Thursday, October 11, 2012

Pumpkin Spice Kissed Pumpkin Snickerdoodles

Pumpkin Spice Hershey Kisses have been around for years (at least since 2008) and I just learned of them this year. Once aware of their existence, I was inspired by equal parts hunter, gatherer, and glutton to make them my own. After searching at 2 drug stores and 4 grocery stores I was beginning to feel defeated. 

That's the thing about Hawaii: new, trendy, seasonal mainland things aren't easily available here. Rice cookers, SPAM, musubi, and chop sticks can be found in every home and convenience store but apple cider and Pumpkin Spice Kisses are like unicorns! The real irony here is that Hershey's candies are from my home state of PA, the state that I left - willingly - 4 years ago.

I had to get strategic and think about where such a timely item would be found... my instincts lead me in the right direction: the commissary. The military bases are where the traditional-nuclear-families with 2.5 kids, 1 dog, 1 cat, and a picket fence would go for such a fall oriented treat, duh. My boss brought me 3 bags from the Navy/Air Force commissary and there are 3 more bags waiting for me on the Marine Corps base.

Oh Pumpkin Spice Kisses, how I've searched and longed for you!  


After all the anticipation I was truly scared to eat one, for fear that my hopes were set too high. The wrappers are an adorable fall-ish display of colors.



Of course the flag says PUMPKIN SPICE and the kisses themselves are a pale orange color.


It's my pleasure to tell you that these little candies are delicious. Imagine a pumpkin spice latte was poured over a pumpkin pie and condensed into a bite sized kiss. They're comforting, flavorful, warm and fuzzy.

Did you know it's best to freeze Hershey's Kisses before topping cookies with them? GREAT idea. First freeze them for a few minutes. Then, remove the wrappers and put them back into the Antarctic green room to await their big debut.


The recipe to use the kisses with was determined long before the kisses were even in my possession: last year's Pumpkin Snickerdoodles, with a few updates of course!

...drum roll please....

Pumpkin Spice Kissed Pumpkin Snickerdoodles
Makes 36 cookies



Print this recipe

for the cookies
2 sticks of butter, at room temperature
1 egg, also at room temperature
1 cup of sugar
1/2 of a cup of light brown sugar
1 cup of pumpkin puree
2 teaspoons of baking powder
1/2 of a teaspoon of salt
1/2 of a teaspoon of cinnamon

for rolling/topping the cookies
1/2 of a cup of sugar
1 teaspoon of cinnamon
1/2 of a teaspoon of allspice
1/2 of a teaspoon of pumpkin pie spice
1/2 of a teaspoon of nutmeg
36 Hershey's Pumpkin Spice Kisses, unwrapped and frozen

In a big bowl, beat the butter with an electric mixer until fluffy. Add both sugars and the pumpkin, mixing well. Add the vanilla and egg and mix some more.


In another large bowl, wisk together the flour, baking powder, salt, and cinnamon.

Add the flour mixture, just a little at a time, to the pumpkin mixture until incorporated well. Cover and refrigerate the dough for about an hour, or until it becomes firm and is no longer sticky.

In the meantime, get busy with a few other things:
  • Mix the sugar, cinnamon, allspice, pumpkin pie spice, and nutmeg for rolling the cookies
  • If you haven't already done some quality control, taste several of the Pumpkin Spice Kisses -remove the wrapper and freeze 3 dozen more in addition to the ones you've successfully made disappear
  • Prepare baking sheets with non-stick spray, a silpat, or parchment paper
  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F
  • Wash the dirty dishes? Find out when the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown is on TV
Once the batter is ready it's time to form, roll, and bake the cookies. 

I highly recommend the Pampered Chef medium scooper for making uniform cookies, but you could use a melon baller or a spoon. Three cookies fit just right in a cereal bowl for rolling in the pixie dust. Be warned that the cookies don't flatten well. A silicone spatula flattens them nicely.


Bake them for 8 - 12 minutes. Immediately after removing cookies from the oven, place a frozen Pumpkin Spice Kiss in the center of each. Admire. Devour.






Pumpkin Snickerdoodles themselves are incredible. Adding the sweet kiss of additional pumpkin spice makes them phenomenal!


They're warm and inviting and make you want to snuggle up with a sweater in a chilly wooden cabin, or carve Jack-O-Lanterns, or rake leaves?? Whatever you love most about fall is inside these cookies - promise.


Seasonal, yummy, and addicting means these cookies need to get the hell out of my house before I'm too wide to walk through an imaginary cabin door! They were soon boxed up and taken to work with me (thrice) and Bryce (just once).


After searching high and low for these kisses, I was happy to find and make use of them. My new problem is that now everyone at work expects me to bake for them! I meant what I said and I said what I meant: donate food items to me and I'll make something delicious with them... and I might even share!

When those other 3 bags of pumpkin-y kisses become mine I'll create the cheesecake that's on their wrapper with those doomed little confections!

Have you seen those candies at your local stores? Have you tried one? Have you used them in a recipe?

5 comments:

  1. Around Christmas-time, find the mint chocolate kisses. There is a recipe on the back for mini brownies topped with mint chocolate kisses and it is delish! I had made a bunch to give to our neighbors in Milwaukee but John and I ate so many of them I had to make more!

    -Brooke-

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  2. Brookie - Those sound incredible! Bryce hates mint/chocolate together so they'd all be mine (evil laughter). Those bacon cookies at your wedding are still holding the top cookie of my life title :)

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    1. Those are the most labor intensive cookies I've ever made (the bacon cookies) but they were TOTALLY WORTH IT.

      PS - came across this quote and felt like it needed to be somewhere on your blog:

      "I hate, hate, the notion of a secret recipe...Recipes were made to be shared. That's how they improve, how they change, how new ideas are formed and older ones made ripe." - Molly Wizenberg, A Homemade Life: Stories and Recipes from My Kitchen Table

      -B-

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  3. Just so you know, you forgot to add the measurements for vanilla (the recipe directions specify adding it yet it's not listed with the ingredients) ;p.

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  4. Oh..looks like you also skipped the flour amounts. .

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