Grandma Reilly's Congo Bars Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Serves a Crowd

by: Abbie C

August4,2013

5

1 Ratings

  • Makes about 2 dozen bars

Jump to Recipe

Author Notes

If my childhood had an official cookie, it would have to be my grandmother's Congo Bars. I'm not sure if my grandmother was the mastermind behind this recipe, but she definitely had a black belt in baking these gooey gifts to the world. They are like a fudgy brownie in texture, but the brown sugar makes them taste caramel-y. Even my half-siblings, who only had them a few times when visiting on weekends, still rave about these bars. They are best eaten out of a square-bottomed glass cookie jar, just like at Grandma Reilly's. —Abbie C

Test Kitchen Notes

What a delicious bar cookie! These are a potentially addictive and indulgent afternoon snack; I could also picture the congo bars served, if you cut them larger, as a plated dessert in the comfort food genre, with a scoop of vanilla ice cream on top and a drizzle of chocolate or caramel sauce. The congo bars have a fudgy, gooey texture with a bit of crunch, provided you include the optional walnuts. The brown sugar gives them a butterscotch-y flavor that lingers after every bite. I sprinkled mine with a little sea salt on top, but they are great as is, too! —navahfrost

  • Test Kitchen-Approved

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • 2/3 cupvegetable shortening
  • 2 1/4 cupsbrown sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 2 3/4 cupssifted all-purpose flour
  • 2 1/2 teaspoonsbaking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoonsalt
  • 1 cupwalnuts (optional)
  • 1 package semi-sweet chocolate chips
  • 1 teaspoonvanilla extract
Directions
  1. Preheat your oven to 350° F.
  2. Melt the shortening in a large saucepan. Mix in the brown sugar, then cool. Make sure you let this mixture cool completely or your chocolate chips will melt when you add them to the batter.
  3. Mix in the eggs, then mix in the flour, baking powder, and salt. The batter will be stiff.
  4. Mix in the chocolate chips, nuts, and vanilla extract. I've added the vanilla when I've added the eggs before, and it doesn't seem to make a difference -- but Grandma said to add it here.
  5. Spread batter onto a greased jellyroll pan and bake for 18 minutes.
  6. Allow to cool, then cut into square shaped bars.

Tags:

  • Cookie
  • American
  • Chocolate
  • Egg
  • Serves a Crowd
  • Breakfast
  • Dessert
  • Snack
Contest Entries
  • Your Best Family Recipe
  • Your Best Recipe with Walnuts
  • Your Best Family Recipe, Part 2

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Kasey Coff

  • Jacqueline Gevercer

  • Susan Leipziger

  • Abbie C

Popular on Food52

23 Reviews

Thom January 2, 2019

Found it!

It’s a Nestle recipe. This Nestle ad looks like it’s from a Ladies Home Journal. According to other sources the ad is circa 1940s-1950s.

https://www.pinterest.com/pin/63824519696639638/

Thom January 1, 2019

This is the EXACT same recipe my mom, a bride of the 1950’s, used to bake Congo Bars when we were growing up! So, sorry, I don’t think your grandma was the mastermind behind this recipe. :) I’d love to know the origin.

We never called them blondies and, although everyone in the house liked coconut, we never used coconut in them. The only variation was the type of nuts — pecans or walnuts.

Great recipe!!

Abbie C. January 2, 2019

Thanks for sharing! I was never sure if this was something my grandmother had made up since the recipe was on an old handwritten recipe card. I wonder if the reason she added vanilla at the same time as the nuts and chocolate is because it doesn’t seem to be included in the Nestle recipe? Very cool learning the origin of the recipe :)

Thom January 2, 2019

I copied mine from my mother’s well used recipe card too! Good eye on the missing vanilla. It’s the last ingredient on the recipe my mom used and stirred in just before the chocolate chips and nuts. Maybe Nestle corrected the recipe later or... maybe it was added by word of mouth... the tip shared via whispered voices across the country, “Stir in a teaspoon of vanilla. [wink]” Now I’m curious to try the original recipe to see how they taste without vanilla!

Given the name, graphics and approximate publication date it’s an interesting example of how food marketers were selling the allure of far away places, the exotic, by bringing them into the American home — in this case through a fabricated recipe that is geographically and culturally incorrect. Beyond the historical context, they are dang good cookies!

Kasey C. January 26, 2015

1) My mother made them at Christmas - we're talking the '50s / '60s here - for us to take to school for the class party. We just called them "blondies."
2) "Congo bars" are so-called because they have coconut; coconut was a luxury, and thought to come from anyplace exotic. Whether they actually come from the Congo region of Africa is irrelevant; people thought they did.
3) We always added walnuts; we mixed half the chocolate chips in and set the other half aside; we spread the batter (dough) thin in a sheet-cake pan and sprinkled the remaining chocolate chips over top. Popped it in the oven for many 5 or 6 minutes, then took it out and swirled the now-softened chocolate chips through the batter, then finished baking them.

No kidding. It don't get better than that--!

Kasey C. January 26, 2015

I mean, "Popped it in the oven for MAYBE 5 or 6 minutes..." Sometimes I can't even type, lol...

Abbie C. January 26, 2015

That's so great to get some of the history on the name! My mother does not like coconut, so that might be why my grandmother's recipe doesn't have them. She was also kind enough to make them without the walnuts when I was little, but now I love them with walnuts! Swirling the chocolate chips sounds heavenly!

Kasey C. January 26, 2015

Absolutely love them - to this day I'd rather have one of those than "real" brownies, lol...

Jacqueline G. January 11, 2015

What size bag of chocolate chips, please? I would like to try these....

Abbie C. January 11, 2015

A 12 oz bag.

Shelley January 10, 2015

I used virgin coconut oil, replaced walnuts with unsweetened shredded coconut, lined9x13 with parchment paper, lowered heat to 325 and baked for 25 mins....yum, yum, yummy!

Abbie C. January 10, 2015

That sounds great! Great idea to lower the temp and extend the baking time since virgin coconut oil has a lower smoke point! All of these ideas for alternatives to shortening have me super curious to get experimenting too!

Abbie C. January 11, 2015

This is probably the only recipe I ever use shortening for, just because the recipe, as is, is so tied to my memories of my grandma. However, I love all the ideas to modernize the ingredients and play around with the recipe, so I subbed in virgin coconut for the shortening, used 1/2 cup coconut flakes and 1/2 cup chopped pecans, subbed flax "eggs" (1tbsp ground flax + 3tbsp water per egg, and let mix sit about 15 mins) for the eggs to veganize the recipe. Per the suggestion by Ivorygirl in the head note, I sprinkled a little extra sea salt on top before baking at 325 degrees for 30-35 mins. Grandma Reilly would definitely have approved of the result :)

Susan L. January 8, 2015

Thank you, I will!

Abbie C. January 8, 2015

I've made them with refined coconut oil to mimic the taste of shortening more closely, but I bet that virgin coconut oil would be really yummy in these! I've never tried making them with butter, but I suspect it would work well based on the fact that most brownie and blondie recipes use butter. Please me know if you try any other options because I love being able to adapt my recipes to suit a diversity of diets!

Susan L. January 8, 2015

Can you use butter or coconut oil in place of shortening?

Patrick January 11, 2015

I've made these often using Margaret Fox's recipe from her Cafe Beaujolais cookbook, which uses unsalted butter. They're always a hit.

Patrick January 11, 2015

PS: Bake at 325 deg. F for 35 minutes.

barb48 January 8, 2015

I don't use shortening. What's an equal sub for it?

Amanda B. January 1, 2015

Walnuts should not be optional IMO! :-)

Abbie C. January 1, 2015

They were not permitted in mine as a kid, but now I love the walnuts! That's why she always made two batches to please you guys and me :)

Muse August 5, 2013

These certainly look delicious...will make some tomorrow and try them out!

Abbie C. August 5, 2013

Let me know how you like them!!

Grandma Reilly's Congo Bars Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Why are they called Congo bars? ›

Some say these thick cookie bars are named after the "Congo Room" in Vegas and others connect it with "Congo Square" in New Orleans. Others have said it's named after Congo in Africa, due to the unique (and totally optional) cookie bar ingredient, shredded coconut.

What is a Congo bar made of? ›

Congo Bars are soft and gooey chocolate chip cookie bars made with 2 kinds of chocolate. Using both light and dark brown sugar gives them an extra rich caramel flavor that sets them apart. Congo Bars Are Just Like Chocolate Chip Cookie Bars…But Better!

What did Congo used to be called? ›

The Democratic Republic of the Congo has been known in the past as, in chronological order, the Congo Free State, Belgian Congo, the Republic of the Congo-Léopoldville, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the Republic of Zaire, before returning to its current name the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

Why is it called Congo Free State? ›

On 29 May 1885, after the closure of the Berlin Conference, the king announced that he planned to name his possessions "the Congo Free State", an appellation which was not yet used at the Berlin Conference and which officially replaced "International Association of the Congo" on 1 August 1885.

Is it still called Congo? ›

Officially known as the Republic of the Congo, the country is often called Congo (Brazzaville), with its capital added parenthetically, to distinguish it from neighbouring Democratic Republic of the Congo, which is often referred to by its acronym, the DRC, or called Congo (Kinshasa).

Why did Congo change their name? ›

Following a constitutional referendum involving Belgium and political activism from Congolese people, Zaire became the DRC in 1965. Then in 1997, President Kabila formally changed the country's name after overthrowing the previous regime of Mobutu.

Why don t they bake in the congo? ›

They don't have anything to do with Africa — the Congo region has no tradition of baked desserts such as brownies and cakes, and wheat (for flour) cannot be grown in Central Africa. In fact, most of Africa has little tradition of sweet desserts.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Eusebia Nader

Last Updated:

Views: 6259

Rating: 5 / 5 (60 voted)

Reviews: 83% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Eusebia Nader

Birthday: 1994-11-11

Address: Apt. 721 977 Ebert Meadows, Jereville, GA 73618-6603

Phone: +2316203969400

Job: International Farming Consultant

Hobby: Reading, Photography, Shooting, Singing, Magic, Kayaking, Mushroom hunting

Introduction: My name is Eusebia Nader, I am a encouraging, brainy, lively, nice, famous, healthy, clever person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.