Dating from 1703, this American English term derives from the Dutch koekje meaning "little cake".
Perhaps now, three hundred years after the fact, it is time for the new American English word bakies to be coined and take hold. Good luck! :)
Cookie break
Well, you eat cookies, and I sure hope you don't eat history. I know one similarity. You can make cookies and you can make history. Or you can make history by making really good cookies. Or you can make historical cookies. Or you can eat cookies while making history. Or you can eat history while making cookies.
Piernik is a kind of cake or cookie, it can hardly be grown! In English it is called a gingerbread simply, but not the Scandinavian-type (like thin gingerbread Christmas cookies). Polish gingerbread cookies are much thicker, often with marmalade inside.
Cookies
The history of spritz cookies- They're basically a generic buttery cookie dough which was squeezed out of a cookie press and baked. Spritz cookies are originally a Christmas Cookie from the Scandinavian countries.
cookies! which since you bake them they are really called bakies but baking is a form of cooking which i have heard i think that is wrong, :) love you honey
A group of cookies cooked at once is called a batch.
Crazy Cookies
Fortune Cookies.
In Ireland and England alike, cookies are chocolate-chipped circular biscuits. If you're American, I think you call all biscuits cookies. If so, the answer you are looking for is biscuits.
Biscuits.
A batch
galletas
Actually, i don't think you can get creme filled cookies. If you could, they would be called Creme Cookies.
Cookie sandwiches can be called sandwich cookies, cream sandwich cookies, or sandwich cream cookies.
"Kekse" or "Plätzchen"
cookies