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Whether You re a Soft or Crispy Cookie Fan, Here s How to Bake the Perfect Batch

Whether You re a Soft or Crispy Cookie Fan, Here s How to Bake the Perfect Batch Zoe Denenberg © Provided by Southern Living Jennifer Causey When it comes to baking cookies, there are a million and one tips and techniques that bakers use to achieve the perfect batch. We ve seen it all, from pan-banging to refrigerating dough balls for days before baking. If you grew up in the kitchen, you re probably attuned to the countless cookie hacks that home bakers and pastry chefs alike swear by. But the problem with deeming one hack to make the perfect batch of cookies is that everyone likes their cookies a different way. While some prefer soft, chewy cookies, others look for a cookie with snap and crispy, lacy edges. This also varies greatly based on the type of cookie you re baking; we may look for a soft, gooey center in our chocolate chip cookies, but want a crunchy, crispy gingersnap.

Our Favorite Super Bowl Food Ideas and Recipes — Sunset Magazine

24 Super Bowl Food Ideas to Make, Even if You’re Not Watching the Game Check out all of our favorite recipes to make for your Super Bowl viewing party, however remote it may be this year. We even threw in a few of our freezer-section favorites. Magdalena O Neal  – February 2, 2021 | Updated February 5, 2021 The Super Bowl is once again upon us, and while this year we can’t round up the crew and pile into the car to a tailgate or backyard BBQ, we can still eat around the television and tweet about the halftime show! That’s why we’ve rounded up our favorite wing recipes, finger foods, and dips to make sure the Super Bowl leaves you just as full as every other year. Taking into account that many of us are over-doing dishes, we’ve also added a few of our freezer favorites for an easy game-day spread. Check out the full list below.

Local colleges hit hard by pandemic enrollment drops

WHYY By Locust Walk on the University of Pennsylvania campus. (Ximena Conde/WHYY) Colleges across the country saw enrollments dip this fall, with area schools experiencing larger-than-average drops, according to recent data from the National Student Clearinghouse Research Center. Nationally, enrollment fell 2.5%. Pennsylvania schools dipped 3.1%, Delaware schools declined 3.2% and New Jersey saw a 4.2% decline. Combined, the three states had about 37,000 fewer students enroll in colleges this fall compared to fall 2019. Explaining these enrollment losses will take time. It’s clear, however, that the pandemic has hurt some types of schools more than others. Graduate enrollment, for instance, actually went up this fall, according to the data. So too did undergraduate attendance at four-year private universities.

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