Holiday Cookies

With candy canes and sprinkles lining grocery store shelves, holiday season just screams, "sugar cookies!" Around this time each year, I toss aside my fanciest dessert recipes and opt for the more humble sugar cookie instead. Sugar cookies can be enhanced any which way, from flavoring the dough to adding crushed candy to topping with sprinkles and frosting....with so many variations, there's truly a sugar cookie for everyone.

I made sugar cookies twice this season, both times differently than I have before. When Jackie hosted a cookie-making-and-decorating party (a blast, as you may have guessed), I was introduced to the wonder that is maple extract. It's not the easiest to find, but I'll be keeping it close for those times when I'm craving maple flavor, but adding maple syrup would change the texture. Apparently 5 lbs. of cookie dough and lots of intermittent nibbling wasn't enough for me, so I decided to make another batch at home. For those, I used vanilla extract and just a bit of molasses, which imparted an earthy flavor to otherwise regular sugar cookies. I highly recommend these recipes, and I've included both of them below.

At Jackie's party, we had the full gamut of cookie decorations as our disposal, from trusty powdered-sugar-milk icings to ginger-flavored sugar and other fancy treats. While those were loads of fun to play with, back at my house I used crushed candy instead. You can do so many things with crushed candy canes and heath bars, the two I used: you can incorporate them into the dough, sprinkle or press them on top of each cookie, or fill them into holes in your cookies to make a stained-glass effect, as Elise does here. Any way you choose, it's pretty hard to go wrong. So make a double batch of these and keep'em around this holiday season. Your family, friends, and uninvited guests will surely thank you.

Rolled Maple Sugar Cookies courtesy of Jackie and her friend's mom

Ingredients

  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 tsp. baking powder
  • 11 Tbsp. (a bit less than 1 1/2 sticks) butter, cut into chunks
  • 3/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1/3 tsp. vanilla
  • 2/3 tsp. maple extract
  • 1 Tbsp. milk
  1. Mix flour and baking powder in a large mixing bowl.
  2. Add all the other ingredients, in order, and mix either by hand or using a kitchenaid/electric mixer. Shape dough into a disk.
  3. Chill for at least one hour, up to overnight.
  4. Roll out dough to 1/4-inch thickness, and cut out any shapes you like.
  5. Bake at 350 degrees for 10-12 minutes, until cookies have just begun to brown around the edges.

To make frosting:

Put 1/2 cup of powdered sugar in a small bowl, and add milk by the Tbsp. until the mixture is the thickness of syrup. A thinner icing will run more easily and take longer to dry; a thicker one will run less and dry more quickly, but is harder to manipulate into shapes.

Old-fashioned Sugar Cookies adapted from Epicurious

  • 1 1/2 sticks butter
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 tsp. vanilla
  • 1 Tbsp. molasses
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp. baking soda
  • 3/4 tsp. salt
  1. Stir together butter, sugar, egg and vanilla, either by hand or with a mixer.
  2. Add flour, baking soda, and salt; stir until the mixture forms a dough.
  3. Form into a disk, and chill, covered, at least 2 hours.
  4. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees.
  5. Roll dough to 1/4 inch thickness, and cut out 2-inch rounds from the dough (or any other shape).
  6. Crush any hard candy until most of it is very fine; I used heath bars and candy canes.
  7. dunk cookies in crushed candy, and place 1 inch apart on a baking sheet covered with parchment paper.
  8. Bake in batches in the middle of the oven for 8-12 minutes, until edges have just turned golden.
  9. This last part is important -- eat one hot! Cookies will keep, packed in an airtight container, for up to one week.

Good 'Ole Apple Pie

Apple Pie has been done, done, and done again. If you skim anyone's list of cookbooks or blogs, you'll find infinite declarations of how to make apple pie. Some claim to have the definitive recipe. Since I have never (to the best of my memory) actually made an apple pie, start to finish, from scratch, I'm certainly not going to promise that the results of this first attempt are worth repeating. However, I can say that I learned a great deal, and I'm positive that this post will impart at least one valuable apple-pie baking recipe (which so many others have discovered before I did): apple pies are best with regular top crusts. The lattice doesn't trap enough of the steam inside, and the apples either don't cook through, or don't get coated with that lovely apple pie sludge. Next time, I'll forgo the beautiful lattice and stick to the easier top crust. Save your lattices for berry pies and other juicy things.

That said, the sludge that this pie produced (in my humble opinion) perfectly balanced sweet and tart. The apples were soft but still toothsome, and the syrup that oozed from each slice was delightful. By the time the pie was actually gone, the dish needed very little scrubbing, as I'd been sneaking fingerfuls of the goo all along.

Here's the info about my pie, element by element:

The Crust
It's fashionable to avoid transfats these days. They're pretty darn bad for you, and you're definitely better off with butter. Plus, never growing up with much margarine or shortening in the house, they freak me out a bit, and I tend to associate them with spam and other such delicacies. However, Friday night dinner was meat, so I couldn't use butter in the crust, and frankly, oil is simply an unacceptable substitute in proper pie dough, so I caved and used margarine. I now understand why people use it, scary as it may be: it produces a perfectly flaky dough that's neither tough or overly dense. I'd say I'd do it again, but I won't. Hey, it was good while it lasted.

As for the lattice top, it's really not as complicated to make as it looks. An instructional video can be found here. Basically, the methodology is as follows: cut 16 1/2-inch strips from your second disk of rolled-out dough. Lay eight of them across the pie in one direction, equidistant from each other. Now, fold every other strip back over itself almost all the way, and lay down your first crossing strip. Unfold the folded strips over, and fold the other strips over themselves (that is, every other strip, but the ones that run under the first cross strip). Now, lay the next strip down. Unfold the folded strips, fold the unfolded strips, and lay down the next cross strip. Keep alternating this way until all strips are laid, and you'll find a perfect lattice crust.

The apples
People are so particular about which apples to use in a pie. These taste better, these hold their shape better, those are just horrible in pies, etc. I say, there's no such thing as an apple that's horrible in pies. They're all pretty darn good. So I picked up the "seconds" at the farmers market: with a couple of bruises here and there, seconds run about 89 cents a pound -- not bad for farm-fresh apples. It turns out that I used a mix of braeburn, honeycrisp, jonathan, and jonagold, and I was very pleased. The verdict? Use whatever's in the fridge. Just stay away from red delicious which taste less-than-wonderful and macintosh, which get kinda mushy.


The add-ins
I'm a big fan of quinces. The little suckers will give you quite a run for your money if you dare try to peel or (gasp!) slice them up, but once chopped, sugared, and cooked, quinces elevate any old apple pie and impart an unparalleled complexity of flavor. Quinces should be sauteed before added to pie, as they take longer to cook than apples (and are quite unpleasant if undercooked). I like to boil them in a very diluted simple syrup with a bit of vanilla and cinnamon.


Basic Flaky Pie Crust
adapted from The Pie and Pastry Bible (© 1998 Cordon Rose, Inc.) by Rose Levy Beranbaum

(Pastry for a 9-inch lattice pie, a 9-inch deep-dish pie, a 10-inch pie shell, or a 12- to 14-inch free-form tart

  • 9 tablespoons unsalted butter or margarine, cold
  • 1 1/2 cups (dip and sweep method) bleached all-purpose flour
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 3 1/2 to 4 1/2 tablespoons ice water
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons cider vinegar
  • 1/8 teaspoon baking powder (optional, and I didn't use it; if not using, double the salt)
  1. Divide the butter into two parts, about two thirds to one third: 6 tablespoons and 3 tablespoons.
  2. Cut the butter into 3/4-inch cubes. Wrap each portion of butter with plastic wrap, refrigerate the larger amount and freeze the smaller for at least 30 minutes. Place the flour, salt, and (optional) baking powder in a reclosable gallon-size freezer bag and freeze for at least 30 minutes.
  3. Place the flour mixture in a food processor with the metal blade and process for a few seconds to combine. Set the bag aside.
  4. Add the larger amount of butter cubes to the flour and process for about 20 seconds or until the mixture resembles coarse meal. Add the remaining frozen butter cubes and pulse until all of the frozen butter is the size of peas. (Toss with a fork to see it better.)
  5. Add the lowest amount of the ice water and the vinegar and pulse 6 times. Pinch a small amount of the mixture together between your fingers. If it does not hold together, add half the remaining water and pulse 3 times. Try pinching the mixture again. If necessary, add the remaining water, pulsing 3 times to incorporate it. The mixture will be in particles and will not hold together without being pinched.
  6. Spoon the mixture into the plastic bag. (For a double-crust pie, it is easiest to divide the mixture in half at this point.)
  7. Holding both ends of the bag opening with you fingers, knead the mixture by alternately pressing it, from the outside of the bag, with the knuckles and heels of your hands until the mixture holds together in one piece and feels slightly stretchy when pulled.
  8. Wrap the dough with plastic wrap, flatten it into a disc (or discs) and refrigerate for at least 45 minutes, preferably overnight. (For a pie shell and lattice, divide it in a ratio of two thirds:one third — use about 9.5 ounces for the shell and the rest for the lattice, flattening the smaller part into a rectangle.)
  9. Store, refrigerated, up to 2 days; frozen, up to 3 months.
  10. The Pastry Bible's explanation of what's goin' on:

    Pastry flour offers the most tenderness while maintaining flakiness, but it is the addition of vinegar that relaxes the dough without losing flakiness, making it easier to roll, shrink less, and be even more tender. The baking powder lifts and aerates the dough slightly without weakening it, but it makes it seem more tender.

    Thes secret to success is finely incorporating about two thirds of the butter into the flour, which keeps the flour from absorbing too much water and forming gluten, which would make the crust tough. The remaining one third of the butter is incorporated in larger pieces, which serve to seperate the layers, resulting in the desired flakiness. This pie crust does not shrink or distort as much as the standard all-butter crust because there is less gluten development.

    If when adding the water, you find you need more than indicated in the recipe, chances are you haven't moisture-proofed the flour adequately (you haven't used the correct amount of butter or processed it fine enough), leaving the flour free to absorb more liquid. The resulting crust will be flakier but less tender.

    If you find you need less water than specified in the recipe, chances are you divided the butter incorrectly and used too much of it to moisture-proof the flour, preventing it from absorbing an adequate amount of water. The resulting crust will be more tender but not very flaky.

    Flattening the newly formed dough into a disc or discs before refrigerating makes it easier to roll without cracking. The dough is refrigerated to relax the gluten, making it less elastic and easier to roll. Chilling also firms the butter, preventing sticking and the need for extra flour when rolling, which would toughen it. Dough that has rested overnight before baking shrinks less.

Apple Pie adapted from Deb at Smitten Kitchen

  • 3 1/2 lbs apples (about 8)
  • 1 quince
  • 1 vanilla bean, split lengthwise, or one dash vanilla
  • 2 cups water and 1/4 cup sugar
  • 2 tablespoons juice and 1 teaspoon zest from 1 lemon
  • 3/4 cups sugar
  • 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1/2 teaspoon ground allspice

  1. Over medium heat, combine 2 cups water, 1/4 cup sugar, and vanilla. Stir until sugar dissolves. Peel and chop quince, removing the core. Add sliced quince to simple syrup and cook over medium for about 20 minutes, until quince pieces are soft-ish.
  2. Adjust oven rack to lowest position and heat rimmed baking sheet and oven to 500 degrees. Remove one piece of dough from refrigerator (if refrigerated longer than 1 hour, let stand at room temperature until malleable).
  3. Roll dough on lightly floured work surface or between two large sheets of wax paper, to about 1/2-inch thick. Fold dough in half, then over itself again into quarters, and transfer dough to pie plate, placing dough point in center of pie plate and unfolding. Working around circumference of pie plate, ease dough into pan corners by gently lifting dough edges with one hand while pressing around pan bottom with other hand. Leave dough that overhangs lip of plate in place; refrigerate dough-lined pie plate.
  4. Peel, core, and slice apples into about 8 slices each. Toss with lemon juice and zest. In a medium bowl, mix ¾ cup sugar, flour, salt and spices. Toss dry ingredients with apples. Add cooked quinces and toss. Turn fruit mixture, including juices, into chilled pie shell and pile heavily in center.
  5. Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
  6. Roll out second piece of dough to 1/2-inch thick disk. Slice into 16 strips, and follow the instructions above for a lattice top. Alternatively, simply lay the second disk atop the apples in the same manner as you lined the pie plate with the first disk. Trim top and bottom edges to ½-inch beyond pan lip. Tuck this rim of dough underneath itself so that folded edge is flush with pan lip. Flute edging or press with fork tines to seal. For a non-lattice top crust, cut three slits on dough top. If pie dough is very soft, place in freezer for 10 minutes.
  7. Place pie on baking sheet and bake until top crust is golden, about 25 minutes. Rotate pie and reduce oven temperature to 375 degrees; continue baking until juices bubble and crust is deep golden brown, 30-35 minutes longer.
  8. Transfer pie to wire rack; cool to room temperature, at least 4 hours.

Saffron-Nutmeg Rice Pudding: Sugar High Friday!


Something has happened. There used to be no stopping me from gravitating straight toward the chocolate. In Baskin Robbins, I had no control over my constant need for chocolate raspberry truffle, and therefore tasted almost no other flavors for about six years. My mom could hide all the candy in the house and I wouldn't notice, but if chocolate had a hiding place, I could find it in a flash. Lately, my long-standing chocolate obsession has taken a backseat to simpler things. Exhibit A: this little rice pudding number, featured in the latest issue of gourmet. I turned the page to the letters section, noticed the recipe for rice pudding with (gulp) nutmeg as the only flavoring (not even vanilla!) and thought, I. must. make. this. now.

So I did.

Where has all the chocolate gone? No matter. If you make this rice pudding, I guarantee you won't miss chocolate, no, not one little bit. Nutmeg may sound "simple" when you shake it from the jar into your carrot soup (the subject of a later post...stay tuned!) But when it's freshly grated, when it stands alone on arborio rice -- with just some milk, cream and sugar to pull the pudding together -- why, nothing could be more complex.

Nutmeg is a "warm" spice, at once spicy and sweet, with a real bite and a pleasant bitterness that make it irresistible. In the jar, its flavor gets somewhat muted, so grate some from a whole nutmeg whenever possible. I bought 20 whole nutmeg pieces for a buck fifty, so it shouldn't set you back much, and it's truly worth it.

Now, I'll be honest: I didn't stop at the nutmeg. After all, something as simple as rice pudding provides a golden opportunity to play around. I happened to buy a (relatively) big box of saffron a couple weeks ago, and I've been waiting for a chance to use it. What better than a bright yellow, saffron-nutmeg flavored rice pudding? So it was settled.

Aside from the nutmeg, what drew me to this recipe was the stirring -- or lack thereof. Typically, rice pudding means hovering over the stove until your back aches, stirring the thing around and around so it doesn't clump or stick or overcook. Needless to say, it's a pain. But this recipe was for baked pudding: simply mix the ingredients in the ramekins themselves, stick'em on a baking sheet, and bake'em in the oven for an hour. Let's face it -- not much could be easier. And I'd be surprised if you don't scrape your bowl clean, as I did. Saffron-Nutmeg Rice Pudding: my entry for this month's Sugar High Friday.

Saffron-Nutmeg Rice Pudding adapted from this month's Gourmet
serves 4.

  • 2 cups whole milk
  • 1/3 cup Arborio rice
  • 8 tsp. sugar
  • salt
  • whole nutmeg
  • 12 threads saffron
  • 4 Tbsp. heavy cream
  1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees, and put rack in the middle. Butter the ramekins.
  2. Add 1/2 cup milk, 4 tsp. rice, 2 tsp. sugar, and a pinch of salt to each ramekin. Grate a bit of nutmeg over each, and put 3 threads of saffron in each. Stir well to combine, and ensure that the spices don't float, if possible.
  3. Put ramekins in a shallow baking pan and bake until most of the milk is absorbed and the tops are golden-brown, about 1 hour.
  4. A skin will form on each ramekin; remove the skin.
  5. Stir 1 Tbsp. cream into each pudding until creamy. Allow to cool, and if desired, refrigerate 30 minutes until chilled.
  6. Enjoy -- don't forget to scrape your ramekin to the last drop.

Blueberry Tartlets and Cooking Club #2

Sunday night was another installment of "Ladies Who Cook....Sometimes." This month, the theme was "dishes with color." My attempt was quite the adventure -- but I'll get to that in a moment.

It was all sorts of wet and ugly outside, and our first course of squash and pear soup was a perfect foil to the cold, rainy weather. Not surprisingly, it was our orange/yellow element. We also had beet salad (purple), shells with light cheese sauce (white), pesto bread (green), cranberry bars (duh), and my creation....blueberry tarts.

Now it's safe to say that by making blueberry tarts, I was intending to bring something blue. That said, the tart dough came out green, the blueberry mixture was a deep shade of purple, and the whipped cream was...um, periwinkle. If you put them all together and mix them up, they'd probably make blue, though, right?

Anyway, what really matters is how they tasted....and that, my friends, was pretty darned good. Especially considering I made them without ever referencing a recipe, I was pleasantly surprised when I bit into one. The filling was slightly sweet, with still-intact blueberries bound together by a substantive but un-goopy sauce and a hefty dose of brandy. I'd make them again in a flash, if only to do the flambé part again!

I've posted the recipe below, as usual, along with two other recipes from last night's event: cranberry bars and squash-pear soup. If you make any of these, it shouldn't be tough to draw a hungry crowd.

Brandied Blueberry Tartlets makes 22 tartlets

Tart Dough (adapted from Tartelette)

  • 1 1/2 cups flour
  • 1/2 cup powdered sugar
  • 1 stick and 1 Tbsp. butter
  • 1 egg yolk
  • 2 drops blue food coloring, if you're so inclined

Blueberry Filling:

  • 1 pint blueberries, washed and dried
  • 2 1/2 Tbsp. sugar
  • 1 1/2 Tbsp. flour
  • 2 Tbsp. butter
  • a generous splash (1/4 cup) Brandy

Make Tart Dough:

  1. In food processor, combine butter, flour, and sugar. Blend until the mixture resembles coarse meal. Add egg yolk, and pulse until dough comes together. Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate at least 45 minutes, until no longer soft.
  2. Unwrap chilled dough and hit a couple times with a rolling pin to soften. Take thumb-sized pieces and press them into tartlet molds. Using your thumb and forefinger, press the dough up the sides of the molds.
  3. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  4. Now, make the blueberry mixture: In a shallow pan, combine butter and flour to make a roux (melt the butter and stir it around in the flour; this will thicken the blueberries). Add blueberries, and toss to coat. Add sugar and stir until dissolved. Now, add brandy, all at once. At this point, you can either: a) shake the pan around over a gas flame until the flame licks the edge of your pan and the brandy catches on fire, or b)take a match to the brandy and let it burn, baby!
  5. Once the flame has burned off all the alcohol in your brandy the blueberry mixture should be well emulsified and ready to use. Turn off the stove.
  6. Anchor the tartlet shells by piercing them a couple times each with a toothpick. This should prevent them from puffing up. Pre-bake the shells for 10 minutes, or until golden.
  7. Meanwhile, whip your cream (and add some blue food coloring if you want to be wacky). Fill baked shells with blueberry filling, and top with whipped cream. Don't get them all over your face, now!

Cranberry Bars from Sara Rahnama

  • Makes 12-18 bars
  • 1 1/2 sticks unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch cubes
  • 2 cups whole wheat all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons brown sugar
  • 3 cups fresh cranberries
  • 1/4 cup water
  • 1 tbsp lemon zest
  • Confectioners sugar for dusting
  1. Preheat oven to 350°F with rack in middle.
  2. Line a 9-inch square baking pan with parchment paper, leaving anoverhang.
  3. Blend butter, flour, salt, and 1/2 cup sugar in a foodprocessor until mixture begins to clump together. If the mixture is toodry, add up to 1 tbsp cold water. Press into bottom of pan.
  4. Bake until pale golden and sides begin to pull away from pan, 25 to 30 minutes.
  5. While crust is baking, cook cranberries, remaining 2/3 cupsugar, lemon zest, and water in a 2-quart heavy saucepan over mediumheat, stirring occasionally, until berries burst, 6 to 8 minutes.
  6. Pour cranberries over crust and bake until edge is golden, about 25minutes.
  7. When the bars have cooled completely, sift confectioners sugarover top. Lift out of pan using overhang and cut into squares.

Butternut Squash Pear Soup From Joey Loewenstein (from Noteworthy Two, A New Recipe Collection from the Ravinia Festival) Serves 6-8

  • 1 and ½ quarts chicken broth
  • 2 and ½ pounds butternut squash, peeled, seeded, in 2-inch pieces
  • 3 ripe pears, peeled, cored, quartered
  • 1 large onion, chopped
  • 2 medium shallots, peeled, chopped
  • ½ t. nutmeg
  • ½ c. half and half
  • salt and pepper to taste
  • 6-8 T. sour cream, optional
  • 1-2 t. cinnamon, optional
  1. In large pot, heat chicken broth. (We used vegetable broth and it worked great....so for all you kosher folks out there, vegetable broth works just fine!)
  2. Add squash, pears, onion, shallots,and nutmeg. Bring to boil. Reduce heat and simmer 30 minutes or untiltender.
  3. In food processor, puree mixture in small batches (OR, BETTER YET, GET A HAND BLENDER. TOOK ME 2 MINUTES! CAREFUL, THOUGH, NOT TOSPLASH! TURN THE BLENDER ON AFTER YOU PUT IT INTO THE MIXTURE).
  4. Return to pot, stir in half & half, salt & pepper. Cook over low heat untilhot. Serve with dollop of sour cream and sprinkle of cinnamon.