Sweet Street is crazy expensive. Have you tried contacting a local bakery to make your cookie dough for you? They’ll even portion it for you to save you time for the same cost. The local bakery I went with does the same size cookie doughs for 1/3 of the price and it’s not only a better product but you can advertise that you sourced them locally as well.I sell Sweet Street cookies.
I want to try baking cookies fresh, can anyone tell me a good specific brand and variation of a chocolate chip cookie?
Im looking at Davids or Otis Spunkmeyer
This is exactly what the local bakery does for my spot. Pick a few and give them a call or go in person to discuss. Better product, fresher product, and sourced locally all while be much much less expensive. I get 6 oz frozen cookie dough portions for Skillet Cookie desserts. We sell quite a bit of those alone and takes 3 mins in the oven to warm up!I want to buy pre formed frozen cookie dough for ease of operations while still having a fresh baked product. Id like to know what brands others are buying. Also any tips on baking them.
I can totally taste the chemicals in david’s cookies! Thanks for bringing this up. They are very artificial tasting.If your customers are used to sweet street, then switching to davids is not going to work. When I eat Davids I can taste all the chemicals. I dont see Riche’s at the depot.
@smiling with hope Walter, you have the right idea! cookie dough is easy to make and freezes well. I’m sure they are way better than anything from the distributors. I just don’t have the time…maybe one day when I have a smaller menu.we make scratch made choc chip cookies breaking real eggs, butter, pure vanilla extract. They mix in our 60 quart Hobart and it takes me about 10 minutes to make a batch that lasts a week in the cooler and about 15 minutes to bake per batch. We sell 1 oz cookies for $1 and a 12oz container of raw cookie dough for $12. People go on and on how they taste better than any bakery or gourmet premade cookie and we sell out most days. Homemade is cheaper and better. Walter
I hear you. It is a challenge to say “no we don’t have that here” to customers but I work on the - develop your audience to what you want to do. We have scaled down our dinner menu to just large pizza, salad, cookie, cannoli. It made my life 500 times easier and we are just as busy. Lunch is not as busy so we still offer on top of the dinner menu small pies, calzones, Sicilians, but that will change to the dinner menu if lunch gets any busier. My mother is from Italy and her family was in the food business. She always says - make one thing right and they will line up out the door. Make a bunch of stuff 1/2 way and you compete with everyone else. It is funny to watch people pick up our menu and immediately turn it over looking for more options. We don’t have ice or a soda machine either. Just canned/bottled drinks. Doing just this simple menu keeps me as busy as I want to be.@smiling with hope Walter, you have the right idea! cookie dough is easy to make and freezes well. I’m sure they are way better than anything from the distributors. I just don’t have the time…maybe one day when I have a smaller menu.
We do the same, but it takes us about 2 hours. What am I missing? Mixing doesn’t take long, but portioning takes forever. How are you portioning?smiling with hope said:we make scratch made choc chip cookies breaking real eggs, butter, pure vanilla extract. They mix in our 60 quart Hobart and it takes me about 10 minutes to make a batch that lasts a week in the cooler and about 15 minutes to bake per batch.