Dayton Daily News

The official Girl Scout cookie power rankings

Two bakeries provide cookies to the 110-plus councils in U.S.

- By Lucas Kwan Peterson

We’ve got a lot to cover, so let’s get moving, shall we?

Welcome to the conclusive, unassailab­le and 100% correct Girl Scout Cookie Power Rankings.

I have pored and pondered over these delicious snacks, and have rated them by 1) taste (at room temperatur­e) and 2) taste when they’re right out of the freezer.

Now for some quick housekeepi­ng: Girl Scout cookies are unexpected­ly complicate­d because two bakeries, ABC Bakers and Little Brownie Bakers, provide cookies to the 110-plus Girl Scout councils throughout the country.

And the division of labor is not broken up in any kind of predictabl­e way, like, east of the Mississipp­i, you get one baker and west of it, you get the other. Each local council makes its own selection. In Orange County, for example, the scouts source cookies from ABC Bakers. In Los Angeles, cookies come from Little Brownie Bakers. Weird, eh?

For the purposes of these rankings, there are 12 types of Girl Scout cookies. But technicall­y there are 17 different cookies; a number of the classics, like Thin Mints, are baked by both companies and have slight but distinct difference­s.

In some cases, there are also different names for the same cookie: Orange County has Peanut Butter Patties but Los Angeles has Tagalongs. For the sake of brevity, I’m counting that as one type of cookie, because they’re not structural­ly different in any meaningful way.

I am, however, distinguis­hing between the two S’Mores cookies, because they’re completely different — one is a sandwich cookie and the other is a chocolate-coated graham cookie. Now if only we could get cookie season to last year-round. On to the ratings!

1. Samoas/Caramel deLites: I was trying to figure out a way to serve up a hot take and pronounce that this was not the best Girl Scout cookie, but I would have been kidding myself and doing you a disservice. This is, simply, a stellar cookie, and superior to the others if only because there are so many different things going on. There’s the crunch of the cookie, which blends with the chewiness from the caramel, giving an almost nougat-like feel. Then there’s the toasty coconut flakes, followed by the chocolatec­overed bottom and thin racing stripes across the top.

This is a good frozen cookie as well, with the initial crunch morphing into a stiff chewiness that slowly softens with each masticatio­n. Frozen ranking: 2

2. Tagalongs/Peanut Butter Patties: It’s the cookie equivalent of Reese’s Pieces, a chocolatec­oated cookie with creamy peanut butter smeared on it. Do I have to say more? (N.B. The peanut butter here is smooth and silky, in contrast to the graininess of that of a Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup.) This was in the running for first place — it’s a great cookie in its own right . Frozen, this doesn’t perform quite as well. The peanut butter fades into the background and the cookie almost disappears, acquiring a meringueli­ke lightness. Frozen ranking: 7

3. Do-si-dos/Peanut Butter Sandwich: Peanut butter has been a great friend to me during quarantine, as I imagine it has for many people. Spread on the usual suspects, sure — apples, celery, toast — but also eaten alone, on a plastic takeout spoon while sitting on the couch, staring at a blank Google doc for the second consecutiv­e hour. What did I learn during these long afternoons? A lot about myself.

But also that peanut butter tastes good anytime, and on pretty much everything. So it stands to reason that the Do-si-do, or Peanut Butter Sandwich, is a good cookie, if a little one-note. The peanut butter cookie outside is very crumbly, like a granola bar, but the taste combinatio­n — peanut butter and, well, peanut butter — is a winner. Frozen ranking: 9

4. Thin Mints: Thin Mints, per

haps the most iconic cookie in this pantheon, have gone through a number of name changes over the years according to Time magazine, including Cooky-Mints, Chocolate Mints and Cookie Mints. But since its debut in 1939, the idea has remained the same: Chocolate and mint taste great together. Naturally, this cookie is a winner. The interior is almost sandy, and drier than Oscar Wilde camping in Death Valley during Prohibitio­n.

But the chocolate coating combines with the delicate, barely-there cookie to create a minty communion wafer. It’s light, snackable and dangerous — you can easily go through a stack of these without realizing it. For the record, the ABC version of these is mintier; the Little Brownie version is crispier. Both are good but Little Brownie’s is the better cookie.

The Thin Mint, while not the best cookie in toto, is clearly best when frozen, and ascends to a higher plane of existence. Cold complement­s this cookie in the best possible way, bringing out the mintiness and creating an icy treat that you can crunch on, or let sit and melt in your mouth. Frozen ranking: 1

5. Toffee-tastic: Good texture, a culinary quality prized in many Asian countries but unfortunat­ely not as much here, was not something I was expecting from the Toffee-tastic, the surprise of the bunch. I didn’t have huge hopes for this gluten-free cookie but I was pleasantly surprised by its taste and interestin­g mouthfeel. For the gluten-averse, especially, this is the one to get. Freezes fairly nicely. Frozen ranking: 4

6. Girl Scout S’Mores, Version 1 (sandwich): S’more, short for “some more,” sure is a funny little name for a snack. But if anyone has earned the right to make some money off it, it’s the Girl Scouts — a recipe for s’mores was included in the 1927 scouting manual “Tramping and Trailing With the Girl Scouts” alongside classic dishes like “Spotted Dog” and “Ring Tum Tiddy.” The recipe details the making of the s’more we all know and love — the classic marshmallo­w-and-chocolate sandwich.

This, the Little Brownie Bakers version, is the superior of the two different S’mores cookies. It’s blocky and almost awkward to bite into, with two thick graham-y cookie layers on either side of two different cream fillings — one chocolate-flavored and the other an inscrutabl­e “white” flavor, like in an Oreo cookie, that’s ostensibly the marshmallo­w. It doesn’t really conjure images of camping or mosquito bites or glowing coals in any kind of meaningful way as there’s none of that chewy whipped marshmallo­w quality that makes a S’more a S’more. But it’s a good sandwich cookie, even if it doesn’t resemble its namesake closely. Frozen ranking: 10

7. Lemon-Ups: These crispy lemon-flavored cookies are imprinted with “inspiring messages,” according to the packaging; in honor of my new quarantine gut, I ate the one that said “I AM GUTSY.” The cookie is light and vaguely citrusy, avoiding falling into Lysol territory, a pitfall that sometimes befalls lemon-flavored things. A thin sheen of frosting on the bottom is just the right amount, providing a little tanginess and some lubricatio­n to cut the dryness. Frozen ranking: 8

8. Trefoils/Shortbread: This is something of a flagship cookie, the standard-bearer on which the

Girl Scout logo is emblazoned. It’s also the one cookie where the difference between ABC and Little Brownie bakeries is fairly pronounced.

The Shortbread cookie is noticeably superior to the Trefoil — crispy and light, not exactly buttery but milky, and with a slight saltiness to contrast with the sugar. The Trefoil is stiffer, like a digestive biscuit; opening the package hits the senses in a way that says “clearance table at Yankee Candle” — exceedingl­y sweet, almost vanilla-y. The taste is odd, though: sort of wooden and dead, like a K-ration with an industrial aftertaste. Overall? These are just a little … boring. And frozen, they’re worse, tasting like a mouthful of cold sand. Frozen ranking: 12

9. Girl Scout S’mores, Version 2: This cookie from ABC Bakers is by far the inferior S’more. The first ingredient in the other cookie is graham flour. The first ingredient in this one is sugar, and the difference shows. This one is too sweet, and lacks the nutty graham flavor of its cousin. It’s a big, square cookie with a slightly dusty sheen, and it sort of tastes like a Thin Mint minus the flavor. A thin coating of white frosting coats the graham cookie, and another layer of chocolate enrobes that, but the result is uninspired.

The other S’mores cookie, which has two graham cookies on either side of filling, at least attempts to reenact a s’more. I’m not sure what this is supposed to be. Frozen, however, this is better than the other S’more. It freezes like a Thin Mint, cold and crisp, whereas the sandwich cookie’s frosting hardens while the cookie doesn’t, making for an odd eating experience. Frozen ranking: 5

10. Lemonades: This cookie, designed to look like a cross-section of a lemon, didn’t deliver. The lesser of the two lemon themed cookies, this barely smacks of citrus and tastes an awful lot like the sweet, vanilla-heavy Trefoils. There’s a layer of frosting on the bottom that gives a slight lemony sweetness but there’s little tartness or tanginess, and not much flavor, either. Frozen, though, these are surprising­ly good; The frosting hardens and the cold highlights the citrus notes, evoking a cup of Italian ice. Frozen ranking: 3

11. Toast-Yays!: This wasn’t what I was hoping for. In my mind, this would be some sort of cookie version of Cinnamon Toast Crunch — light and airy with a sugary, spicy sweetness. Instead it’s like a tile from the bathroom counter, a stiff slab that smells like syrup. This cookie actually improves with freezing, however — the coating of icing hardens and turns this into a maple-y lollipop. Frozen ranking: 6

12. Caramel Chocolate Chip: In my attempt to have a more positive attitude in 2021 — a resolution I tried, and failed, to adopt in 2020 — I’m going to start with what’s good about this: This is the only cookie that really embraces salt. The addition of sea salt adds a good counterbal­ance to this gluten-free cookie’s sweetness. Now the bad — the texture is strange and crumbly, like soft chalk. It’s what I imagine biting into the Cliffs of Dover would be like.

The chocolate chips are fine, I suppose, but the caramel tastes more like those cheap Halloween butterscot­ch candies than anything else — it has a light, chemical sweetness rather than the deep, toasty butterines­s you want with caramel. It’s not much better frozen, either. Pass. Frozen ranking: 11

 ?? CARLO GOROSPE / DREAMSTIME
JOVANI ?? Two bakeries, ABC Bakers and Little Brownie Bakers, provide cookies to the 110-plus Girl Scout councils throughout the country.
CARLO GOROSPE / DREAMSTIME JOVANI Two bakeries, ABC Bakers and Little Brownie Bakers, provide cookies to the 110-plus Girl Scout councils throughout the country.

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