Otis Spunkmeyer, FundraisingZone, and Great American Fundraising have cookie dough fundraisers and offer ideas if one is planning on starting a fundraiser. Wow! Fundraising provides a list of the top cookie dough fundraisers.
In order to organise a cookie dough fundraiser you will need to find a supplier of cookie dough first. They should be able to help guide you through all other steps, such as ordering the cookie dough and how to sell the cookie dough.
Google search x-)
Probably because Pillsbury does not make peanut butter cookie dough for retail sale.
There are many different types of healthy cookies. You could use different aspects of the cookie to make it healthier. You could use a different dough or even use nuts instead of chocolate chips.
just read the ingredients on the back of the cookie mix and cake mix and you will find out the answer there
If someone wants cookie recipes to cut out and keep then it is worth buying some cookery magazines that have them and saving those. These magazines might include 'The Good Food Magazine' and also any that has Delia Smith involved.
She usually makes her own or follows a recipe, you can find her cookie recipes on HGTV or Paula Deen Websites
I am not an expert but I did find a biography on her and I found out she ' Apparently' likes Cookie Dough ice cream.
I'm sure it's possible, but I'm not sure how. Naturally, when you put cookie dough in the oven when it flattens out it will be circular. i know you can make straight edge cookie cake, but that is because it takes the whole pan. if you can find a tiny pan that is the right size for the cookie that would be perfect, but i doubt it exists. i dont know how you could for sure keep it from being circular, but you could try making it into a square or rectangle -whichever you want- before putting it into the oven instead of making a ball of dough. I hope this helps. Good luck
It is the hard chips you often find in Edy's cookie dogh icecream. Ex. "Man that hardshot is gettin in the way of the dough."
Basically, "Fig Newtons" are a "jelly roll" with the "cookie" being made first, then a fig puree spread over half of the cookie, then the other half of the cookie folded over it (for the record, Nabisco doesn't refer to it as a cookie!). To find out the history of the Fig Newton: http://inventors.about.com/od/fstartinventions/a/Fig_Newton.htm If you want to make your own, here's a recipe: http://www.recipezaar.com/134577
A person could find a low calorie Christmas cookie recipe from a number of recipe websites. One can find such recipes on sites such as 'Taste of Home', 'Eating Well' and 'Good Housekeeping'.