Bakesale Bestsellers II: Wonder Bars, A Flexible Recipe

Last year’s Bakesale Bestsellers: Sugar Cookie Wands were a hit, raising tons of change for the kids’ school. Even so, I couldn’t just repeat myself again…
This year, I needed somthing easy and quick. So, I fiddled with a recipe I think I must have cribbed from the back of either a box of graham crackers or a can of condensed milk back in university [when my roommates and I had a giant kitchen, by the way, with a double oven, that we only really ever took advantage of when we made the full Thanksgiving feast]. For this year’s Wonder Bars, we used a combination of Semi-Sweet, Butterscotch, and White Chocolate Chips, but, as you’ll see below, the recipe is quite flexible in terms of mix-ins. With this in mind, our Wonder Bars will help you use up the last of the bits and bobs in your sweets cabinet. Anything in the recipe in [brackets] is optional and need not be added.
Of course, half, no, three-quarters of the battle with bakesales is making things look tempting – so the real draw here, aside from the baking, is to wrap your bakesale best-sellers, whatever they may be, in something that makes them attractive. Today, I wrapped each bar individually in clear cellophane from the dollar store. Then, I made quick and easy tags, printed them on a full sheet of white sticker paper, also from the dollar store, cut them out, and affixed them to the front of each wrapped bar. You could also print these out on cardstock, hole-punch them, and attach them to the bars with ribbons.
Here’s a free printable pdf of my Wonder Bar Labels.
_______________________
Wonder Bars
A Flexible Recipe
makes 24 squares*

Ingredients
.5 c [+1 to 4 tbs: optional] unsalted butter, melted
3 c total of one or more of the following:
graham cracker crumbs, oreo crumbs, cocoa cookie crumbs, ground chocolate wafers or vanilla wafers
[.25 c sugar , white or brown: optional]
1.25 c [+.25 c: optional] semi-sweet chocolate chips or other style chip of your choice – chocolate, white, milk, peanut butter
1.25 c [+.25 c: optional] total of any of the following in any proportion you like:
butterscotch, white, milk, dark, peanut-butter chips, m&m’s, chopped nuts, smashed chocolate bars of any kind, super-splintered bits of candycane, busted pretzels, toffee bits, raisins, other dried fruit.
1 can sweetened condensed milk
1.5 c- [+.25 c] sweetened shredded coconut
Method
Heat oven to 375.
Line a 15×10* jelly roll pan with a generous amount of parchment paper
Make sure the paper stays in the pan by wiping your empty butter wrapper in a few spots on the pan
or by sprinkling it with a bit of water before pressing or folding the paper in place.
Mix the melted butter, cookie crumbs and [optional sugar].
Pat the mixture evenly into the paper-lined pan.
Bake for 10 minutes and allow to cool completely.
Spread chocolate chips and the heaping cup of your other ingredient(s) on top of the cooled crust.
Open your can of sweetened condensed milk and pour evenly over the top.
Sprinkle the coconut evenly over the gooey loveliness.
Bake for 10 minutes or until the coconut looks toasted evenly.
Let cool completely on a wire rack.
You might even want to refrgerate the bars for 10 minutes or so before slicing.
WRAP ELEGANTLY, LABEL, PRICE, & SELL, SELL, SELL
*Note: For a denser bar that feeds fewer people, use a 13×9 pan, reduce butter to .5 c, grahams to 1.5-1.75 c and restrict coconut to 1.5 c.

_________________________
Quick Links for Mobile Users
Summer of Funner : The Lunchbox Season : In Defense of Burning
Bakesale Bestsellers: Sugar Cookie Wands
September 22, 2011
It’s a toy and a treat all in one, a cookie lollipop wrapped up with a little magic and mystery. Last year, for the bakesale at the school’s Fall Fun Fair, we baked our first batch of Sugar Cookie Wands. This year, we got it down to a science, finding even more ways to get the kids actively involved.
These Sugar Cookie Wands are great for bakesales, alternatives to birthday cake (say, at movies or sports parties), in loot bags, as stand-alone party favours, and holiday treats.
Supplies * Ingredients * Baking * Decorating * Wrapping * Labelling
_____________________________________
50 (1/2 Package) Wooden Coffee Stirrer Sticks
1-2 Rolls Clear Cellophane Wrapping Paper
1 Roll Festive Curling Ribbon
1 piece Colourful Cardstock or 2 Index Cards
Parchment Paper for Baking
All of these supplies are available at our local dollar store. The kids really like choosing the ribbon colours and poking around. Alternatives to the Coffee Stirrer Sticks may include tongue depressors, wooden popsicle sticks, 8-in wooden skewers (pointed tips removed with scissors, cut tips never inserted into cookie dough) and lollipop sticks (from the bulk or baking supply store). Do not use bamboo skewers for this project, they take on a strange odour when wet!!!
_____________________________________
INGREDIENTS
makes 48-50 cookie wands
Dough
1 1/3 cup unsalted butter
3/4 cup granulated sugar
3/4 cup brown sugar
2 eggs
2 tbs milk
2 tsp vanilla
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
4 cups flour
Icing 1 500g bag icing sugar, 1/2 cup milk, 1 1/2 tsp vanilla, food colouring
_____________________________________
BAKING
-
Have the kids cream the butter and sugars in a mixer.
-
Let them crack the eggs and add them one at a time.
-
Add the vanilla and milk and mix until smooth.
-
Add baking soda and salt.
-
Add flour 1/2 cup at a time until incorporated.
-
Refrigerate dough until needed.
-
Heat oven to 350 F.
-
Line two cookie sheets with parchment.
-
Have two more parchment liners ready for the remainder of the dough.
-
Have the kids form tim-bit sized balls of cookie dough with a teaspoon or with their hands.
-
Insert a coffee stirrer stick half-way into each ball.
-
Flatten the dough into a disc as the kids see fit: try pressing them flat between your hands, try pressing your hand onto the ball of dough on the baking tray, or try pressing it with a flat bottomed jar, a cup, or a rolling pin.
Have the kids align the pressed cookies onto parchment lined cookie sheets so that the sticks don’t stray too far. They came up with the skull & crossbones pattern to the right. You can fit about 12 per sheet.
-
Bake for 9-11 minutes.
-
Leave on hot baking trays for 3-5 minutes.
-
With cookies still on parchment, cool completely on wire racks.
_____________________________________
DECORATING
Making the Icing
-
Have the kids divide the sugar from the bag into 2 or 3 bowls.
-
Add 1/2 tsp vanilla to each bow.l
-
Add milk 1 tbs at a time to each bowl, stirring hard, until icing becomes of a thick but drizzlable consistency.
-
Add food colouring 1 drop at a time to create the kids’ choice of 2-3 colours.
The Icing-Spreader’s Technique
- This is messy. You might want to cover your table or workspace with a plastic cloth or an old cotton sheet.
-
Once cookies have cooled, rearrange each batch on their parchment paper sheets so that the cookies are in the center and the sticks jut out from the edge of each sheet.
-
Choose a “base” (usually your darkest) colour of icing. Using a tablespoon, have the kids drop or swirl icing onto each cookie, beginning in the centre.
-
Icing WILL run to the sides and off of the cookies.
-
If you chose to make a third colour of icing, swirl, scatter, or dallop this on to your cookies now!
-
After letting the icing harden on the cookies for 10-15 minutes, remove cookies from the parchment sheets and place them on wire racks to continue to set without sticking to one another or to the gooey parchment sheet. You might want to place the wire racks on top of the old parchment sheets or your tablecloth. The cookies WILL continue to drip. The kids will try to lick and taste the icing from the now-empty parchment sheets. Will you let them?
-
Be sure the icing is set completely before wrapping your cookies.
-
Instead of starting with cookie balls, roll out your cookie dough a little thicker than you normally would for cut-outs and use cookie-cutters to create special shapes for your wands. Carefully insert a stirrer stick in the midst of each cookie’s thickness. Tricky…
-
Impress white or coloured sugar into the cookie before baking .
-
Add food colouring straight to your dough for a coloured cookie base.
-
Ice each cookie in a single colour for a monotone look. Or gradually darken the hue of the icing as you go along for a paint-deck style array.
-
Add coloured sugars, sprinkle or decors to a single or multicoloured cookie.
-
Make some icing a little thicker and, using a small-nosed squeegee bottle, draw faces or shapes on each cookie.
-
Use fruit juice instead of milk in your icing.
_____________________________________
-
Cut 50, 12-in lengths of ribbon.
-
Slicing across the entire length of the roll of cellophane, cut 12-in wide strips.
-
Cut each 12-in strip into 4 equal sections (you should have long rectangles).
-
Place the cookie part of your wand in the center bottom of the rectangle of cellophane.
-
Fold the cellophane down over top of the cookie, forming a new rectangle whose vertical height is now half of its former size.
-
Do the same to the cellophane to the right side of the cookie.
-
Fold the right side in small increments at an angle towards the front of the cookie.
-
Wrap the ribbon around the base of the cookie and tighten into a knot.
-
Tie a bow with the ribbon.
-
Curl the edges if you like.
_____________________________________
Finally, you can create a card listing the name and ingredients of the Cookie Wand by writing or printing on a piece of cardstock or an index card. We used the same technique to make this card as we did to create our canning labels, scanning a photo into picnik.com, adding text to list our title and ingredients, and printing it out in black and white on cardstock. Then, the kids folded and taped the cardstock to make a stand-up card. Finally, we penned in “Buy Me For: __” to leave space for the organizers to set a price. Alternatively, you could print the name and ingredients on a small set labels and attach each label like a “flag” to the stick.
Voila! Sugar Cookie Wands!
_____________________________________
Quick Links for Mobile Users
The Lunchbox Season : Summer of Funner : In Defense of Burning
What’s Inside of the Lunchbox?
Recent Posts
- First Communion Fun
- Saying “Thank You”
- DIY Cookie Cutters: The Zeppelin Edition
- Book Fan Shirts
- Making the Movie Monster Video
- The Vanities of the Leaked-Upon
- MARCH breACK! 2013: Spirit Bear Stick Puppets and Finger-Walking Bear Puppets
- MARCH breACK! 2013: Illustrate-Your-Own-Books, Ahma, The Spirit Bear, Part IV: A Berry Picking Party & What Follows
- MARCH breACK! 2013: Spirit Bear S’mores: Honey Graham Cracker Cookie Cut-Outs and Honey Marshmallows From Scratch
- MARCH breACK! 2013: Kermode’s Path Math Game
- MARCH breACK! 2013: Mooksgm’ol [Spirit Bear] Drum Faces Inspired by Tsishmian Art & the Four Tsishmian Clans
- MARCH breACK! 2013: Illustrate-Your-Own-Books, Ahma, The Spirit Bear, Part III: In Which Harriet is Saved and Jane Tries Not To Be
Our Most Popular Arts & Crafts Posts
- Sherlock Holmes Party: DIY Detective Kits
- Necktie Beanbag Snakes
- A Birdseed Wreath
- Snake Mobiles and A Skip Counting Game
- Easter Egg Workshop
- Toy Heart Photo Valentines
- Constellation Cards
- DIY Python Masks
- Pop Art Name Plates
- Snake Sock Puppets
- Favourite Photo Ornaments
- The Adventures of Sir Lochrann Holmes: A Study in Emerald (Introduction)
- Read and Illustrate The Winter’s Tale
Our Most Popular Recipes
- Butter Beer Blondies
- Whisky Fig Cranberry Sauce
- Our Best Chewy Granola Bars
- Eat This(,) Chicken!
- Shamrock S’mores
- Chewy Chocolate Brownies
- Cookie Meteors & Santa Babies
- Haikukies!
- Quick and Easy Individual Thin Crust Pizzas
- Skylanders Portal of Power Cake
- Frogwiches! Gingerbread Sandwich Cookies with Vanilla or Citrus Cream
- Punch and Judy Cookies
- Cannoli Buche de Noel
- Red Panda Cake
Lunchbox “Bento”: Categories
Our Sister Site: Summer of Funner
- The Lunchbox Season is Back
- Summer of Funner 2012 Film Festival
- Peach Day! Amaretto Peach Jam, Brown Sugar Vanilla Jam, and Giant Peach Butter
- A Movable Mural
- The Imaginary Beasts of Riverdale Farm
- Mad Scientist Day 2012: Ten “Sweet” Experiments
- The Kids Make Street Eats (with Beer!): Pilsner Pretzels & Hops and Robbers Mustard
- Glam Cans 2012: Kid-Designed Canning Labels DIY











