Yankee Recipe Archives | Hermit Cookies (1952)
Spicy, sweet, and studded with raisins and currants, hermit cookies are a classic New England sweet treat.
Hermit Cookies
Photo Credit: Aimee TuckerHere in New England, the love for cookies runs long and deep (Massachusetts is home to the original Toll House Cookies, after all), and hermit cookies are another regional classic. Most often made with brown sugar/molasses, dried fruit (usually raisins and currants), spices, and sometimes nuts, you’re just as likely to see them in bar form as you are as a drop cookie—maybe more. Mostly the shape is a matter of preference, but if you make them in bar form, you can tell yourself that you’re enjoying an early ancestor of the modern day brownie or blondie. Praised for their ability to keep, it’s thought that hermits were a favorite among sailors and nomads, but they’re still mighty popular today.
I tracked down a drop cookie recipe for hermit cookies in the Yankee archives from August 1952.

Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
In that same issue (which cost only 25 cents!) were pieces on “Bostonians Take to Outdoor Art,” a profile on humorous sculptor John Rogers, and about a million ads for New England travel destinations and inns.


In this era of Yankee history, the food section was called “Yankee Recipes” and featured seasonal recipes from editor Nancy Dixon, plus recipe contest winners. That month, Mrs. Ida L. Wilbur of Franklin, Maine, won first prize ($5.00) for this hermit cookie recipe, which she called “Great Grandma’s Harmony Hermits.” They had many of the things I think about when I think of hermit cookies—namely brown sugar (which has molasses), raisins, currants, cinnamon, and nutmeg.
The only tweak I made to the recipe was to swap out the shortening for butter and substitute milk for the buttermilk since the amount called for (just 2 tablespoons) was so small. The dough for these hermit cookies was a normal looking drop-cookie dough. You can eyeball the amounts with a teaspoon but I like using a cookie scoop to ensure my cookies are all the same size—not because I’m a perfectionist, but because same-size cookies will bake at the same speed, meaning no overdone or underdone cookies in the batch.

Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
After baking, the hermit cookies emerged wonderfully fragrant with slightly crisp edges and dense, chewy centers. Just the way I like them. Despite the brown sugar, they’re also not overly sweet, which (for me) is another plus. It’s easier to tell yourself it’s not to bad for you if it’s not stuffed with chocolate.

Photo Credit : Aimee Tucker
These hermit cookies went quickly when I brought them into the office for sampling. One editor even declared them to be one of the best cookies I’ve ever made, so if you like a slightly-sweet cookie with spicy flavor and lots of dried fruit, you should add these to your to-bake list.
Are you a fan of hermit cookies?
This post was first published in 2015 and has been updated.
Get the Recipe: Hermit Cookies Recipe
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Hermit cookies were one of my dad’s favorites. I look forward to giving this recipe a try.
I can not wait to try this recipe!! All new englanders were raised on hermit cookies, and as a transplanted yankee I was thrilled to see this recipe, even though I haven’t though about or had a hermit in yeaaaars. As soon as I saw this, I was instantly transported back to grammies kitchen and those wonderful aromas of her cooking ‘n baking…..and that to me was a priceless memory 🙂
Can’t wait to see what “Lenton” recipe awaits us…..
Hi Debra! I’m so glad to have helped with your trip down memory lane! Kitchen smells (especially the good ones) are some of the best ways to transport ourselves back to childhood. 🙂
Hi Jackie! I hope that you enjoy them!
I baked these Hermit Cookies 4 times in the last 2 weeks and each time they came out better. I used a big heaping tablespoon of batter for each cookie and baked a full 15 minutes as they were large portions. I found out using more batter for one cookie makes them come out very soft and not crisp but that’s the way we like them. I will continue to bake these and add this recipe right up there with other favorites in YANKEE MAGAZINE ! Thank you for bringing back foods from my childhood. I look forward to each issue.
What are the directions ( baking time & oven temp.) when the hermits are made into bars instead of drop cookies? I only had them as bars.
My mother also made hermits in a pan. She sprinkled a little sugar before baking, no icing! Any luck getting baking directions for a pan?
sound good but would like to try the bars instead
Hermits are my favorites. I do like using molasses for my recipe, and golden raisens. I’ve used the same recipe for years, although I love trying new recipes.
Grew up on New England cooking–miss the East coast terribly.