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As promised, proof that there are ten kinds (plus fudge) for 2009:
1: Linzer Cookies - recipe
from the King Arthur Flour website, this year with almond meal and using cherry
preserves instead of raspberry. We used the smallest snowflake shape to make the center
hole. The dough is very delicate and is best rolled out between waxed paper, with
the center holes being cut after the cookie has been placed on a baking parchment
covered cookie sheet. These really are best the day of making because the cookies
tend to absorb moisture from the filling. They're still very good, but they are softer
and more cake-like if kept.
2. Light Spice Rolled Cookies -another
from King Arthur (their cookie recipes are uniformly excellent). The only substitution
I made was to use 1/4 tsp Chinese Five Spice Powder in place of ground cloves. (I
don't like a strong clove flavor). I used the cookie roller described in
the last post. Aside from the advice posted there, I strongly suggest very lightly
dusting the top of the dough with flour before trying to use the embossed roller,
and using the roller without the handle. Cookies are light and crisp, not too sweet.
Overall, this is an excellent ginger/spice tea biscuit, worth doing again. (This dough
can also be rolled thin and cut out with conventional cutters if you don't have the
roller.)
3. Classic Peanut Butter Cookies - this one is from our circa 1970s copy of Joy
of Cooking. We usually use crunchy peanut butter instead of smooth because it
makes a better texture, but this year Younger Daughter has braces on her teeth and
crunchy is banned for the duration. For decoration instead of the standard fork-tine
checkerboard on top we use a cookie stamp, just because we have it. Peanut butter
cookies tend to be moist and oily and keep a long time. They're usually the second
cookie we make in our march towards our requisite 10 types.
4. Buffalo Bourbon Balls - This is a standard no-bake cookie recipe that starts with
ground store bought vanilla wafers, cocoa, and ground pecans. Ours comes from a version
published in one of the Buffalo NY newspapers some time in the early 1960s. I've posted
it before, but the recipe appears to have gone the way of all things so it's repeated
at the end of this post. We switched to using rum a few years ago, and prefer the
results. Rum or bourbon, cookies also benefit from being made at least two weeks in
advance so that the spirits mellow out. They're always the first cookie we make each
year because they keep so well.
5. Sugar Cookie Cutouts - this year in snowflake and holly leaf shapes only. Another
classic cookie. This one is "Rich Rolled Cookies" also from our old Joy of Cooking.
Our variant is to add a couple of drops of lemon extract to the batter, and to make
the icing by using just enough lemon juice to make confectioner's sugar spreadable,
then dividing it into several smaller quantities, each tinted with food coloring.
This icing hardens up nicely and if the cookies are left spread out after painting
until they're firm to the touch, will not cake up in the tin.
6. Chocolate Chip - our version of the official Toll House cookie recipe, although
I do admit we splurge and use Ghirardelli semisweet chips and lots of broken pecans
for an over the top touch.
7. Chocolate Crinkles - In this house they're called Earthquakes because of all the
fault lines. I alternate between the King
Arthur Flour version, and a very similar cookie recipe from a clipping sent to
me by long time pal Kathryn (Hi, Kathyn!). The King Arthur version is smack-you-in-the-face-with-chocolate,
but the other one has a better texture and is less candy-sweet.
8. Pecan Sandies - Another recipe with Buffalo heritage, this
one is an heirloom from my husband's extended family. My variant is to sort through
the bag of pecans and set aside the unbroken halves, then grind the bits to add to
the batter. The pretty halves get dunked in water and pressed on the cookie tops just
before baking. As you can see I've gotten a little better at shaping them over the
years.
9. Easy Fudge - the condensed
milk version. Super easy to make and a great way to use up leftover nuts from
the other cookies. This year's was bittersweet chocolate and walnuts. I repeated using
the silicon
oval baking forms to shape the pieces. Much neater and more uniform than the pat
it into a pan and slice method.
10. Tatte Date Nut Rolls - recipe
from the Boston Globe. This one was new this year. Preparation was very easy with
a klutz-avoid rating of only 2 out of 10. The dough was well behaved, rich tasting
dough and yummy date/walnut filling. Although it doesn't look like there's a ton of
filling while the cookies are being made, the proportion of filling:cookie at the
end is perfect. This is a keeper, but it's not my ideal Christmas cookie. They taste
fantastic, and would be the star of any holiday buffet, but they're too delicate for
plonking into cookie-share boxes, and like most fine pastry they do not keep especially
long. (I'm thinking of all sorts of other fillings and will make this again for a
dinner party, for sure.)
11. Oysters. My
own invention. A hazelnut spritz sandwich cookie with a rich chocolate filling.
It turns out that Younger Daughter is a dead-eye ace with the cookie press. She formed
all of these this year. One caution - use one of the simple cookie press dies. The
fancy shapes with small or narrow openings will not work. The ground hazelnuts will
clog them and you'll get the haphazard odd shapes that prompted this cookie's name.
Buffalo Bourbon Balls
Adapted from the women's pages of a Buffalo newspaper from the 1960s. Best if
made at least two weeks in advance and allowed to mellow in a cookie tin.
Ingredients for cookies
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1 12-oz. box
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Store bought vanilla wafer cookies
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2 cups
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Confectioner's sugar
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1 cup
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Finely chopped pecans
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¼ cup
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Cocoa
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½ cup
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Rum
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¼ cup
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Light corn syrup
Powdered sugar or cocoa or a mix of the two to rolls the balls in
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Special equipment
Directions:
1. Using food processor, grind cookies to powder. Remove from processor.
2. Using food processor, grind nuts finely. Add to cookie crumbs.
3. Sift sugar and cocoa together into crumb/nut mix.
4. Stir in rum and corn syrup. (Clean-up hint - measure the half cup rum into glass
measuring cup, add light corn syrup to same cup until total volume equals 3/4 cup.
Mix the two together in the measuring cup, then pour mix into dry ingredients. Much
easier than trying to measure sticky syrup by itself). Keep stirring wet into dry
ingredients until everything is combined (this may take a while).
5. Form into ¾ inch balls. Roll in confectioners sugar or a mix of cocoa and confectioners
sugar to coat.
6. Store in a tightly covered container. Makes about 40-50 cookies, depending on size.
Variants: Use rum instead of bourbon. Walnut/Bourbon is a good combo. Use almonds
and Amaretto; hazelnuts and Frangelica; or almonds and Chambord, Kirsch or other cherry
or berry liqueur.
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