There are a few foods I make each and every year for Christmas. These food traditions are embedded so deep in me that I don’t feel the holiday is complete
unless I have them on hand.
Some recipes have come and gone, others have been
added, but these are my favorites:
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I haven't made these YET, but Christmas is still three days away. This is a Google image. |
Viennese Crescents
(This cookie is known by other names, among them, Mexican
Wedding Cookies. I have been making these crunchy little nuggets for more years than
I can remember. It’s very easy.)
Set the oven at 300 degrees.
Cream thoroughly
1 cup butter (don’t
use margarine!)
Add
¼ cup sugar
2 cups flour
1 cup ground almonds (unbleached)
1 teaspoon vanilla
Mix well. Shape with fingers into crescents about 3 inches
by 1 inch and ½ inch thick. (NOTE: To ensure consistency in size, I shape them
into smallish balls, which is much easier than crescent shapes.) Roll in
Confectioners’ sugar
Place on cookie sheets. Bake 35 minutes (but watch them so they don't get too brown. Cool. Roll in sugar
again. Makes about 36.
Note: If you substitute hazelnuts, pecans, walnuts, decrease
flour to 1-3/4 cups.
Store in a tin. Keeps well.
Pecan Tassies
Mini pecan pies
Crust
1 cup butter
6 ounces cream cheese
2 cups flour
Mix softened butter and cream cheese until smooth. Add flour in fourths; work into smooth dough. Chill Shape into 1-1/4 inch balls and press into small muffin pans to make shells.
Filling:
1 box light brown sugar
3 eggs, beaten
3 tablespoons butter, melted
Dash of salt
¼ teaspoon vanilla
1 cup chopped pecans.
Slowly beat sugar into eggs. Mix in butter, salt and vanilla. Place ½ teaspoon nuts in each shell, add filling to about ½ full. Top with more nuts. Bake 25 minutes at 350 until set. Better made 1-2 days ahead. Put waxed paper between layers to store. Keeps well.
Sausage Balls
Delicious for breakfasts around Christmas time. Nothing could be easier:
1 lb. pork sausage (I use sage flavored)
1 lb. sharp cheddar cheese
3 cups Bisquick or self-rising flour
A shake of cayenne pepper if you prefer it hot, or use hot sausage for similar effect)
A few drops of water if needed for mixing
Mix all ingredients in food processor or by hand. Roll into balls. May be frozen before baking and removing from freezer as needed. When ready to bake, preheat oven to 375 and bake for about 30 minutes. Just watch them to prevent overbrowning. Line cookie sheet with parchment to prevent sticking.
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These are not the "prettiest" Christmas cookies to be found, but they are oh-so-melt-in-your-mouth good! |
Nurnberger Elisen Lebkuchen
(A variation of the traditional gingerbread-type lebkuchen.
This recipe, which uses no flour, is from my mother-in-law and my husband’s
favorite cookie. She gave me the recipe in grams and I haven’t bothered to translate
into ounces, as I have a scale that weighs in grams. I usually double or triple the recipe,
as these don’t last long at our house. My mother-in-law always baked these on thin
oblaten wafers but I find baking on parchment paper prevents sticking just as well.)
2 eggs
200 grams sugar
1 packet vanilla sugar (I don’t always have this on hand so
I simply add about ½ teaspoon vanilla to 3 tablespoons sugar for a similar
effect)
Big dash ground cloves
1 t. cinnamon
½ shot rum
1-2 drops lemon extract
75 grams candied citron
125 grams almonds
¼ teaspoon baking powder
125 grams ground hazelnuts
Set oven at 350 degrees
Beat eggs and sugars until thick and creamy. Add spices.
Grind citron and nuts together
Mix egg mixture with nut mixture
Bake 25-30 minutes. Best when aged in sealed tin a few days.
Half an apply may be added to retain moistness.
(Nuts are best ground with a manual grinder in order to
obtain a consistency similar to flour. If ground in a food processor the result
is not the same. Regarding the citron, I simply chop it finely so as to not gum
up the grinder with stickiness.)
If you bake these, I suggest baking a test cookie before
loading up an entire cookie sheet. Why? Because oven temperatures vary and you
don’t want these to cook too fast and brown over before getting fully baked. I
find my cookies turn out better at 325 degrees and adding about 10 minutes to
the baking time.
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A colorful sweet bread for Christmas, and I made it for many years. But it dries out so fast that I have discontinued the tradition.....at least for now. Credit: The Swiss Colony |
I used to bake Christmas Stollen each year, but after so
many years of it drying out too quickly, I prefer just making a yeast bread
Danish pastry, or purchasing a Panettone.
A new one this year: Linzer Cookies
I have always wanted to make these cookies because of the
way they look. I found one of the special cookie cutters this year, so this was
my first attempt. I was not at all pleased with the difficulty involved, primarily
because the dough stuck horribly inside the little design cut-out for the top
cookie. I’m not bothering to post the recipe because I won’t be making these
again! But they are quite good.
From the looks of my baking (and I have not featured everything here, as I also made chocolate truffles, haystacks, pumpkin cookies and peanut butter fudge) one might think we do lots of eating around here. The fact is that I give away many of these sweet treats.
Baking is a lot of trouble and takes much time. However, being in the kitchen is one of the ways I enjoy Christmas. Put on the music, light a pine or cinnamon scented candle and bake away!