Ratios and cherry almond cookies
I’m an improvisational cook. This means that I’ll take stock of what I have in the kitchen and then create dishes from what’s available. This method usually works if I’m making savory dishes, but when it comes to baking I’ve had less success. (We won’t discuss the time I spontaneously threw in steel oats, cayenne, and sea salt into a chocolate cookie recipe.)
Baking calls for precision, which I lack. For a long time I’ve wondered if there were basic formulas for making pastries, something I could use to make up my own recipes, if say, I wanted a steel oat and sea salt cookie to actually be edible. So when I heard about Michael Ruhlman’s latest book, Ratio, I knew this was the information I’d been looking for.

A professor of Ruhlman’s at the Culinary Institute of America (CIA) presented him with the initial ratio concept, which takes certain foods and reduces them to their basic essence. For instance, let’s look at pie crust. Its ratio is 3 parts flour: 2 parts fat: 1 part water. So no matter if you’re mixing butter and lard with wheat flour and ground pecans, or shortening with oat flour and buckwheat, by using these exact proportions of fat to flour to water you should have a crust that works.
Besides his pastry section—which covers all doughs and batters—he also shares the ratios for stocks, farcir (a fancy term for sausages), sauces and custards. And while he provides measurement conversion from weight to volume—ounces to cups—you’ll learn that it’s more accurate to use a scale.

Now that I had Ruhlman’s ratios on hand, I decided to put them to work. I wanted to make a shortbread cookie in which the ratio is 1 part sugar: 2 parts fat: 3 parts flour.
I placed a four-ounce stick of butter in a bowl on top of my new toy—my kitchen scale—and then creamed it with two ounces of powdered sugar. I had some almond flour around, so I threw in three ounces of that and then three ounces of wheat flour. To jazz up the cookie a bit more, I added a pinch of salt, a pinch of nutmeg and an ounce of chopped dried cherries.
I know that I’m prone to exaggeration, but believe me when I say that this dough was a dream to work with as it wasn’t too sticky nor was it too dry. It was just right. And the cookies baked beautifully. Still unsure about this wonderful cookie I’d made without a recipe, I took them to a group of people with very discerning palates—my coworkers. I explained to them how I’d baked with ratios and not a recipe and I needed their honest opinion on the cookies. They ignored me, however, and managed to finish the whole batch in record time. I reckon this means that my ratio cookies were indeed delicious.
Cherry almond cookies
Ingredients
- 2 ounces powdered sugar plus more for coating cookies (1/4 cup)
- 4 ounces unsalted butter, room temperature (1/2 cup)
- 3 ounces almond flour (1/2 cup)
- 3 ounces all-purpose wheat flour (1/2 cup)
- Pinch of salt
- Pinch of nutmeg
- 2 ounces dried cherries, chopped (1/4 cup)
Instructions
- Cream the butter and the sugar and then mix in the flour, salt, nutmeg, and dried cherries.
- Form the dough into a log, and refrigerate for a few hours or overnight.
- Preheat the oven to 350° F.
- On a greased cookie sheet or one lined with parchment paper or a Silpat, form the dough into 1/2 tablespoon-sized ball, placing each ball about an inch from the other. Bake for 15 minutes.
- Let cool for 5 minutes, and then dip cookies into powdered sugar.








I love the kitchen scale! Once you get in the habit of using it(and memorize easy conversions from those “barbaric” cups and tablespoons), you wonder why people ever used measuring cups. They sure aren’t easier. I’m dying to get my hands on a copy of Ratio b/c I’m sure it’ll integrate nicely into my existing cooking habits.
Yum! Those look very similar to what my family calls Russian tea cakes, which I adore. I love the addition of dried cherries. I’ve had my eye on that book and just might have to get it!
Ahh, I’ve been looking for a book like this one to lead me on a path of baker understanding. Also have wondered about the scale. Thanks for the scoop!
Hey!
I’m a long time lurker from Austria, and up until now I was especially a fan of your savoury dishes. Over here all baking is done with a kitchen scale, so it’s always a bit of a hassle to convert all those measurments.
Can we hope to see some more recipes like that or is it just a one-off?
The thing I like most about kitchen scales (besides the accuracy) is that you mostly only ever need the one bowl where you mix it all together and nothing else gets dirty for measuring. The Tara function will be your best friend 😉
BTW: Thanks for the book recommendation, I just ordered it.
I’ve been following your blog off and on for a couple of months and just love it. My BFF in Houston, Mary Jo Dupre, turned me on to it. And that’s not the only reason she’s my BFF. Anyway, I’m planning on checking out this book. I get tired of using recipes all the time. I’m hoping this book will help with cooking creativity. Thanks. Kathy Combs