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A tasty tribute

Cookie university celebrates 250 years of sweet treats

By Karen Mansfield 5 min read
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Christin Maatta of Rostraver Township, left, paints cookies with baker David Jones at Cookie University on Sunday at the Hilton Garden Inn Southpointe. [Karen Mansfield]
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Cookie varieties spanning 250 years were on display at Cookie University at Hilton Garden Inn at Southpointe on Sunday. The event celebrated the history of cookies in the United States. [Karen Mansfield]
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Danna Vegoda of Fayette County created buckeye "buffalo wings" for Cookie Table University's America 250 event. [Karen Mansfield]
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AnnMarie O'Rourke, who baked three varieties of cookies for Cookie Table University's America 250th celebration, surveyed the 250 cookie varieties displayed on two large cookie tables on Sunday. [Karen Mansfield]
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America 250, a Cookie Table University celebration of the history of cookies in the United States, featured 250 varieties of cookies, including these Dwight D. Eisenhower and Mamie Eisenhower marble cookies, which are situated next to WWI bacon fat soft molasses cookies.[Karen Mansfield]
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Jamie Pikulsky of Uniontown displays apple cookies she made for Cookie Table Univeristy's America 250 cookie celebration held Sunday at Hilton Garden Inn at Southpointe. [Karen Mansfield]
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Among the 250 cookie varieties featured at Cookie Table University's America 250 celebration was a cookie recipe from a 1976 cookbook. [Karen Mansfield]

Move over, apple pie.

America is baseball, hot dogs, and 鈥 cookies.

Cookie Table University, a celebration of cookies hosted by the Wedding Cookie Table Community, held its 11th annual event on Sunday at Hilton Garden Inn at Southpointe, featuring 250 cookie recipes spanning the history of the sweet treat in honor of America鈥檚 250th anniversary.

鈥淭his is great. The cookies are gorgeous, and there are so many more people here than I thought. I鈥檓 getting so many ideas. It鈥檚 a lot of fun,鈥 said Tori Maatta of Pittsburgh, who is getting married on Oct. 2 and attended the event with her mother, Christin Maatta, and a family friend, Catherine Carroll, who marked her 80th birthday. 鈥淲e wanted to celebrate with the birthday girl, and I鈥檓 getting a lot of inspo. I am absolutely having a cookie table, and I鈥檓 getting a lot of ideas here.鈥

The cookies 鈥 thousands of them 鈥 were arranged on two 40-foot cookie tables, and attendees selected a dozen cookies to take home.

That, it turns out, was the hard part.

鈥淚 was overwhelmed. There were so many kinds of cookies that I went through the line and thought, 鈥楬ow do we pick what kinds we want to take?'鈥 said Kim White, who drove from Columbus, Ohio, with her husband, Mike, to visit. 鈥淚 thought it was so interesting how the cookies date back as far as the start of the country. It was an amazing event.鈥

About 180 bakers who volunteered for the event were assigned cookies that spanned U.S. history. The goal, said Laura Magone, founder of the Wedding Cookie Table Community, was to tell the country鈥檚 history, using cookies that represented important historical figures or events dating to 1776.

The variety of cookies was remarkable: the original 1913 recipe for Girl Scout cookies; an original Toll House cookie; a cookie made with Tang; and cookies enjoyed and/or baked by presidents and their spouses including the Eisenhowers, Laura Bush (cowboy cookies), and Barack Obama (crunchy cookies).

AnnMarie O鈥橰ourke of Grove City, a member of the Wedding Cookie Table Community, baked three varieties of cookies, including Betty Ford鈥檚 chocolate cookie and a Pope Leo XIV lofthouse-style cookie.

鈥淚 loved the idea of making cookies that were made over the course of American history,鈥 said O鈥橰ourke. 鈥淪ome of the cookies were definitely a challenge because some of the ingredients bakers used to use aren鈥檛 available, so you have to adapt the recipes, and for some of the recipes you have to adjust measurements.鈥

For her part, Magone made a 鈥減oor man鈥檚 cookie鈥 from the Great Depression era, which she adapted, using whole milk Greek yogurt instead of shortening.

Other cookies: 1937 Hindenburg Kirsch cookies, Paul Revere mini-rum bar cakes, Mister Rogers rainbow cookies, Andy Warhol tomato soup sugar cookies, Susan B. Anthony peach cobbler cookies, women鈥檚 suffrage pfeffernusse cookies, World War I bacon fat soft molasses cookies, and Marlon Brando homemade mallobars.

More than 1,500 people attended the two sessions, with attendees lining up an hour before the first session started at 9 a.m.

Bakers and cookie lovers 鈥 many bedecked in red, white and blue 鈥 came from as far as Seattle, California, Michigan, and Iowa to pick out cookies, participate in Cookie Table University, which included vendors and activities, including cookie decorating classes.

Cyndi Eicholtz and Linda Kempski made the trek from Baltimore, Md., and brought along their husbands, Bob and Mike, who ended up having as much fun as their wives.

Eicholtz stumbled across the Wedding Cookie Table Community website 鈥 the group now has 406,000 members across the country and internationally 鈥 while she was researching wedding cookie tables, which she hadn鈥檛 heard of until a friend attended a wedding that included a large cookie spread.

She attended her first Cookie Table University last year and was excited to return for the America 250 event.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just amazing what these ladies and gentlemen put together. I鈥檓 fascinated with wedding cookie tables, and this is a lot of fun,鈥 said Eicholtz. 鈥淲e鈥檝e had a great time. I bought so many USA baking pans that we had to get a luggage cart for them.鈥

The tables 鈥 one formal, one picnic-themed 鈥 featured Duncan & Miller glassware, and dozens of the cookies were displayed on the glassware. The glassware company produced some of the country鈥檚 most well-known and beautiful glassware at its Washington facility from 1893 until 1955.

Proceeds from Cookie Table University benefit the Monongahela Area Historical Society鈥檚 renovations of the Longwell House.

Magone said she was thrilled with the event and the efforts of all of the volunteers who worked for months to organize it. The event is sponsored by Washington County Tourism Promotion Agency.

鈥淚t鈥檚 been a beautiful day,鈥 said Magone. 鈥淲e鈥檙e here celebrating a cookie table tradition, but what we鈥檙e doing today is about far more than cookies. When this community comes together, we鈥檙e really celebrating things like kindness, civility, and generosity, and you all embody that. We need more of it in our world today.鈥

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