A classic Dunkin’ Donuts commercial shows Fred the Baker rolling out of bed and trudging to work, sleepy-eyed, in pre-dawn darkness. “Time to make the donuts, time to make the donuts,’’ he mumbles as he suits up for the day.
It’s been like that for the few weeks here, except the baked goods in question are cookies – Christmas cookies of all shapes, sizes and persuasions. Cookies that keep us up late at night and get us up early in the morning.
We say “Time to make the cookies’’ with enthusiasm -- most of the time. Making cookies isn’t a chore, unless you erroneously add an extra stick of butter to a recipe and have to make the cookies all over again.
Or the cookies don’t come out quite as you imagined they would, and you start questioning your baking skills and whether you should share said cookies.
But I digress.
I received a copy of “The Gourmet Cookie Book: The Single Best Cookie Recipe Each Year, 1941-2009,’’ from my sister, Anne, for Christmas last year, and that little book has been my constant companion this baking season.
I’ve read it front to back, like a novel, and made several recipes from it for gift-giving, interspersed with a couple of old favorites.
These are Kourambiedes, a Greek butter cookie made with (gulp!) an entire pound of butter.
I would make them again, adding more ground nuts (almonds), more booze (Grand Marnier), a splash of almond extract and more powdered sugar on top. The cookies themselves contain just a half-cup of powdered sugar.
They’re pretty Plain Jane, a cookie to be savored with coffee or tea. Prepare to brush powdered sugar off your clothes as you bite into them.
These are Speculaas (Saint Nicholas Cookies), a traditional Dutch cookie loaded with spices – ginger, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, ground anise seed – with slivered almonds pressed into their tops before baking. I cut them in rectangles, as prescribed in the recipe, but you can use any small cutter. A robust ginger cookie is a must-have at Christmastime, and these are a keeper.
These are Anise-Scented Fig and Date Swirls. They’re a little bit fussy to make, but the return on investment is that they are a refrigerator cookie: Roll up the dough smeared with luscious, fragrant fruit into a big, fat log and refrigerate it until you a ready to slice and bake. The triple-wrapped dough cylinder was in the freezer for more than three weeks and suffered no ill consequences. I’m delighted with the final product and know I will be making this recipe again – and again.
As for the Classics: It wouldn’t be Christmas without All-Occasion Cut-Outs (recipe here) and World Peace Cookies (recipe here).
Gotta go now. Time to make the cookies!
Thanks for mentioning the cookbook, Barbara... just added an image of the cover. It's a great book and you would love it. You are welcome to borrow it any time! Merry Christmas to you, too! Are you busy baking?
Posted by: Margaret @ Eat First | 12/20/2011 at 09:20 PM
Margaret, these look amazing, and I'm glad I can personally attest to how great they taste! I need to look up that cookbook and add it to my wish list. Merry Christmas, friend!
Posted by: barbara | 12/20/2011 at 07:37 AM