Oh, hello there, you gorgeous drinkable confection. Let me introduce you to my friends, Oreo cookies.
Well, almost Oreo cookies. The cookies, like the drink, are really a one-off of someone else's brilliance (aren't we all), brilliance in this case being Starbucks' Mocha Cookie Crumble Frappuccino.
I've been big on the frappe /cookie combo almost since I first began
visiting coffee shops, the establishment that introduced me to them being Broad
River Coffee Company in Boiling Springs, North Carolina (I would add a nice
little link here but I can’t because they recently switched hands are now Broad
River Coffee & Cone and what is with
that??). I have a quaint memory of my mom and I stopping to get frappe from
Broad River on a special mother-daughter outing together, probably for my
birthday or getting good test scores or my period, or something equally
momentous and coffee-worthy. Broad River had a short menu of add-ins for their
frappes: M&Ms, Heath bar, Snickers (mom's go-to), et cetera; but that
was the day I tried Oreo, and it was, as evidenced by my writing
it here, very memorable.
I just discovered this. It's amazing: no more buying coconut milk just for the cream. Of course, now I have an entire can to dispose of . . . |
I got sick in the cemetery. My mom asked if it was all the graves and headstones and suggested we go back to the car, but it wasn’t that at all, hadn’t even occurred to me that what we were doing could be considered morbid, though it was certainly a formative experience as pertaining to the realization of my own inevitable six foot drop; but I’m just a sick bastard that way. No, it was because of that delicious, sweet, frosty, cookie-and-caffeine laced frappe. It was just too rich and I had drunk it too fast.
All right: recipe intro? Check. Charming childhood memory? Check. Morbid, irrelevant reflection upon death? Check. Just a typical blog post. Moving right along.
So, those of you who frequent Starbucks or
the mall or anyplace that is not a cave have probably heard about the summer
Mocha Cookie Crumble Frappuccino. If you are in fact in a cave at the moment,
the name and preceding narrative is pretty self-explanatory so figure it out. So, cookie and mocha is
delicious, the Broad River Coffee Co. is defunct and their frappe's a thing of the past and Starbucks probably makes a better version any way, but in order to obtain one, I
would need to 1) drive to a Starbucks, 2) spend money, and 3), talk to a person.
I hate doing all those things, and when you add them together, it’s pretty much
out of the question.
That's how this happened.
Cookie Crumble Frappe [vegan]
2 tbsp cocoa powder
4 Oreo or sorta-Oreo cookies*
2 shots of espresso**
1/3 cup almond milk
½-1 cup ice (this depends on your blender, ice maker, etc; start with ¼ - ½ cup and add in as needed)
1 tsp Stevia + drizzle of honey or other sweetener***
Dash salt
1 tsp vanilla
Add everything
except cookies to blender and blend until smooth, adjusting ice and liquid as
needed. Add 3 cookies and pulse until they are still visible but preferably
drinkable through a straw (admittedly, I overblended mine). Chop your last
cookie for topping. Crown the frappe with some coconut whip and sprinkled cookie bits. It would be nice to add a little cocoa powder to the whip like the Starbucks original, which is what
I intended to do. Until I ran out of cocoa powder. So.
*You should not be a miser like me an just get legitimate Oreo's people, it's worth it and it's better and I've learnt my lesson so you don't have to.
**If you
don’t have espresso, I would suggest substituting ½ a cup of strong coffee + 2
tbsp light coconut milk, the kind from a can, instead of espresso and almond milk. The coconut milk
is heavier than almond, more like creamer, achieving the correct balance of
milkiness without volume or dilution. I haven’t tried it for this recipe, that’s
just the approximate formula I usually use in those lean espresso-less times.
***Yes, I
used stevia and honey like a hippie. If you don’t have or like these things, I
suggest shooting for 1-3 tbsp of sugar, depending on how sweet you like it. My
recipe is for a drink on the sweeter side.
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