find data that it's *more* of a problem than salmonella. Something like 2-4x more people get sick and die from salmonella than e-coli, but I hadn't considered salmonella-contaminated flour.
Jerry: You see, Elaine, the key to eating a black and white cookie is that you wanna get some black and some white in each bite. Nothing mixes better than vanilla and chocolate. And yet still somehow racial harmony eludes us. If people would only look to the cookie, all our problems would be solved.
Clouds of any powders are highly combustible. I remember asking my father about that way back when Are You Afraid of the Dark was airing and they throw the sawdust on the fire and it flares up. While that could have just as easily been a special effect, throwing saw dust on a fire would yield that flare. It’s crazy that noncombustible materials can act like they are if the elements are right.
“I’ll give it a taste, the raw eggs being a minor health risk, you do you.” Best badass yet responsible comment/directive from a recipe giver I’ve heard in quite some time. Respect.
I too grew up in NY on these. I’ve searched for the best recipe and I’ve now found it! I skipped the lemon and used almond extract and memories of me riding my banana seat bike down to Hemstroughts bakery came flooding in. Excellent!
Useful sticky trick for parchment paper. Spray or lightly dab some oil on the pan before applying the parchment to keep it from sliding around. Just one large X across the pan will suffice.
I made these! A little labor intensive to ice, as my icing was very viscous and tough to spread, even after adding more liquid than suggested. But the cookies look and taste great!
The ones I get from Publix here in Florida are my favorites so far, the ones from too jays are way too dark, also Publix covered the whole cake in white, then cover the other side in black, it helps even out the dark chocolate I think, great video thank you
Hi Adam, I had my first black and white cookie on Long Island over the summer and been craving more ever since. Thank you for posting a recipe definitely giving it a try.
These look thoroughly authentic, at least to the type I see in just about any bakery for ages. For me, though, I grew up almost always seeing them done with chocolate cookies. The yellow cake version came along later, but now it’s the only kind I ever see. Not sure if it was a regional variant or not (upstate NY), but I haven’t had the chocolate version now for decades. I would imagine some adjusting would be needed to get the right consistency while adding a fair amount of powder into the batter, though.
For dense cake batter, like this you can pretty reliable swap 1:1 flour for cocoa. If still say experiment, but a quarter to a third of the flour would be a good place to start
I’m so glad to see you mixing the butter and sugar. I never knew just what it’s supposed to look like and now I do. Good idea with using a narrow bowl. Thanks!!!
FINALLY someone who knows the difference between frostings and icings! Icings are harder, usually denser, and "drier" that's used for cookies generally while frostings are light, rich, and moist things for putting on top of cakes.
I imagine that cake cookie recipe (without the icing) working quite well to make Jaffa cakes; just spread a layer of orange marmalade over the top and then cover with chocolate. Also reminds me a bit of Dutch "roze koeken" (literally: pink cakes) which are small cakes with pink icing (or sometimes orange icing when there's something relating to either the Dutch monarchy or Dutch national sports teams to celebrate), although those cakes are typically bakes in moulds. The shape (at least before flipping them over and icing them) also reminds me of Dutch "eierkoeken" (literally egg cakes) but those are usually a lot more fluffy and don't have any icing.
Almond extract is an underrated spice in baking. It elevates and creates more complex flavors just by adding a little bit. Pro-tip to the reader: add a 1/4tsp to your next banana bread loaf!
i agree however since it's a liquid i wouldn't call it a spice however i am but a teen procrastinating on homework who decided to be pedantic in a youtube comments section so feel free to just ignore what i say
When I was little, I would always get these from a local bakery. I loved them. The bakery closed and ever since I've bought them any time I found a new one hoping it would measure up to my memories of that cookie. They never have. This has. I tried the recipe. Thank you. You fulfilled a years long mission.
I'm not a fan of chocolate in large quantities. I've always wanted to make/try a black and white cookie that's all white with a little drizzling of chocolate on top.
My girlfriend's been really getting into the christmas spirit lately, so we tried a variation on this with red icing flavored with ginger and cinnamon + green icing flavored with peppermint extract. They turned out great and i think I'll be doing this every holiday from here on
I'm from Utica and we have our version which is called a Half-Moon! When ever I see these online I always get excited because, I think they're talking about my hometown lol
I'm glad you clarified these are made with cake batter. A local restaurant sells some of these but I didn't know what they were. The first one I got I just pointed at one the counter, and as I ate it I realized it was just hard cake. So the second time I asked for a "tiny cake" and the person at the counter looked really confused.
I just wish to share my appreciation with you and how you run your channel thank you for putting the recipe in the description and not on a website separate that I need to visit to see makes it easy to screenshot for later use cheers
I'm only now finding out these are different to what we call black and white buiscuits/tarts or neenish tarts in Australia. The Australian things look the same from the top but they're a dense pastry shaped to be a tiny tart with custard (I think, its some kind of creamy vanilla stuff) and usually also jam. Watching Seinfeld i presumed they were the same thing, intresting how both countries ended up with a different desert with the whole black and white icing thing (i've seen black and pink and black and yellow ones before too but black and white is most common)
You mentioned the raw eggs when tasting the batter, but it's more the raw flour that is a real health risk of eating any raw batters or doughs. EDIT: After further review, I'd like to clarify that raw eggs are more of a risk than raw flour, but raw flour should also be considered as a possible risk, as it does have the potential to contain E. Coli.
While raw flour is also risky, I’m unaware of any research indicating that it’s more risky than raw egg. Got a study? CDC has only two documented E. coli outbreaks traced to raw flour.
@@aragusea I appear to be mistaken. Originally, I thought I heard this from a youtube video by ChubbyEmu, who I know does his research, but upon further review that can't be the case. I apologize for the confusion, I will make an edit to my comment as to not mislead anyone.
This is hilarious. Being from Canada I've never heard of black-and-white cookies until about a week ago when I was watching Seinfeld reruns from over 20 years ago and they talk about black and white cookies. Bizarre.🤣
Flour and cornstarch are flammable when dispersed. A good way to disperse particulates is a fire extinguisher. You can make a fire extinguisher flamethrower. The Hacksmith did this in their Hackalorian suit
2:38 the risk from uncooked flour is higher than from uncooked egg. with eggs you typically only have to worry about salmonella, while flour can harbor a much wider range of bacteria
I had a random idea for a week's worth of videos for you. Your informational video will be about how andy why there are so many versions of adobo when they are all different (The spice blend vs the liquid that canned chipotles are stored in vs the filipino dish), then you can make Filipino adobo!!!!! if you never had it it is tasty stuff
The grocery store I work at gets pastries from a place that makes black and white cookies, I really like them because of their cakey texture, but another reason I like them is the chocolate side is undeniably Pillsbury chocolate frosting that you'd get in a container which I already enjoy.
What a beautiful cakie! Makes me want to assemble these. With Christmas on the way, I see a variation with red, green, and white icing in stripes - kind of a candy cane thing. Hope that's not a completely scandalous idea.
Adam, a co-worker of mine told me these cookies come from New York Jewish communities, could you explore that for me? I thought it was really cool when he told me, and when I told him I have Jewish Heritage he shared one of his B&W Cookies with me! Thank you for the Recipe!
Most things in New York were either brought by Jews from the old country, invented by Jews born in NY or in the case of Chinese food, enjoyed by generations of Jews. Even if it wasn’t invented by the Jewish, (we’ll probably never know for sure) enough east end bakeries and bagel shops have them that it’s inseparable from the culture.
I've seen that at every Saturday service brunch spread. Supposedly they were invented in the early 1900s in New York City, which at the time was 25-30% Jewish. Wouldn't surprise me if Jewish communities just liked the cookies so much they're made often enough it's associated with them
In Australia we have a tart that has a black and white cookie icing pattern called a Neenish Tart, which is basically just that but filled with cream that is filled with gelatine set cream and a thin layer of raspberry jam
7:50 "Now the hardest part: Let that set overnight" *ANGRY LAUREN NOISES* ...and also dealing with the fact that these cookies turn your wife into a combination Cookie Monster and Tazmanian Devil.
Have you ever considered doing an episode on the environmental impacts of Greek yogurt? A friend of mine told me about it and apparently the process of making it creates a lot of acidic whey that's terrible for aquifers and waterways. It sounds like just the kind of food-based issue that would benefit from your journalistic and scientific rigor.
Followed the recipe yesterday, it turned out great! Thank you! The only comment I can make is the quantity of powdered sugar... 6 cups??? I think 3 is more than enough. I had a huge quantity left once the icing was done. I used a 1/3 cup instead of a 1/2 for scooping the dough into dollops, made 10 of them that way.
I’m sorry you’re missing out. I quite like Magic Spoon, but I hope they can find a way to reduce the price a little bit without making the product inferior to what it is now. Right now, I like the cereal a lot, particularly the blueberry and chocolate flavors.
I tried it. Wasn't my thing. While they were sort of similar to traditional cereals they have a funky taste (I assume which comes from the sugar substitute). One of those things you either love or hate. I ended up throwing most of it out.
Up until the eighties, these were made with hartshorn salt (ammonium carbonate) as the leavener. They are known as "Amerikaner" (Americans) in German. Hartshorn salt gives them a distinctive taste that is missing from the modern version. The name "Amerikaner" gradually morphed from the original German name, "Ammonikaner", which indicated that "Ammoniak" (ammonia) was used in the preparation.
Hey Adam on my last trip to the US I was surprised about how no one knew about blackcurrants. Despite it being hugely popular here in the UK (basically, any sweets/flavouring that's purple in colour is almost always blackcurrant. Grape flavour just isn't popular here.) I did some quick research and apparently, it's banned? like, blackcurrants are illegal in the US? Have you got any more info on this topic?
Apparently it’s because the blackcurrant plant commonly hosted a fungus that had the capability to wipe out almost the entire population of pine trees in North America. There was only a small chance of that happening, but no one in charge wanted to take the risk.
Blackcurrant! I love it in the imported foods I sometimes find here in New York. First noticed when I vacationed in London that blackcurrant flavoring takes the place of the super common American “blue raspberry” flavor which obviously isn’t a real fruit but a marketing invention for the harmful BLUE food coloring we consume here. Blue coloring is banned in the UK yet we allow it here in the US. If one major government realizes the harm a food product can do and bans it, all others should do the same. I go out of my way to avoid (specifically) blue food dye now.
Flour dust can cause explosions even! Every so often you hear of a mill or a big bakery exploding because of a flour accident. Doesn't happen as much as it used to, but it still occurs!
If I'm not mistaken here in Poland we call them Amerykanki and it translated into "American women" and they are usually just with the classic white icing.
gonna try these out today - got excited because this is one of the only recipe’s I’ve found that specifies crispy icing - the hallmark of a black and white cookie from home for me (from LI). I’m gonna try doing half with the crispy white icing, and half with melted dark chocolate, because a bakery nearby me does that. Thanks!
The large pound-cake like cookie makes me wistful for PA Dutch Sugar Cakes which can be eaten as is or used to make Whoopie Pies - two sugar cakes (curved sides out) with sweet creme between.
You see, Elaine, the key to eating a black and white cookie is that you wanna get some black and some white in each bite. Nothing mixes better than vanilla and chocolate. And yet still somehow racial harmony eludes us. If people would only look to the cookie, all our problems would be solved.
I've heard the last few years that raw flour is of more concern than raw eggs when it comes to eating raw dough/batter, but I don't know how true that is. Have you done any research on this? Might make for an interesting video to go over risk stats of eating raw baking ingredients; eggs, flour, potentially rancid oil (check your oil before you use it, people), others? Personally, I still eat raw batters and doughs without hesitation.
Hello fellow Long Islander! I just found your channel. I never thought of black and white cookies as cake, but it makes total sense. Also my favorite side has always been the chocolate icing.
I finally took the time to try out this recipe. Had to have watched the video thirty times. They are in the oven and im hoping for the best. I forgot to add salt, and the texture was a bit off before adding the flour. Hopefully they will be ok without a convection setting.
My mom used to make these for me when I was a kid…I haven’t had one since in five years, but this video shook my memory! So thank you, Adam.
OmicronGaming
for some reason you've commented on every single video I've watched.
didn't know you watched adam this is a pleasant surprise
OmicronGaming
minecraft gamer man
funny anecdote: in Germany we call these cookies "Amerikaner" wich simply translates to 'American'
Yeah, you get them here in every bakery lel
In my country we call them Michael Jackson cookies because of that " Black or White " song of his.
damn, seems like I was late^^ just posted nearly the same comment a minute ago ^^
LMAO
Ich bin ein Jelly Doughnut
I'm very grateful to this guy for always having captions on his videos. As someone with issues with audio processing it helps me a lot. I think all video creators who write scripts should feel morally obligated- if not want to- just take the minute to convert those into captions for their vids. I only have minimal issues and I can manage without but having captions opens up your creations to a far wider audience that includes those that are deaf/HOH, don't have english as a first language and find it easier to read, etc. Thank you!
I've always had issues with spoken English compared to written English since it's not my first language so i agree
Yes! Too many creators naively go “aren’t there automated ones for that?”, seemingly not realising they’re not truly fit for purpose (even though laughing at wrong ones also seems fairly common among the crowd who seem to think they should be fine? Which… is an odd thing.)
I cannot believe I never realized that these were just cakes 😂. These were my absolute favorite "cookies" growing up and it was such a treat getting these from my local bakery or bagel shop. So enjoyed this video :)
send location of bakery must buy
Seeing that you watch Adam Ragusea is a cool combination of my strange interests xD
@@yoderiate7472
Patsy’s Bakery in Lindenhurst, on Long Island was where I had them growing up. So good.
Replace the icing with buttercream frosting and ganache and you'll have Half Moons! A Central New York staple.
Also gotta have the dense chocolate base for those!
@@Numaria828 I'm a heathen, I like the white bottom ones. But yes, good point, chocolate is the standard!
Aren't staples HARD to EAT?
@@DMSProduktions not if you're used to paperclips
@@paulanhalt3609 Project?
Someone has probably said this before....but you can add almond extract to the white icing to give it a flavour beyond just tasting like "sugar". It is colourless, so the icing will remain white.
Also McCormick's makes a colourless vanilla extract. That will also work. I use it when I want things to have that special commercial bakery/packaged baked goods taste most of us have gotten used to from buying cakes and cookies.
"Hey did you know that clouds of flour are highly combustible? It's true look it up" this is why I love your channel.
I learned this from Goblin Slayer.
great mythbusters video on this
Also, clouds of pretty much any fine powder. Also not great if you're breathing it in for an extended period of time.
@@Butter_Warrior99 i learned it from black butler lmao
@@finnianheart
I learned it from Baki. WHY ARE ALL THESE ANIME MAKING FLOUR BOMBS
In Upstate NY we have a version of this called Half Moon cookies with more of a buttecream white frosting, and usually a fluffier chocolate cake cookie. I'm not used to Adam's version but I'll give it a try.
My mom makes cookies exactly as you describe (and same name) in new england too. Has for 30+ years
@@Cambone13 makes sense. They are pretty similar to whoopie pies (which are also incredible)
chocolate and vanilla cake cookies!! the variety packs are always a hit
Oddly my wife calls these that Adam makes Half Moon.
You guys do everything differently up there. Lol
Hi Adam. I just wanted to say you’ve inspired me to get into cooking. I wasn’t incompetent before but now I try new things and I can make a few recipes that I think are better than restaurants. Thanks for keeping your videos informative and I hope you and your family have a great day!
I agree, thanks Adam, you’re the best!
Whenever you taste raw dough, you mention the raw eggs being a health risk that you're taking, but the raw flour is just as much if not more of a health risk as the eggs. See the FDA guidance on flour as a raw product that may have been exposed to Salmonella or E.Coli.
I've read you can just microwave the flour for raw use, but I'd love to hear actual science summarized in an easily digestible form. Seems like a great topic for a youtube video :)
You do you.
Yeah, couple years ago I was out of work for almost a week when that King Arthur contamination happened. Didn't know about it til after I already got sick and went looking for information on why.
@@catmeat2059 most people treat the flour by evenly dispersing it across a tray and putting it in the oven, the microwave might not heat the flour evenly as it doesn't contain any fluid
I can see the risk of e.coli being a real thing, but I can't seen to find data that it's *more* of a problem than salmonella. Something like 2-4x more people get sick and die from salmonella than e-coli, but I hadn't considered salmonella-contaminated flour.
Jerry:
You see, Elaine, the key to eating a black and white cookie is that you wanna get some black and some white in each bite. Nothing mixes better than vanilla and chocolate. And yet still somehow racial harmony eludes us. If people would only look to the cookie, all our problems would be solved.
LOOK TO THE COOKIE, ELAINE.
No joke. I'm watching this very episode while writing this comment
That's why binging with babish also did this cookie
If this wasn't the top comment...then what are we even doing here?
@@spicerack4397 Da fuq?
Lauren's reaction is the most relatable ever
Reminds me of whenever Claire Saffitz apologizes before telling you to let your prepared cookie dough sit overnight before baking lol
Just made these and they were excellent. My wife said they were the best dessert I’ve ever made. That’s saying a lot since I cook quite often.
I dig it! You can also frost the whole thing with white first, then top half with chocolate for even more icing goodness.
Being from LI I remember about half of the bakeries having a layer of white icing under the chocolate side.
This is correct
Clouds of any powders are highly combustible. I remember asking my father about that way back when Are You Afraid of the Dark was airing and they throw the sawdust on the fire and it flares up. While that could have just as easily been a special effect, throwing saw dust on a fire would yield that flare. It’s crazy that noncombustible materials can act like they are if the elements are right.
but....wood is already combustible.
@@ForeverMasterless It’s combustible, but not explosive. Throwing a solid piece of wood on a fire would not immediately light.
Metal powder is another example of this. Different types of metal yield different colours when burned and that's how colourful fire works are made
@@nahometesfay1112 big fan of copper and boron and their green flames
@@feeeshmeister4311 you beat me to it, I was going to say literally just about the same thing.
My entire extended family is from Syracuse and Utica, so this was a treat see. My grandma uses mayo where you use sour cream
“I’ll give it a taste, the raw eggs being a minor health risk, you do you.” Best badass yet responsible comment/directive from a recipe giver I’ve heard in quite some time. Respect.
Look to the cookie Elaine! Look to the cookie...
I too grew up in NY on these. I’ve searched for the best recipe and I’ve now found it! I skipped the lemon and used almond extract and memories of me riding my banana seat bike down to Hemstroughts bakery came flooding in. Excellent!
Useful sticky trick for parchment paper. Spray or lightly dab some oil on the pan before applying the parchment to keep it from sliding around. Just one large X across the pan will suffice.
I made these! A little labor intensive to ice, as my icing was very viscous and tough to spread, even after adding more liquid than suggested. But the cookies look and taste great!
The ones I get from Publix here in Florida are my favorites so far, the ones from too jays are way too dark, also Publix covered the whole cake in white, then cover the other side in black, it helps even out the dark chocolate I think, great video thank you
Hi Adam,
I had my first black and white cookie on Long Island over the summer and been craving more ever since. Thank you for posting a recipe definitely giving it a try.
These look thoroughly authentic, at least to the type I see in just about any bakery for ages. For me, though, I grew up almost always seeing them done with chocolate cookies. The yellow cake version came along later, but now it’s the only kind I ever see. Not sure if it was a regional variant or not (upstate NY), but I haven’t had the chocolate version now for decades. I would imagine some adjusting would be needed to get the right consistency while adding a fair amount of powder into the batter, though.
For dense cake batter, like this you can pretty reliable swap 1:1 flour for cocoa. If still say experiment, but a quarter to a third of the flour would be a good place to start
I’m so glad to see you mixing the butter and sugar. I never knew just what it’s supposed to look like and now I do. Good idea with using a narrow bowl. Thanks!!!
I’ve never heard of these kind of cookies, but they look so tasty!!
FINALLY someone who knows the difference between frostings and icings! Icings are harder, usually denser, and "drier" that's used for cookies generally while frostings are light, rich, and moist things for putting on top of cakes.
I imagine that cake cookie recipe (without the icing) working quite well to make Jaffa cakes; just spread a layer of orange marmalade over the top and then cover with chocolate.
Also reminds me a bit of Dutch "roze koeken" (literally: pink cakes) which are small cakes with pink icing (or sometimes orange icing when there's something relating to either the Dutch monarchy or Dutch national sports teams to celebrate), although those cakes are typically bakes in moulds.
The shape (at least before flipping them over and icing them) also reminds me of Dutch "eierkoeken" (literally egg cakes) but those are usually a lot more fluffy and don't have any icing.
I am testing out your theory about the Jaffa cakes but I am not sure there will be any cookies left by the time I am ready for the jelly
@@spotter623 if you do manage to complete one, let me know how it went
Used your recipe and the cookies came out Amazing!!! Thanks!
"I would not bother doing this without a power tool of some kind"
Ok, where's my jackhammer?
A very distant Tim Allen: Auegh
Right next to the chainsaw and circular saw maybe? That’s where I keep mine. It’s right beside the pepper mill.
black and whites are my favorite seasonal food
Almond extract is an underrated spice in baking. It elevates and creates more complex flavors just by adding a little bit. Pro-tip to the reader: add a 1/4tsp to your next banana bread loaf!
i agree however since it's a liquid i wouldn't call it a spice
however i am but a teen procrastinating on homework who decided to be pedantic in a youtube comments section so feel free to just ignore what i say
When I was little, I would always get these from a local bakery. I loved them. The bakery closed and ever since I've bought them any time I found a new one hoping it would measure up to my memories of that cookie. They never have. This has. I tried the recipe. Thank you. You fulfilled a years long mission.
I'm not a fan of chocolate in large quantities. I've always wanted to make/try a black and white cookie that's all white with a little drizzling of chocolate on top.
My girlfriend's been really getting into the christmas spirit lately, so we tried a variation on this with red icing flavored with ginger and cinnamon + green icing flavored with peppermint extract. They turned out great and i think I'll be doing this every holiday from here on
Adam, you just gave me the dish I want to perfect as my signature dish.
I'm from Utica and we have our version which is called a Half-Moon! When ever I see these online I always get excited because, I think they're talking about my hometown lol
Look to the cookie Adam, look to the cookie…
I'm glad you clarified these are made with cake batter. A local restaurant sells some of these but I didn't know what they were. The first one I got I just pointed at one the counter, and as I ate it I realized it was just hard cake. So the second time I asked for a "tiny cake" and the person at the counter looked really confused.
Hey Adam! Gonna try to make these. My wife wanted to suggest making Baltimore Berger cookies, they look pretty similar
I just wish to share my appreciation with you and how you run your channel thank you for putting the recipe in the description and not on a website separate that I need to visit to see makes it easy to screenshot for later use cheers
I'm only now finding out these are different to what we call black and white buiscuits/tarts or neenish tarts in Australia. The Australian things look the same from the top but they're a dense pastry shaped to be a tiny tart with custard (I think, its some kind of creamy vanilla stuff) and usually also jam. Watching Seinfeld i presumed they were the same thing, intresting how both countries ended up with a different desert with the whole black and white icing thing (i've seen black and pink and black and yellow ones before too but black and white is most common)
As a Jew and a Vinegar Legate, I’ve been loving the recent recipes for Jewish foods!! Hope everyone is looking forward to Hanukkah next week!
Squarespace, Skill share, and Magic Spoon are now the king sponsors for Adam
Also Fetch
My (late) 4 grandparents were all from Brooklyn. I remember these cookies fondly. Thank you!
THANK YOU! Love Black & White Cookies and you made it look as if I could do it!
Honestly I’ve never heard of these but they look so tasty. I gotta try to make these.
You mentioned the raw eggs when tasting the batter, but it's more the raw flour that is a real health risk of eating any raw batters or doughs.
EDIT: After further review, I'd like to clarify that raw eggs are more of a risk than raw flour, but raw flour should also be considered as a possible risk, as it does have the potential to contain E. Coli.
While raw flour is also risky, I’m unaware of any research indicating that it’s more risky than raw egg. Got a study? CDC has only two documented E. coli outbreaks traced to raw flour.
@@aragusea I appear to be mistaken. Originally, I thought I heard this from a youtube video by ChubbyEmu, who I know does his research, but upon further review that can't be the case. I apologize for the confusion, I will make an edit to my comment as to not mislead anyone.
You have no idea how many memories that brought back.
I miss having a good, tall, narrow bowl. They're so useful for hand mixing!!
My grandfather use to always buy these for me at the local bakery. I loved them so much!
This is hilarious. Being from Canada I've never heard of black-and-white cookies until about a week ago when I was watching Seinfeld reruns from over 20 years ago and they talk about black and white cookies. Bizarre.🤣
In Germany you can get them at almost any bakery and they are called “Americans” 😂 which is funny because they were invented by Germans in the US
Hahahahaha 🤣same here! I just watched that episode today and It was the first time I heard about those cookies.😁
same, never knew about the cookie, watched the episode like a week ago and there you go
OM goodness. I am making these today.
"I was proportionally much smaller at the time" lmfao
Flour and cornstarch are flammable when dispersed. A good way to disperse particulates is a fire extinguisher. You can make a fire extinguisher flamethrower. The Hacksmith did this in their Hackalorian suit
2:38 the risk from uncooked flour is higher than from uncooked egg. with eggs you typically only have to worry about salmonella, while flour can harbor a much wider range of bacteria
Basically all flour is considered to have salmonella, while its somewhat rare with eggs and raw chicken
I had a random idea for a week's worth of videos for you. Your informational video will be about how andy why there are so many versions of adobo when they are all different (The spice blend vs the liquid that canned chipotles are stored in vs the filipino dish), then you can make Filipino adobo!!!!! if you never had it it is tasty stuff
100% making these within the next week. All ingredients I already have at home!
Hey Adam! Can you do a video on Pumpkin Pie since Thanksgiving is next week.
pecan is better
The grocery store I work at gets pastries from a place that makes black and white cookies, I really like them because of their cakey texture, but another reason I like them is the chocolate side is undeniably Pillsbury chocolate frosting that you'd get in a container which I already enjoy.
"One is the only odd number allowed among baked goods!" Adam hasn't heard of a Bakers Dozen??
Adam's humor is great.
What a beautiful cakie! Makes me want to assemble these. With Christmas on the way, I see a variation with red, green, and white icing in stripes - kind of a candy cane thing. Hope that's not a completely scandalous idea.
Adam, a co-worker of mine told me these cookies come from New York Jewish communities, could you explore that for me? I thought it was really cool when he told me, and when I told him I have Jewish Heritage he shared one of his B&W Cookies with me! Thank you for the Recipe!
Most things in New York were either brought by Jews from the old country, invented by Jews born in NY or in the case of Chinese food, enjoyed by generations of Jews.
Even if it wasn’t invented by the Jewish, (we’ll probably never know for sure) enough east end bakeries and bagel shops have them that it’s inseparable from the culture.
I've seen that at every Saturday service brunch spread. Supposedly they were invented in the early 1900s in New York City, which at the time was 25-30% Jewish. Wouldn't surprise me if Jewish communities just liked the cookies so much they're made often enough it's associated with them
In Australia we have a tart that has a black and white cookie icing pattern called a Neenish Tart, which is basically just that but filled with cream that is filled with gelatine set cream and a thin layer of raspberry jam
i like how as germans we feel obliged to tell you that we call those amerikaner and love em here too x)
Last two seconds are a crazy good sound bite
7:50 "Now the hardest part: Let that set overnight" *ANGRY LAUREN NOISES* ...and also dealing with the fact that these cookies turn your wife into a combination Cookie Monster and Tazmanian Devil.
Man, I absolutely love your videos. The way you present it and the way you speak and everything... it's 100% my taste. Keep up the good work!
Have you ever considered doing an episode on the environmental impacts of Greek yogurt? A friend of mine told me about it and apparently the process of making it creates a lot of acidic whey that's terrible for aquifers and waterways. It sounds like just the kind of food-based issue that would benefit from your journalistic and scientific rigor.
“Clouds of flour are highly combustible “
Adam watches scishow confirmed
Or remembers that one scene in the 4th eragon book
Or mythbusters
@@werwolf1257well scishow just posted a video three days ago called 5 Weird Things that can Catch Fire
@@werwolf1257 clouds of nondairy creamer are even better
Maybe he played red dead redemption 2
Followed the recipe yesterday, it turned out great! Thank you!
The only comment I can make is the quantity of powdered sugar... 6 cups??? I think 3 is more than enough. I had a huge quantity left once the icing was done.
I used a 1/3 cup instead of a 1/2 for scooping the dough into dollops, made 10 of them that way.
i did 4cups of powdered sugar and had maybe a 1/4 cup left over 😅
I would totally like to try out “magic spoon” but they don’t ship to Europe (specifically Sweden in my case.
Same. It's why I always tend to ignore American sponsorships. They either dont ship, or do ship with expensive costs, or require a credit card.
Don’t worry, some people think they taste terrible, so you might not like it anyways
It's not worth it.
I’m sorry you’re missing out. I quite like Magic Spoon, but I hope they can find a way to reduce the price a little bit without making the product inferior to what it is now. Right now, I like the cereal a lot, particularly the blueberry and chocolate flavors.
I tried it. Wasn't my thing. While they were sort of similar to traditional cereals they have a funky taste (I assume which comes from the sugar substitute). One of those things you either love or hate. I ended up throwing most of it out.
Up until the eighties, these were made with hartshorn salt (ammonium carbonate) as the leavener. They are known as "Amerikaner" (Americans) in German. Hartshorn salt gives them a distinctive taste that is missing from the modern version. The name "Amerikaner" gradually morphed from the original German name, "Ammonikaner", which indicated that "Ammoniak" (ammonia) was used in the preparation.
Hey Adam on my last trip to the US I was surprised about how no one knew about blackcurrants. Despite it being hugely popular here in the UK (basically, any sweets/flavouring that's purple in colour is almost always blackcurrant. Grape flavour just isn't popular here.) I did some quick research and apparently, it's banned? like, blackcurrants are illegal in the US? Have you got any more info on this topic?
Apparently it’s because the blackcurrant plant commonly hosted a fungus that had the capability to wipe out almost the entire population of pine trees in North America. There was only a small chance of that happening, but no one in charge wanted to take the risk.
They are no longer illegal, but they aren't popular because most people didn't grow up eating them
Lofty pursuits had a video talking about that ua-cam.com/video/aF_aXsEor2s/v-deo.html
@@DavidZanter Yesssss, Lofty Pursuits is great!
Blackcurrant! I love it in the imported foods I sometimes find here in New York. First noticed when I vacationed in London that blackcurrant flavoring takes the place of the super common American “blue raspberry” flavor which obviously isn’t a real fruit but a marketing invention for the harmful BLUE food coloring we consume here. Blue coloring is banned in the UK yet we allow it here in the US. If one major government realizes the harm a food product can do and bans it, all others should do the same. I go out of my way to avoid (specifically) blue food dye now.
Good to know that Adam makes cereal the right way. CEREAL FIRST!!
As a Canadian I never knew these cookies are real, I always thought they were just a one off joke in Seinfeld
Yeah, they are real, and also really tasty. I recommend you try them
They're real. And they're spectacular!
Flour dust can cause explosions even! Every so often you hear of a mill or a big bakery exploding because of a flour accident. Doesn't happen as much as it used to, but it still occurs!
If I'm not mistaken here in Poland we call them Amerykanki and it translated into "American women" and they are usually just with the classic white icing.
Cant say I've seen them here at all, though "american cookies" I've seen were shortbread-y chocolate chip cookies
@@The_Yukki That's also true but maybe because I'm a baker I seen a lot of different cookies 😅
@@BTS_lovesweet yea, might be the case. I'm just a lay person
gonna try these out today - got excited because this is one of the only recipe’s I’ve found that specifies crispy icing - the hallmark of a black and white cookie from home for me (from LI). I’m gonna try doing half with the crispy white icing, and half with melted dark chocolate, because a bakery nearby me does that. Thanks!
Funfact: We call them "Amerikaner" (Americans) here in germany.
I found your original comment
I don't live anywhere near New York but I have them at a local deli and they're great!
"Hey, did you know clouds of flour are highly combustible?"
Yes, Adam. I too watch Sci-Show.
honestly i used to eat all the leftover cake batter when i was a kid so i think a taste is fine
I stopped watching a Season 5 episode of Seinfeld to watch this, just a few episodes after this cookie was unveiled.
He should do a chocolate and cinnamon babka
@@zhang6754 Another babka?
I bought a black and white cookie at the diner tonight because of you and this video. Great job Adam. Looks delicious!!
I've never understood the obsession with lemon in "new York style" desserts... I want lemon in a lemon dessert, not in other stuff though
I might use orange instead of lime, Orange and chocolate go together really well.
"Very thick, but still spreadable"
Adam gon make me act up 😩
grow up
The large pound-cake like cookie makes me wistful for PA Dutch Sugar Cakes which can be eaten as is or used to make Whoopie Pies - two sugar cakes (curved sides out) with sweet creme between.
I think that it's kind of funny that here, in germany, these things are called "Amerikaner" which translates to "americans".
Literally the best form of cookie to ever be devised-i gotta try this someday
You see, Elaine, the key to eating a black and white cookie is that you wanna get some black and some white in each bite. Nothing mixes better than vanilla and chocolate. And yet still somehow racial harmony eludes us. If people would only look to the cookie, all our problems would be solved.
Oh childhood, childhood.... I remember those so well :) Thank you :)
I've heard the last few years that raw flour is of more concern than raw eggs when it comes to eating raw dough/batter, but I don't know how true that is.
Have you done any research on this? Might make for an interesting video to go over risk stats of eating raw baking ingredients; eggs, flour, potentially rancid oil (check your oil before you use it, people), others?
Personally, I still eat raw batters and doughs without hesitation.
Hello fellow Long Islander! I just found your channel. I never thought of black and white cookies as cake, but it makes total sense. Also my favorite side has always been the chocolate icing.
A piping bag is a hassle but a ziplock bag with a hole cut in the corner is perfect for things like this!
Well, never have eaten black & white cookies before but that batch of cookies looks hella good
I finally took the time to try out this recipe. Had to have watched the video thirty times. They are in the oven and im hoping for the best. I forgot to add salt, and the texture was a bit off before adding the flour. Hopefully they will be ok without a convection setting.
Thank you for this video, these are my favorite dessert bedsides rainbow cookies.