Cookies are a pastry and pastries, like cakes and muffins, are not candy. Enough said.
Technically, no, they are a "baked good," but not a candy.
Yes-ish, because they have chocolate and they have lots of sugar.
Hope this helps:)
I would say no, I think of them more as a dessert
no
A chocolate cookie is not considered candy. Cookies contain flour and other ingredients not included in candy. A cookie may be considered a small cake or a sweet biscuit, but not candy.
Crazy Cookies
sugar cookies will be the best with chocalate cookies!
Snow balls, candy canes, candy mints, cookies, and everything else that is sweet
are sprinkles considered candy
Chocolate, in itself is not considered to be "candy" but instead considered by the FDA to be an ingredient sometimes used in the process of candy making. Similarly used in this candy making process is vanilla also not considered to be "candy" but simply a sweet. Though most people do associate chocolate with candy.
If it's "made with only candy" then isn't it, itself, candy?There are flourless cookies, which come pretty close to "candy", but you don't start with actual candy when making them; you usually use salt and sugar and egg and (maybe) peanut butter, which, while they might all be INGREDIENTS in candy, aren't literally "candy".
· Kisses (candy)
cookies n cream hersey
candy, Christmas cookies (gingerbread or sugar cookies work best), and hot cocoa.
Chocolate chip cookies, chocolate, cookies, cake, candy
No, natural fruit juice is not considered candy.