Thin Mint Cookies made with Ritz crackers
Ritz Cracker Thin Mint Cookies
Okay. I'm just gonna go ahead and warn ya up front. If you are a fan of the Girl Scout Thin Mint cookies, I'm guessing you'll like these too, and well, I will not be held responsible for your inability to stop eating these once you start. It will be difficult.
I've seen a variety of recipes for this cookie floating around the internet and this is my version of them. Oh my goodness, I fell in love. Recipes out there use a variety of chocolate coatings - including bittersweet and semi-sweet chocolates, chocolate chips, dark chocolate, Andes chocolates (though that seems a bit pricey to me) and some have used various combination of the above. I chose to use something totally different. Imagine that.
I used chocolate almond bark. First, because I happened to have some leftover from the holidays that I needed to use up in my annual and oft ongoing 'Spring Clean Clear the Pantry and Use it Up' effort, and second, because I figured with a Ritz cracker the almond bark would probably be easier to work with. {Hissy Fit Warning} Yes, I know it's not real cocoa butter chocolate, and that's perfectly okay with me for this. I think I was right, but use whatever chocolate you prefer. The brand I used is Plymouth Pantry, found right on the confectionery shelf at any Walmart. Six squares weighed out to be about 12 ounces, covering about 1 and 1/2 sleeves of Ritz crackers. Because packaging has shrunk the past couple of years since I wrote this recipe, you may need a few more crackers, so plan on two packages.
You can melt the almond bark in the microwave of course, but for this recipe, you'll need to keep it warm and pliable as you work through the crackers, so the best method in my opinion is a double boiler {affil link} or simply a bowl on top of a saucepan with a bit of boiling water in the bottom pot. Tracy from over on the Facebook page, suggested using one of those tiny crockpots that are designed for keeping dips warm.
I did see that someone had used Nilla wafers, and someone else used the Nabisco Famous chocolate wafers, so you may want to experiment with your favorite cracker or cookie. Personally, I found the Ritz crackers to be just right in the end. You will need to specifically use peppermint extract, rather than spearmint extract though. I used 1/2 a teaspoon of the extract and thought that was just right, but of course, adjust that to your own taste.
I also stuck the sheet pans in the freezer while the chocolate was melting. The chilled sheet helps to set the chocolate a bit better. On the third tray of cookies, I reused the first tray without refreezing it, and I think that using the ice cold pans made them set much smoother, and faster, on the bottoms.
If you're going to be fooling with a lot of candies and chocolates and such, you may want to invest in a nice, chocolate dipping tool set, {affil link} which would probably make your life much easier, but at this point in my life, I haven't really pursued chocolate making, so I just used a pair of locking tongs, {affil link} one of my personal favorite kitchen tools and that worked fine for me.