Updated Magic 7-Layer Cookie Bar Recipe for My Mom - Viet World Kitchen (2024)

By Andrea Nguyen

When I was thumbing through my Mom’s orange notebook last month, I came across an American recipe that she absolutely adored: 7 layer cookies. One of my sisters had added it to the notebook. Maybe it was my sister Linh, who loves to bake. I remember Linh making those bars for my mom over and over. My mother loves coconut, nuts and chocolate. Over the years, she scored countless post-Halloween deals on Almond Joy bars. When I buy See’s candies for her, I make sure there are plenty of the “dark cocoanuts”.

I’ve never made the 7 layer cookie recipe because I was put off by the versions I’d had in recent years. They tended to be so darn sweet with not much character. But after seeing the recipe in mom’s notebook and thinking about her Mother’s Day, I wanted to update the recipe my mom’s (and my) 21st century tastes: dark chocolate over semi-sweet chocolate, a mild sweetness, and a touch of saltiness. (You could say that we're bittersweet salty people but I'll leave that judgement up to you.)

When I took a closer look at what we’d written down in the notebook, the recipe only had 6 ingredients. Where did number 7 come in? Perhaps that’s why these cookies also go by the name of “Magic Bar” – the seventh ingredient layer is invisible. It is the magic. Right.

Secondly, the recipe we wrote down in the notebook is a little wonky because our English wasn’t great in the 1970s: “¼ cube butter” didn’t sound right, especially when I compared it to the popular recipe from Eagle brand of sweetened condensed milk. A stick of butter is needed; substitute oil if you’re avoiding butter.

Digging further into the cookie’s provenance, I found that the magic 7 layer cookie bar recipe is attributed to Alecia Leigh Couch, who when she was 11 years old, sent her grandma’s recipe to one of America’s first food journalist, Clementine Paddleford. Paddleford gathered and recorded recipe from cooks all over the country. In September 1965, she published Alecia’s recipe for “Hello Dolly” cakes in her recipe swap column in This Week magazine. Eventually, the name changed but the simple deliciousness of the cookie remains.

Back to what we noted down in the mid 1970s. A bag of chocolate chips may have seemed luxurious to our refugee brains then but now, it sounded really intense to me. I opted for dark chocolate chunks sold at Whole Foods. Ditto for the graham crackers; I bought Annie’s brand which offers a wonderful nutty, whole grain flavor, much better than the Honey Maid graham crackers of my youth. (Use gluten-free graham crackers if you want to be wheat free.)

To get close to a tropical coconut flavor, I selected dried coconut from the bulk bins at Whole Foods and tinkered with it. The last time I used sweetened coconut flakes, it lacked a natural coconut flavor. In fact, it was darn cloying. Rehydrating and adding some sugar along with a touch of salt lent a Southeast Asian flair to the cookie. Finally, Old Man condensed milk, a favorite with Vietnamese people was poured over the cookie before baking. The bar cookie came together in no time. And soon, my kitchen was flooded with the familiar fragrance of our family kitchen from decades ago. They taste a zillion times better than what I remember. All the flavors are balanced so that nothing overwhelms. You can parse the ingredients.

I already sent my mom a Mother’s Day card. These are a bit fragile so I’ll freeze what I can stand to not eat and bring them to her. I think she’ll like these over the Almond Joy, See’s Candy, and our original 1970s recipe.

The orange notebook is brimming with favorite family recipes. I’ll keep this one digitally. Hope you’ll add it to your collection too.

RECIPE

Updated Magic 7-Layer Cookie Bar

Yields: 30 to 35 bars

Ingredients:

  • 1 ⅓ cups (4 oz / 120 g) unsweetened dried coconut
  • 6 ounces (180 g) graham crackers (8 to 10 planks)
  • 1 stick (4 oz / 120 g) unsalted butter
  • ¾ teaspoon Kosher salt
  • 2 to 2 ½ tablespoons sugar
  • 1 cup dark chocolate chunks
  • A 14-ounce can sweetened condensed milk
  • 1 cup pecans or walnuts, roughly chopped

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350F with a rack in the center. Oil or spray a 9 by 13-inch baking sheet (a quarter sheet pan).
  2. Put the coconut in a bowl, soak it in very very hot water to cover for 2 minutes. Drain well in a mesh strainer, pressing out excess water. Let sit to cool.
  3. Break the graham crackers into small pieces, dropping them into a food processor. Run the machine to reduce them to crumbs. You should have about 1 ½ cups. Transfer to a bowl and if you want a touch of saltiness, add half of the salt.
  4. Melt the butter then mix into the graham cracker crumbs. Press the most mixture into the baking sheet to even cover the bottom.
  5. Reuse the bowl for the coconut. Mix the coconut with the sugar. Add the remaining salt, if you want a salty sweet hit. Distribute the coconut over the graham cracker crust. Add the chocolate. Drizzle over the condensed milk. Finish with the nuts.
  6. Bake for about 30 minutes, until a rich brown at the rim. Cool to room temperature. Freeze for 15 minutes before cutting into small squares. An offset spatula helps to remove the squares from the pan.

Do you make these? There are so many variations out there. What’s your take on it?

Related post:

  • Inside My Mom’s Book of Domesticity: Recipes and Stories from Vietnam(the orange notebook that inspired me to write cookbooks!)

More Recipes: All

  • Vietnamese Bolognese (Bo Kho Meat Sauce)
  • Hawaiian Tofu Watercress Salad Recipe
  • Vietnamese Chile Sauce Recipe (Tuong Ot Vietnam)
  • Persimmon Spice Cookies
Updated Magic 7-Layer Cookie Bar Recipe for My Mom - Viet World Kitchen (9)
Updated Magic 7-Layer Cookie Bar Recipe for My Mom - Viet World Kitchen (10)
Updated Magic 7-Layer Cookie Bar Recipe for My Mom - Viet World Kitchen (11)
Join the crew! Subscribe to my newsletter:
PASS THE FISH SAUCE

Updated Magic 7-Layer Cookie Bar Recipe for My Mom - Viet World Kitchen (12)

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Cam McAlpine

    I used your basic recipe but added dried cranberries in one recipe and in the other I used rehydrated tangerine skins.
    Both added a little more tartness. Also substituted. maple syrup in cranberry one and honey in tangerine skins.

    Note: Tangerine skins available in most Asian markets :

Updated Magic 7-Layer Cookie Bar Recipe for My Mom - Viet World Kitchen (2024)

FAQs

Why are they called Magic Cookie Bars? ›

The reason these are called "magic" is because you layer everything into a pan, pour sweetened condensed milk over the top, and bake. When they come out of the oven, the sweetened condensed milk has baked into each layer, creating a bar that holds together and tastes amazing!

What is MIT magic cookie? ›

A magic cookie is a long, randomly generated binary password. At server startup, the magic cookie is created for the server and the user who started the system. On every connection attempt, the user's client sends the magic cookie to the server as part of the connection packet.

Why is it called a Hello Dolly? ›

The Hello Dolly name is a reference to the Broadway musical "Hello, Dolly!" which was a popular musical when these bars were created in the mid-1960s. The bars are assembled in seven layers, and they are incredibly delicious.

Who invented magic cookies? ›

History. Magic cookies were already used in computing when computer programmer Lou Montulli had the idea of using them in web communications in June 1994. At the time, he was an employee of Netscape Communications, which was developing an e-commerce application for MCI.

What defines cookie bars? ›

A potluck staple, bar cookies (or bars) are made from a batter or stiff dough that is poured or pressed into a baking pan or baking dish, then baked, cooled and cut into bars, squares or diamonds. Bars can be single-layered (like brownies) or multi-layered – with cake-like or chewy textures.

Why do they call it toll house cookies? ›

The Toll House Inn was an inn located in Whitman, Massachusetts, established in 1930 by Kenneth and Ruth Graves Wakefield. The Toll House chocolate chip cookies are named after the inn.

Who invented the chocolate chip cookie and why was it called a Toll House cookie? ›

It all started back in 1939. Ruth Wakefield, who ran the successful Toll House restaurant in Whitman, Massachusetts, was mixing a batch of cookies when she decided to add broken pieces of Nestlé Semi-Sweet chocolate into the recipe expecting the chocolate to melt.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Chrissy Homenick

Last Updated:

Views: 5422

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (74 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Chrissy Homenick

Birthday: 2001-10-22

Address: 611 Kuhn Oval, Feltonbury, NY 02783-3818

Phone: +96619177651654

Job: Mining Representative

Hobby: amateur radio, Sculling, Knife making, Gardening, Watching movies, Gunsmithing, Video gaming

Introduction: My name is Chrissy Homenick, I am a tender, funny, determined, tender, glorious, fancy, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.