We all love Girl Scout cookies, right? I try to stay away from them or I'll a whole box at a time, but I love them all the same. Well so does one scout from Michigan, who actually broke sales records.
Jennifer Sharpe sold, I kid you not, 17, 328 boxes of cookies. That's a lot of Samoa's! I can't imagine selling even a fraction of that. Apparently, though, all that selling really helped Jennifer get over being shy. Not only that, the cookie sales (about $21,000) is paying for her troop to go to Europe this winter.
Just think about that next time you buy a box of Girl Scout cookies!
The Girl Scouts of America have a new cookie baker for some parts of the country and, in a business move stupider than New Coke, have renamed some of their best-sellers (Though, as some of our readers kindly point out , other parts of the country have the "new" names for ages).
In my neck of the woods, Samoas are now "Caramel DeLites," which sounds like the name of a dietetic candy old ladies buy at the Dollar Tree. Tagalongs are now "Peanut Butter Patties, Do-Si-Dohs are "Peanut Butter Sandwiches" and Trefoils are "Shortbread," names which suggest either a wildly subversive anti-consumerist campaign a la No Logo (Declare Independence from Corporate Cookie! We Don't Need No Name-Brand Baked Goods!) or a newly minted Robotic Cookie Namer down at Girl Scout HQ. All-Abouts (which was a weird name, I admit) are now "Thanks-a-Lots." Try saying that un-sarcastically.
In honor of my favorite GS cookie, I created this Samoa Cake - layers of génoise cake brushed with caramel simple syrup and spread them with alternating layers of chocolate caramel ganache frosting and soft salty caramel, then iced with more chocolate caramel ganache blanketed in toasted coconut flakes. It's tall, rich and incredibly sweet, half-cake, half-candy bar. Take that, Caramel DeLite!
Once a year the Girl Scouts are unleashed on the world and ask us if we want to buy some of their cookies. As if we could even try to exist without their shortbread and minty chocolate wafers.
My favorite has always been the Samoa. Chocolate and caramel and coconut...wow, I used to eat an entire box in one sitting. But then like all addicts I'd want more and want to sell anything I could just to get a few more in my mouth. What can a person do if they love Samoas and they vanish for another year?
When I was a Junior Girl Scout, the other girls sold box after box of Thin Mints, Do-si-Dos, and even those boring Trefoils, and received backpacks and beach towels and stuffed animals for their efforts.
...I sold twenty boxes and got a lousy iron-on patch.
Okay, so I'll never be an entrepreneur. That's okay. Doesn't mean I can't still enjoy the cookies, like the Samoas in Susan's unbelievably decadent recipe on her Sticky, Gooey, Creamy, Chewy blog.
Susan made some adjustments to her Chocolate Mascarpone Cheese Pie and came up with what she calls her Thank Heaven For Little Girl (Scout)s Samoa Cheese Tart, which sounds absolutely divine.
Susan's so nice, she buys cookies from all of the Scouts, but you technically only need one box of the Samoas, plus a few other things...
I supposed I should confess this now: during the 1990s, I had serious addiction.
Luckily, it wasn't to heroin, crack, or even cigarettes. But it was just as insidious. I had an addiction to Samoas. Those are the round-ish Girl Scout cookies that have toasted coconut and caramel, covered in chocolate (they're called Caramel deLites in some areas). Oh, I could easily - easily - polish off a whole box of these while watching TV. They're spectacular. I found a version that's pretty similar, from Little Debbie, called German Chocolate Rings, but my local supermarkets haven't carried them in months.
But now you can find out all about the cookies online! You can find out about the Girl Scout Cookie Program, visit the Girl Scout Cookie MySpace page (of course), and check for troops that sell the cookies by zip code.
It's that time of year again: Girl Scout cookie season. This year all Girl Scout cookies are trans-fat free so you can eat them with slightly less guilt than before.
There are two bakeries that produce Girl Scout Cookies, Little Brownie Bakers and ABC Bakers . Both produce some of the classic cookies, including Thin Mints, Samoas, Trefoils and Tagalongs (a.k.a. Peanut Butter Patties), but each of the bakeries make several cookies that the other does not. Little Brownie Bakers has three original creations this year. Sugar Free Little Brownies are little chewy chocolate squares "packed with chocolate chips" that are diabetic friendly and All-Abouts are all about "Enjoying life as a true Girl Scout" and appear to have a chocolate-flavored coating on one side.
ABC Bakers has Reduced Fat Cartwheels, which are "oatmeal rounds with a cinnamon burst in every bite" and lemon-iced shortbread Lemonades in their lineup this spring, as well as cookies with the odd name Thanks-a-Lot appear to be the same as the All-Abouts from LBB, although they have the words for "thanks" in five different languages written on them.
I'm planning on passing on both the All-Abouts and Thanks-a-Lots, but I'll consider getting a box of Lemonades with my Samoas, Tagalongs and Trefoils this year.
As if we didn't really need more reason to buy an extra box or two of your favorite Girl Scout cookies, I have just
stumbled across the website for one of two
companies that bake the Girl Scout cookies that send us into a thin, minty frenzy every Spring. The website is obviously
geared toward their happy little salesgirls, but they also list recipes, not for the cookies,
themselves, but that use the cookies as ingredients.
Samoas by themselves are pretty rich (I consider them candy, myself), but they can be used to make Mocha
Samoa Zuccoto, a chocolate cake-like base with a mascarpone and chocolate filling and crushed Samoas as a
topping.
Sound too rich? Then what about Levitating Layers, alternating layers of Samoas, sweetened cream
cheese, and chocolate pudding. And it's not just Samoas. You can use Tagalongs, Thin Mints, and Trefoils to make a
Peanut Butter Mint Bombe.
I'll just take my Cafe cookies with a cup
of coffee.
Dreyers/Edys is putting out its seasonal, special-edition Girl Scout
Cookie flavored ice creams this month. The flavors include Thin Mints, a chocolate mint concoction with cookie chunks
based on the best-selling flavor, and Samoas Cookies, a creamy caramel ice cream with fudge swirls and chunks of Samoas
cookies. Both of these flavors are available in regular and light varieties. The final limited-edition flavor is based
on Tagalongs and is vanilla ice cream with peanut butter and fudge swirls as well as pieces of the famous peanut butter
patty cookies mixed in. The flavors will be available in supermarkets through April.
On their website, the company is hosting a Junior Chef recipe contest. Kids 8-12 can enter their favorite dessert
or snack recipes that use the Girl Scout ice creams for a chance to win a prize pack including a year’s supply of
Dreyer’s ice cream. The grand-prize winner will also receive a $500 savings bond and have their recipe featured
on cartons of ice cream. To get inspired, check out last year’s winning recipes.