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crookie

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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Blend of croissant +‎ cookie.

Noun

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crookie (plural crookies)

  1. A combination of a croissant and a cookie.
    • 2014 April 5, Julia Moskin, “A real treat or half-baked?”, in Dayton Daily News, volume 137, number 174, page D7:
      And the dozens of bakers who are busy inventing doissants, mallomacs, crookies and the like are app developers, locked in a fight to create the best new product for the platform.
    • 2014 December 5, Lucas Sin, “Such is the state of American pastry”, in Weekend (Yale Daily News), page B2:
      Such is the state of American pastry: cookie dough shaped into a shot glass and filled with milk, a croissant with its legs crossed into a pretzel, and soft-serve made out of strained cereal milk. Oh, and of course, there’s the Cronut™ and its mutant cousins: the bronut (a brownie doughnut), the brodding (a brownie pudding), the brookie (a brownie cookie), the crookie (croissants with Oreo cookies), the S’monut (doughnut pastry with marshmallow filling and graham crackers), the S’mookies (s’mores between cookies), the townie (a brownie tartlet), the broissant (a Cronut™ made by chocolatier Peterbrooke), the baissant (a bagel-croissant) and the cragel (a croissant-bagel).
    • 2015 August 9, “It’s a croissant! It’s a waffle! It’s ...”, in The Record, page BL-2:
      Well, we’ve had the cronut (croissant-donut hybrid), the cragel (croissant-bagel hybrid), the crookie (croissant-cookie), and now ... the kudossant, a croissant-waffle hybrid.
    • 2015 December 18, Laura Craik, “Can’t cook, won’t cook”, in ES Magazine, page 6:
      They can tell you the exact point at which the cronut replaced the doughnut replaced the duffin replaced the crookie as the city’s pretentious baked hybrid sweet treat du jour.
    • 2016, Alysa Levene, Cake: A Slice of History, Headline Publishing Group, →ISBN:
      We now have crookies, brookies, duffins, and cruffins, all mash-ups of familiar treats (cookies, tarts, brownies, doughnuts, croissants and muffins respectively).
    • 2019 September 18, Greg Cox, “Bakeries offer irresistible sweet and savory goods”, in The Herald-Sun, volume 131, number 205, page 6B:
      You won’t find a cronut (that’s patented), but you will find a brown butter crookie and a lemon meringue cruffin filled with a tangy-sweet custard and crowned with a beautifully browned meringue swirl.