
I made you a cookie with sugar and sea salt inside. And butter: lots and lots of butter. I made you a cookie with egg wash and black and white sesame seeds on top. I made you a cookie you can eat with coffee or a cocktail, with olives or ice cream.
I made you a very confusing cookie. But a delicious cookie, too.

(I know it’s hard for you to believe I exercised any prior restraint in whether or not I should make cookies, by the way, as I have waxed poetic before about my love for them. But I obviously went ahead and made them, so that makes it Willpower: 0, Cookies: 7,632. And counting. I’m especially hopeless against these snickerdoodle cookies.)
I would show you how I made the dough for these cookies, divided it into discs, rolled out the discs and froze them, but it was all sorts of boring to look at so I figured I’d better not bother you with it. So we’ll start here, which is closer to the good stuff. And by good stuff, I mean the eating. Natch.




I made you sweet and salty cookies, and they are so, so, so, so g– anyway, I think you’ll like them.

Adapted from Food & Wine
Yields: Anywhere between 1 dozen and 4 dozen cookies, depending on the size of your cookie cutter
Ingredients:
1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour
3/4 cup almond flour or almond meal
1/3 cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon fine sea salt
1 stick cold unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
1 egg, beaten
black and white sesame seeds for sprinkling
Directions:
In the bowl of a food processor, add flours, sugar and salt; pulse until combined. Add butter and pulse until coarse crumbs form. Slowly trickle water into spout while pulsing food processor, adding just enough water til a dough just begins to form. Remove dough from processor and knead a few times on counter top. Divide dough into two discs. Roll each disc between 2 pieces of wax paper into a 1/4-inch disc; place discs, still covered by wax paper, on a baking sheet. Freeze dough until firm, about 1 hour.
Heat oven to 350 degrees F. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper or silicone mats. Using a 1 1/2-inch round cookie cutter (or whatever size you have, though obviously the larger the cookie cutter, the fewer cookies), cut dough into small round discs. Place discs about 1 inch apart on prepared baking sheets. Brush tops with egg wash, then sprinkle liberally with sesame seeds.
Bake cookies until lightly browned, about 15-20 minutes, rotating halfway through. Let cool on baking sheet 3 minutes, then transfer to a cooling rack to cool completely.




Oh the deliciousness! (And the gorgeous photos!)
WOW! This looks and sounds amazing. And looks pretty easy to make! Never thought of the sesame seeds on cookies.
Joanne — It’s one of the few things I’ve pinned and actually made, haha, and it was worth the lack of willpower. You should definitely try them! ๐
I have these pinterest-ed also and can’t believe I’ve exercised any willpower in making them either. I love all things sweet, salty and sesame though…so these need to be in my life.
Ashley — True story! ๐ Thanks so much, dear!
Confusing cookies are still COOKIES! And yours look like perfection, Stephanie! I’m in.
Miyafoodblog — YES. Cheese + wine + cookies = best meal ever.
Fawn — Totally agreed. ๐ Thanks for the comment!
Ali — Thanks! Trade you your sweet and salty pretzel nachos for these sweet and salty cookies. ๐
Georgia — Aw, thank you so much!