| Randy |
Hi,
I am an Indian who recently moved to the states and am looking
for some recipes for American Christmas cookies. Can someone
please help?
--Freeda
|
|
|
| Freeda |
Sorry - wrong account - use this one instead.
--Freeda
|
|
|
| Melba's Jammin' |
In article <1135344590.988467.295450@g14g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>,
"Randy" <yates@ieee.org> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am an Indian who recently moved to the states and am looking
> for some recipes for American Christmas cookies. Can someone
> please help?
>
> --Freeda
Allrecipes.com has lots of selections for special holiday cookies.
Cut-out and decorated sugar cookies are common. A basic cookbook should
have a recipe; I've posted mine here within the last two weeks. Spiced
cookies are common at Christmas. Spritz cookies are very common.
Good luck. It's a good thing the 12 Days of Christmas do not end on
December 25; that's when they begin. You still have time.
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-22-05
|
|
|
| Melba's Jammin' |
In article <1135344723.642247.282720@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>,
"Freeda" <freedarandy@yahoo.co.in> wrote:
> Sorry - wrong account - use this one instead.
>
> --Freeda
You need to check back here for replies. Most people do not commonly
email responses. They post.
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-22-05
|
|
|
| Julia Altshuler |
Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> Allrecipes.com has lots of selections for special holiday cookies.
> Cut-out and decorated sugar cookies are common. A basic cookbook should
> have a recipe; I've posted mine here within the last two weeks. Spiced
> cookies are common at Christmas. Spritz cookies are very common.
> Good luck. It's a good thing the 12 Days of Christmas do not end on
> December 25; that's when they begin. You still have time.
I was going to say that any cookie could be a Christmas cookie. As long
as it is rich and special (butter, sugar, nuts, dried fruit, chocolate,
jam, somewhere in the recipe), it works for Christmas. But then, I've
never celebrated Christmas so what do I know. What if we phrased the
question the other way and asked if there's any cookie or baked good
that's NOT appropriate for Christmas? If you made hamentaschen
(triangular shaped filled cookies traditionally made for Purim), and no
one knew they were hamentaschen, couldn't they be brought to a Christmas
celebration and wouldn't they fit right in?
--Lia
|
|
|
| Nancy Young |
"Julia Altshuler" <jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote
> I was going to say that any cookie could be a Christmas cookie. As long
> as it is rich and special (butter, sugar, nuts, dried fruit, chocolate,
> jam, somewhere in the recipe), it works for Christmas. But then, I've
> never celebrated Christmas so what do I know. What if we phrased the
> question the other way and asked if there's any cookie or baked good
> that's NOT appropriate for Christmas?
There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
Christmas to me.
> If you made hamentaschen (triangular shaped filled cookies traditionally
> made for Purim), and no one knew they were hamentaschen, couldn't they be
> brought to a Christmas celebration and wouldn't they fit right in?
Sure, and rugelagh (sp), lots of cookies say Christmas to me. To me
a good rule of thumb is lots of butter and maybe nuts. Oh, and I like
those pecan tassies? I have a cookie cookbook that has a section for
Christmas cookies and the other half is everyday cookies. The Christmas
section is heavy on butter cookies.
nancy
|
|
|
| Wayne Boatwright |
On Fri 23 Dec 2005 07:55:42a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Nancy
Young?
>
> "Julia Altshuler" <jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote
>
>> I was going to say that any cookie could be a Christmas cookie. As
>> long as it is rich and special (butter, sugar, nuts, dried fruit,
>> chocolate, jam, somewhere in the recipe), it works for Christmas. But
>> then, I've never celebrated Christmas so what do I know. What if we
>> phrased the question the other way and asked if there's any cookie or
>> baked good that's NOT appropriate for Christmas?
>
> There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
> Christmas to me.
I agree with that, but it's the only cookie that David really likes and
asks for, so I always bake chocolate chip cookies for him on holidays.
>> If you made hamentaschen (triangular shaped filled cookies
>> traditionally made for Purim), and no one knew they were hamentaschen,
>> couldn't they be brought to a Christmas celebration and wouldn't they
>> fit right in?
>
> Sure, and rugelagh (sp), lots of cookies say Christmas to me. To me
> a good rule of thumb is lots of butter and maybe nuts. Oh, and I like
> those pecan tassies? I have a cookie cookbook that has a section for
> Christmas cookies and the other half is everyday cookies. The Christmas
> section is heavy on butter cookies.
>
> nancy
--
Wayne Boatwright *¿*
__________________________________________________
________________
And if we enter a room full of manure, may we believe in the pony.
|
|
|
| Julia Altshuler |
Nancy Young wrote:
> There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
> Christmas to me.
That's because chocolate chip cookies aren't sufficiently special.
They're the first cookie every kid learns to make, and they're what
people who don't particularly like cooking or baking bring to potlucks
(when they can't get away with bringing the paper plates). Also, have
you noticed that they taste good (the recipe from the Nestles' bag) even
if you get something wrong? I've had them come out so flat and
shapeless that I had to break them apart to call them cookies-- but they
were edible and tasty.
--Lia
|
|
|
| sarah bennett |
Newsgroups: rec.food.cooking
X-Trace: newssvr11.news.prodigy.com 1135352571 ST000 68.21.35.98 (Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:42:51 EST)
User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.2 (Windows/20050317)
X-Accept-Language: en-us, en
MIME-Version: 1.0
In-Reply-To: <FsidneYkSuBnizHeRVn-ow@comcast.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Complaints-To: abuse@prodigy.net
NNTP-Posting-Date: Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:42:51 EST
X-UserInfo1: TSU[@I_A\S@WRTPX@JJLN\@IFB\BAEHLBIPB_DUMHP]LWC]FDU
]CS[GTJTXDX_KI\VB]JBVMS^YT_G[CZVWAOS\DHFWEH]@KGXYH
B\_CMDSFABP^J[AHHRKARLE_JDBLJ\XA[JRMEI]MGJSPB\Y]^K
G\@S^@VQKI_Q[G@@_ACSARASDEFLBJ]S\GFNTUAVBL
Xref: spool6-east.superfeed.net rec.food.cooking:1147942
Julia Altshuler wrote:
> Nancy Young wrote:
>
>> There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
>> Christmas to me.
>
>
>
> That's because chocolate chip cookies aren't sufficiently special.
> They're the first cookie every kid learns to make, and they're what
> people who don't particularly like cooking or baking bring to potlucks
> (when they can't get away with bringing the paper plates). Also, have
> you noticed that they taste good (the recipe from the Nestles' bag) even
> if you get something wrong? I've had them come out so flat and
> shapeless that I had to break them apart to call them cookies-- but they
> were edible and tasty.
>
>
> --Lia
>
I made some as part of some cookie tins that I made as gifts. But what
should I know from Christmas cookies? I'm Jewish :)
--
saerah
"Peace is not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind, a
disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice."
-Baruch Spinoza
"There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly
what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear
and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There
is another theory which states that this has already happened."
-Douglas Adams
|
|
|
| Melba's Jammin' |
In article <doh35k$hso$1@news.monmouth.com>,
"Nancy Young" <qwerty@monmouth.com> wrote:
> "Julia Altshuler" <jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote
>
> > I was going to say that any cookie could be a Christmas cookie. As long
> > as it is rich and special (butter, sugar, nuts, dried fruit, chocolate,
> > jam, somewhere in the recipe), it works for Christmas. But then, I've
> > never celebrated Christmas so what do I know. What if we phrased the
> > question the other way and asked if there's any cookie or baked good
> > that's NOT appropriate for Christmas?
>
> There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
> Christmas to me.
>
> > If you made hamentaschen (triangular shaped filled cookies traditionally
> > made for Purim), and no one knew they were hamentaschen, couldn't they be
> > brought to a Christmas celebration and wouldn't they fit right in?
>
> Sure, and rugelagh (sp), lots of cookies say Christmas to me. To me
> a good rule of thumb is lots of butter and maybe nuts. Oh, and I like
> those pecan tassies? I have a cookie cookbook that has a section for
> Christmas cookies and the other half is everyday cookies. The Christmas
> section is heavy on butter cookies.
>
> nancy
In my mind, a Christmas cookie is one you don't make any other time of
the year, likely not because of the xpense of ingredients or degree of
difficulty. Holidays are often the times when folks on a budget pull
out the stops and do 'extra.' For some, it's any cookie if they don't
bake them year 'round; for others, it's the degree of difficulty or
putziness. Or, if the recipe makes a boatload and you've only got an
innertube's worth of eaters year 'round but a boatload during the
holiday season, that would be a factor, too. My favorite
cookie/pastry for Christmas are rozhky -- yeast in the dough that is
prepared like pie dough (cutting in fat), resting the dough, rolling,
cutting the shape (trapezoidal), filling, and baking. Filling must be
prepared -- apricot and pineapple and nut filling. Makes a boatload.
Mine are as good as mom's. Sister Julie's fill the need for The
Desperate.
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-22-05
|
|
|
| Melba's Jammin' |
In article <FsidneYkSuBnizHeRVn-ow@comcast.com>,
Julia Altshuler <jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote:
> That's because chocolate chip cookies aren't sufficiently special.
> They're the first cookie every kid learns to make,
Snickerdoodles.
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-22-05
|
|
|
| Nancy Young |
"Wayne Boatwright" <waynesgang@waynes.gang> wrote
> On Fri 23 Dec 2005 07:55:42a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Nancy
> Young?
>> There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
>> Christmas to me.
>
> I agree with that, but it's the only cookie that David really likes and
> asks for, so I always bake chocolate chip cookies for him on holidays.
Oh, nothing wrong with that ... I never turn down a chocolate chip
cookie unless it has coconut in it, I hate that. Commercial brands do
that to annoy me; as you know, it's all about me. (smile)
nancy
|
|
|
| Melba's Jammin' |
In article <%VUqf.4126$oW.120@newssvr11.news.prodigy.com>,
sarah bennett <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
> Julia Altshuler wrote:
> > Nancy Young wrote:
> >
> >> There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
> >> Christmas to me.
> > That's because chocolate chip cookies aren't sufficiently special.
>
> I made some as part of some cookie tins that I made as gifts. But what
> should I know from Christmas cookies? I'm Jewish :)
<cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
opinion.
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-22-05
|
|
|
| sarah bennett |
Newsgroups: rec.food.cooking
X-Trace: newssvr11.news.prodigy.com 1135354719 ST000 68.21.35.98 (Fri, 23 Dec 2005 11:18:39 EST)
User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.2 (Windows/20050317)
X-Accept-Language: en-us, en
MIME-Version: 1.0
In-Reply-To: <barbs.challer-ACFC43.10104823122005@individual.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Complaints-To: abuse@prodigy.net
NNTP-Posting-Date: Fri, 23 Dec 2005 11:18:39 EST
X-UserInfo1: TSU[@IONWJWOBQ\YZBN^[_P@GB\VPUDO@HTHOCULF@^PGDTFOG
[]VFW[ML\THRCKV^GGZKJMGV^^_JSCFFUA_QXFGVSCYRPILH]T
RVKC^LSN@DX_HCAFX__@J\DAJBVMY\ZWZCZLPA^MVH_P@\\EOM
W\YSXHG__IJQY_@M[A[[AXQ_XDSTAR]\PG]NVAQUVM
Xref: spool6-east.superfeed.net rec.food.cooking:1147957
Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> In article <%VUqf.4126$oW.120@newssvr11.news.prodigy.com>,
> sarah bennett <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>
>
>>Julia Altshuler wrote:
>>
>>>Nancy Young wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
>>>>Christmas to me.
>
>
>>>That's because chocolate chip cookies aren't sufficiently special.
>
>
>>I made some as part of some cookie tins that I made as gifts. But what
>>should I know from Christmas cookies? I'm Jewish :)
>
>
> <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
> home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
> butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
> participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
> a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
> Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
> recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
> opinion.
They don't bake unless it comes pre-mixed in a package. There are 7
different kinds of cookies- almond flavored butter cutouts, orange
flaopred butter cut-outs, vanilla cut-outs, chocolate chip, oatmeal
raisin, gingerbread thin rounds, and chewy gingerbread hearts with
candied ginger. I think two of them being 'common' is ok. :) It makes me
kind of sad that they are impressed by simple drop cookies, but whatever
:) I couldn't afford to make 'fancy' cookies this year, so I made those
that I had the ingredients for already (I did have to buy butter, vegan
margarine and extra bags of flour and sugar, though).
--
saerah
"Peace is not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind, a
disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice."
-Baruch Spinoza
"There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly
what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear
and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There
is another theory which states that this has already happened."
-Douglas Adams
|
|
|
| ~patches~ |
Nancy Young wrote:
> "Julia Altshuler" <jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote
>
>
>>I was going to say that any cookie could be a Christmas cookie. As long
>>as it is rich and special (butter, sugar, nuts, dried fruit, chocolate,
>>jam, somewhere in the recipe), it works for Christmas. But then, I've
>>never celebrated Christmas so what do I know. What if we phrased the
>>question the other way and asked if there's any cookie or baked good
>>that's NOT appropriate for Christmas?
>
>
> There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
> Christmas to me.
I make at least one batch of oatmeal chocolate chip cookies at
Christmas. Our elderly neighbour loves them so they are a perfect gift.
One DS asks me to make oatmeal chocolate chip cookies as well and
other one wants peanut butter cookies. A plate of peanut butter cookies
can look feastive. I like making spritz and spicey cookies for the
Christmas cookie tray. To me though, they don't say Christmas any more
than any other cookie since I make all kinds of cookies throughout the
year. My mom always made date swirl cookies at Christmas. I should go
dig out her recipe and make a batch.
>
>
>>If you made hamentaschen (triangular shaped filled cookies traditionally
>>made for Purim), and no one knew they were hamentaschen, couldn't they be
>>brought to a Christmas celebration and wouldn't they fit right in?
>
>
> Sure, and rugelagh (sp), lots of cookies say Christmas to me. To me
> a good rule of thumb is lots of butter and maybe nuts. Oh, and I like
> those pecan tassies? I have a cookie cookbook that has a section for
> Christmas cookies and the other half is everyday cookies. The Christmas
> section is heavy on butter cookies.
>
> nancy
>
>
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:10:48 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
<barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
> <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
> home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
> butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
> participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
> a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
> Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
> recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
> opinion.
I feel the exact same way. Chocolate chip cookies are every day
cookies. Nothing special about them, to me. Crash's favorite
Christmas cookie? Chocolate chip.
But ya know what? We've gotten away from posting recipes. I'm gonna
go do that now.
Carol
|
|
|
| S'mee |
One time on Usenet, damselicious@gmail.com said:
> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:10:48 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
> <barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
>
> > <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
> > home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
> > butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
> > participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
> > a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
> > Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
> > recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
> > opinion.
>
> I feel the exact same way. Chocolate chip cookies are every day
> cookies. Nothing special about them, to me. Crash's favorite
> Christmas cookie? Chocolate chip.
>
> But ya know what? We've gotten away from posting recipes. I'm gonna
> go do that now.
I'll beat ya to it -- I think I got a lot of the notes here in RFC:
Shortbread Cookies
1 cup butter, softened
3/4 cup sugar, granulated or powdered
1/4 tsp. salt
2 cups flour
In a mixing bowl, cream the butter. Add sugar gradually and mix well.
Combine flour and salt; add to creamed mixture. Shape into 2 rolls, 1
1/2 inch in diameter. Wrap in waxed paper and chill for at least 4
hours. Cut into 3/4 inch slices. Place on greased cookie sheet or baking
parchment. Bake at 300°F for 20 minutes or until slightly browned on
edges. Cool for 5 minutes; remove to a wire rack to cool completely.
Some nice ways to make shortbread:
* Knead some miniature semi-sweet chocolate chips into the dough before
making a log and slicing.
* Roll log in coarse sugar before baking.
* Press a pecan or walnut half into the cookie before baking.
--
Jani in WA (S'mee)
~ mom, Trollop, novice cook ~
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 09:42:10 -0500, Julia Altshuler
<jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote:
> If you made hamentaschen
> (triangular shaped filled cookies traditionally made for Purim), and no
> one knew they were hamentaschen, couldn't they be brought to a Christmas
> celebration and wouldn't they fit right in?
My former aunt-in-law (RIP) used to make those for Christmas every
year. Part of her Jewish heritage, although her segment of the family
became Lutherans at some point. I've made the cookies, too, but
they're never as pretty as Marion's. I make mine with almond filling.
* Exported from MasterCook *
Hamantaschen
Recipe By :Solo
Serving Size : 32 Preparation Time :0:00
Categories : cookies
Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
2 3/4 cups flour
1/2 cup sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
1 teaspoon grated orange peel
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 sticks soft butter
2 eggs -- beaten
2 tablespoons milk
1 can Solo filling
1 egg yolk -- beaten with ...
1 tablespoon milk -- for brushing
Stir flour, sugar, baking powder, orange peel, and salt in large bowl.
Cut in butter until mixture resembles coarse crumbs. Add eggs and milk
and mix until dough binds together. Knead dough in bowl 5 to 8 strokes
or until smooth. Divide dough in half and wrap each piece separately
in waxed paper or plastic wrap. Refrigerate 1 hour.
Preheat oven to 350° F. Grease 2 baking sheets and set aside.
Roll out 1 piece of dough on lightly floured surface 1/4-inch
thickness. Cut dough with floured 3-inch round plain cookie cutter.
Spoon 1 teaspoonful poppy filling onto center of each circle. Bring 3
edges of circle together into middle of circle to form triangle. Pinch
edges upward to make slight ridge, leaving small hole in center. Place
on prepared baking sheets about 11/2 inches apart and brush with
beaten egg yolk mixture. Repeat with remaining dough and filling.
Bake 20 to 25 minutes or until golden brown. Remove from baking sheets
and cool completely on wire racks.
Source:
"http://www.solofoods.com/"
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On 23 Dec 2005 05:32:03 -0800, "Freeda" <freedarandy@yahoo.co.in>
wrote:
> Sorry - wrong account - use this one instead.
Oh yeah. Shows me not to read from the bottom up.
Carry on,
Carol
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 16:32:41 GMT, jjsworldSPAM@BLOCKERzipcon.com
(S'mee) wrote:
> Shortbread Cookies
Thanks! Good last-minute cookies that I can make for Crash. He loves
shortbread cookies, and I don't believe I've ever made them.
Carol
|
|
|
| S'mee |
One time on Usenet, damselicious@gmail.com said:
> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 16:32:41 GMT, jjsworldSPAM@BLOCKERzipcon.com
> (S'mee) wrote:
> > Shortbread Cookies
>
> Thanks! Good last-minute cookies that I can make for Crash. He loves
> shortbread cookies, and I don't believe I've ever made them.
I LOVE them, but being on a no sugar diet right now, I won't be
making any this year (Miguel and Buddy don't care for them, the
heathens!). I did break down and have some sugar last night though;
my best friend brought over a bunch of cookies including her family's
potato chip cookies. I just can't resist those...
--
Jani in WA (S'mee)
~ mom, Trollop, novice cook ~
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 17:07:33 GMT, jjsworldSPAM@BLOCKERzipcon.com
(S'mee) wrote:
> One time on Usenet, damselicious@gmail.com said:
> > On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 16:32:41 GMT, jjsworldSPAM@BLOCKERzipcon.com
> > (S'mee) wrote:
>
> > > Shortbread Cookies
> >
> > Thanks! Good last-minute cookies that I can make for Crash. He loves
> > shortbread cookies, and I don't believe I've ever made them.
>
> I LOVE them, but being on a no sugar diet right now, I won't be
> making any this year (Miguel and Buddy don't care for them, the
> heathens!). I did break down and have some sugar last night though;
> my best friend brought over a bunch of cookies including her family's
> potato chip cookies. I just can't resist those...
I hear ya. I plan on becoming a practicing diabetic again in January.
Carol
|
|
|
| S'mee |
One time on Usenet, damselicious@gmail.com said:
> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 17:07:33 GMT, jjsworldSPAM@BLOCKERzipcon.com
> (S'mee) wrote:
> > One time on Usenet, damselicious@gmail.com said:
> > > On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 16:32:41 GMT, jjsworldSPAM@BLOCKERzipcon.com
> > > (S'mee) wrote:
> >
> > > > Shortbread Cookies
> > >
> > > Thanks! Good last-minute cookies that I can make for Crash. He loves
> > > shortbread cookies, and I don't believe I've ever made them.
> >
> > I LOVE them, but being on a no sugar diet right now, I won't be
> > making any this year (Miguel and Buddy don't care for them, the
> > heathens!). I did break down and have some sugar last night though;
> > my best friend brought over a bunch of cookies including her family's
> > potato chip cookies. I just can't resist those...
>
> I hear ya. I plan on becoming a practicing diabetic again in January.
I probably wouldn't be monitoring it so closely (especially during
the holidays for Pete's sake!), but last month I had some incidences
of BG over 200 that left me scared and feeling like crap...
--
Jani in WA (S'mee)
~ mom, Trollop, novice cook ~
|
|
|
| Julia Altshuler |
Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
> home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
> butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
> participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
> a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
> Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
> recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
> opinion.
Here's the way to organize cookie exchanges or dessert potlucks. On one
side of the page, put the following list: chocolate, nuts, lemon or
orange, raspberry or apricot jam, spice such as cinamon and ginger. On
the 2nd list, put: drop cookies, cut-outs, bars, crust with something on
top, pressed. Then you make sure everyone chooses a flavor idea from the
first list and a cookie type from the second (cross off each as it is
taken). For example, chocolate could be chocolate chip (drop), a rolled
cookie cut into rounds, congo bars, a shortbread crust with chocolate
chips on top, or a pressed cookie with cocoa. That way you get variety.
I use similar reasoning when putting together a tin of cookies for a gift.
--Lia
|
|
|
| Julia Altshuler |
I realize this is months ahead of time, but does anyone have a
hamentaschen recipe that's dairy free and suitable for eating after
either a milk or meat meal? As I recall, my grandmother's recipe used
Mazola oil and eggs but no butter. The dough was made and refrigerated,
then rolled out on a little flour. (She did the rolling as the dough
was quite sticky and fersnickety.) My brother and I did the decorating
and filling. We didn't stick to the triangular shape but came up with
all sorts of creative variations. I never wrote down her recipe and
would love to have it now.
--Lia
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 13:09:30 -0500, Julia Altshuler
<jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote:
> I realize this is months ahead of time, but does anyone have a
> hamentaschen recipe that's dairy free and suitable for eating after
> either a milk or meat meal? As I recall, my grandmother's recipe used
> Mazola oil and eggs but no butter. The dough was made and refrigerated,
> then rolled out on a little flour. (She did the rolling as the dough
> was quite sticky and fersnickety.) My brother and I did the decorating
> and filling. We didn't stick to the triangular shape but came up with
> all sorts of creative variations. I never wrote down her recipe and
> would love to have it now.
Here's the first one I found, Julia. I hope it's similar to the one
you remember from your childhood:
http://www.jewish-holiday.com/homemade.html
Carol
|
|
|
| Julia Altshuler |
Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
> Here's the first one I found, Julia. I hope it's similar to the one
> you remember from your childhood:
> http://www.jewish-holiday.com/homemade.html
Thanks! To tell the truth, I'll never know if that's the recipe I
remember or not. I don't remember enough about it to know if that's
right or wrong, but I will give it a try.
--Lia
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 14:06:04 -0500, Julia Altshuler
<jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote:
> Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
>
> > Here's the first one I found, Julia. I hope it's similar to the one
> > you remember from your childhood:
> > http://www.jewish-holiday.com/homemade.html
>
> Thanks! To tell the truth, I'll never know if that's the recipe I
> remember or not. I don't remember enough about it to know if that's
> right or wrong, but I will give it a try.
You'll know once you taste them. :-)
Carol
|
|
|
| Jude |
Nancy Young wrote:
> "Julia Altshuler" <jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote
>
> > I was going to say that any cookie could be a Christmas cookie. As long
> > as it is rich and special (butter, sugar, nuts, dried fruit, chocolate,
> > jam, somewhere in the recipe), it works for Christmas. But then, I've
> > never celebrated Christmas so what do I know. What if we phrased the
> > question the other way and asked if there's any cookie or baked good
> > that's NOT appropriate for Christmas?
>
> There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
> Christmas to me.
>
> nancy
Last year, my BF's mother bought special Christmas chips. They tasted
just like chocolate chips, but had tons of food coloring added to make
them red and green, and they were shaped like stockings, santas,
wreaths, christmas trees, etc. They made cute cookies, but they tasted
just like regular old toll house, which doesn't say "CHRISTMAS" to me.
They were made by Nestle's. Don't know if they had them agani this
year, but for sure not at MY house!
|
|
|
| Melba's Jammin' |
In article <6NSdnRn72uvwoTHenZ2dnUVZ_tednZ2d@comcast.com>,
Julia Altshuler <jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote:
> Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>
> > <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
> > home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
> > butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
> > participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
> > a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
> > Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
> > recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
> > opinion.
>
>
> Here's the way to organize cookie exchanges or dessert potlucks. On one
> side of the page, put the following list: chocolate, nuts, lemon or
> orange, raspberry or apricot jam, spice such as cinamon and ginger. On
> the 2nd list, put: drop cookies, cut-outs, bars, crust with something on
> top, pressed. Then you make sure everyone chooses a flavor idea from the
> first list and a cookie type from the second (cross off each as it is
> taken). For example, chocolate could be chocolate chip (drop), a rolled
> cookie cut into rounds, congo bars, a shortbread crust with chocolate
> chips on top, or a pressed cookie with cocoa. That way you get variety.
> I use similar reasoning when putting together a tin of cookies for a gift.
>
>
> --Lia
Nice plan. But if I had to sign up for anything, be it flavor or type,
I'd take a pass. Ixnay. If I've only got two dazzling holiday cookie
recipes, you'll get one of those--even if they fit a category someone
else 'claimed'. I do think, however, that people should take a sworn
oath that they won't bring CCC, Oatmeal, or PBC.
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-22-05
|
|
|
| The Cook |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 13:05:33 -0500, Julia Altshuler
<jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote:
>Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>
>> <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
>> home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
>> butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
>> participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
>> a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
>> Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
>> recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
>> opinion.
>
>
>Here's the way to organize cookie exchanges or dessert potlucks. On one
>side of the page, put the following list: chocolate, nuts, lemon or
>orange, raspberry or apricot jam, spice such as cinamon and ginger. On
>the 2nd list, put: drop cookies, cut-outs, bars, crust with something on
>top, pressed. Then you make sure everyone chooses a flavor idea from the
>first list and a cookie type from the second (cross off each as it is
>taken). For example, chocolate could be chocolate chip (drop), a rolled
>cookie cut into rounds, congo bars, a shortbread crust with chocolate
>chips on top, or a pressed cookie with cocoa. That way you get variety.
> I use similar reasoning when putting together a tin of cookies for a gift.
>
>
>--Lia
The main reason for the cookie exchanges or any other pot luck type of
get together is the "get together." It is a social occasion not
necessarily a culinary gathering.
If I did not make chocolate chip, peanut butter, and oatmeal scotchies
at Christmas, my kids would be very upset. I also make fruitcake,
mint chocolate chip and frosted fruit cookies. This year the kids
were here for Thanksgiving and on Friday we went to Mrs. Hanes' Cookie
Factory to watch the women cut out the cookies and to buy Moravian
Christmas Cookies.
--
Susan N.
"Moral indignation is in most cases two percent moral,
48 percent indignation, and 50 percent envy."
Vittorio De Sica, Italian movie director (1901-1974
|
|
|
| Margaret Suran |
Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:10:48 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
> <barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
>
>
>><cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
>>home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
>>butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
>>participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
>>a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
>>Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
>>recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
>>opinion.
>
>
> I feel the exact same way. Chocolate chip cookies are every day
> cookies. Nothing special about them, to me. Crash's favorite
> Christmas cookie? Chocolate chip.
>
> But ya know what? We've gotten away from posting recipes. I'm gonna
> go do that now.
Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help
answer this: What about people like me, who can bake little else but
Chocolate Chip cookies. I make them with love and send them out at
Christmas time. Or did, until now. I probably won't, any more. I
never knew that they are considered to be second class cookies, at
least at this time of year. :o(
|
|
|
| Puester |
Margaret Suran wrote:
>
>
> Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help answer
> this: What about people like me, who can bake little else but Chocolate
> Chip cookies. I make them with love and send them out at Christmas
> time. Or did, until now. I probably won't, any more. I never knew
> that they are considered to be second class cookies, at least at this
> time of year. :o(
I'm not Carol, but I am counseling you to keep sending your chocolate
chip cookies. The only people who look down on them are those who
bake all the time, something which rarely happens these days. Young
people today are always on a diet and always short of time so home
baking gets shifted to the bottom of the list of duties, and often
gets canceled altogether. (Obviously I'm not talking about rfc people,
so don't y'all get your undies in a bunch.)
I am sure that your recipients adore your cookies. Keep on baking.
Happy Channukah.
gloria p
|
|
|
| Mr Libido Incognito |
S'mee wrote:
> One time on Usenet, damselicious@gmail.com said:
>> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:10:48 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
>> <barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
>>
>>> <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming =
>>> home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanu=
t=20
>>> butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each=
=20
>>> participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz=
up=20
>>> a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks=
=2E =20
>>> Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the=20
>>> recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my hum=
ble=20
>>> opinion.
>> I feel the exact same way. Chocolate chip cookies are every day
>> cookies. Nothing special about them, to me. Crash's favorite
>> Christmas cookie? Chocolate chip.
>>
>> But ya know what? We've gotten away from posting recipes. I'm gonna
>> go do that now.
>=20
> I'll beat ya to it -- I think I got a lot of the notes here in RFC:
>=20
> Shortbread Cookies
>=20
> 1 cup butter, softened
> 3/4 cup sugar, granulated or powdered
> 1/4 tsp. salt
> 2 cups flour
>=20
> In a mixing bowl, cream the butter. Add sugar gradually and mix well.=20
> Combine flour and salt; add to creamed mixture. Shape into 2 rolls, 1=20
> 1/2 inch in diameter. Wrap in waxed paper and chill for at least 4=20
> hours. Cut into 3/4 inch slices. Place on greased cookie sheet or bakin=
g=20
> parchment. Bake at 300=B0F for 20 minutes or until slightly browned on =
> edges. Cool for 5 minutes; remove to a wire rack to cool completely.
>=20
> Some nice ways to make shortbread:
>=20
> * Knead some miniature semi-sweet chocolate chips into the dough before=
=20
> making a log and slicing.
> * Roll log in coarse sugar before baking.
> * Press a pecan or walnut half into the cookie before baking.
>=20
>=20
I put Chocolate chips in my Shortbreads....That way they meet all
expectations.
|
|
|
| Nancy Young |
"Margaret Suran" <margaret@no.spam.for.me.invalid> wrote
> Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help answer
> this: What about people like me, who can bake little else but Chocolate
> Chip cookies. I make them with love and send them out at Christmas time.
> Or did, until now. I probably won't, any more. I never knew that they
> are considered to be second class cookies, at least at this time of year.
> :o(
Geez, Margaret! You're killing me here. And how many people
are going to be mad at me because I said I don't consider them to be
Christmas cookies and now you won't send them.
They are wonderful and I bet you make the best ones ever.
nancy
|
|
|
| Mr Libido Incognito |
Melba's Jammin' wrote:
> In article <6NSdnRn72uvwoTHenZ2dnUVZ_tednZ2d@comcast.com>,
> Julia Altshuler <jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote:
>
>> Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>>
>>> <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
>>> home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
>>> butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
>>> participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
>>> a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
>>> Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
>>> recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
>>> opinion.
>>
>> Here's the way to organize cookie exchanges or dessert potlucks. On one
>> side of the page, put the following list: chocolate, nuts, lemon or
>> orange, raspberry or apricot jam, spice such as cinamon and ginger. On
>> the 2nd list, put: drop cookies, cut-outs, bars, crust with something on
>> top, pressed. Then you make sure everyone chooses a flavor idea from the
>> first list and a cookie type from the second (cross off each as it is
>> taken). For example, chocolate could be chocolate chip (drop), a rolled
>> cookie cut into rounds, congo bars, a shortbread crust with chocolate
>> chips on top, or a pressed cookie with cocoa. That way you get variety.
>> I use similar reasoning when putting together a tin of cookies for a gift.
>>
>>
>> --Lia
>
> Nice plan. But if I had to sign up for anything, be it flavor or type,
> I'd take a pass. Ixnay. If I've only got two dazzling holiday cookie
> recipes, you'll get one of those--even if they fit a category someone
> else 'claimed'. I do think, however, that people should take a sworn
> oath that they won't bring CCC, Oatmeal, or PBC.
I lean more towards the Holiday baking of bars and squares...A Favorite
is that Pecan Pie bar Wayne posted last year. The only change I made to
it was using brown sugar in the shortbread crust...It is a winner.
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 15:26:01 -0500, Margaret Suran
<margaret@no.spam.for.me.invalid> wrote:
> Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help
> answer this: What about people like me, who can bake little else but
> Chocolate Chip cookies. I make them with love and send them out at
> Christmas time. Or did, until now. I probably won't, any more. I
> never knew that they are considered to be second class cookies, at
> least at this time of year. :o(
I'm speechless. Speechless.
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 15:26:01 -0500, Margaret Suran
<margaret@no.spam.for.me.invalid> wrote:
> Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help
> answer this: What about people like me, who can bake little else but
> Chocolate Chip cookies. I make them with love and send them out at
> Christmas time. Or did, until now. I probably won't, any more. I
> never knew that they are considered to be second class cookies, at
> least at this time of year. :o(
I've hurt someone who makes Mother Theresa look like a bitch.
Please forgive me.
|
|
|
| ~patches~ |
Puester wrote:
> Margaret Suran wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help
>> answer this: What about people like me, who can bake little else but
>> Chocolate Chip cookies. I make them with love and send them out at
>> Christmas time. Or did, until now. I probably won't, any more. I
>> never knew that they are considered to be second class cookies, at
>> least at this time of year. :o(
>
>
>
>
>
> I'm not Carol, but I am counseling you to keep sending your chocolate
> chip cookies. The only people who look down on them are those who
> bake all the time, something which rarely happens these days. Young
> people today are always on a diet and always short of time so home
> baking gets shifted to the bottom of the list of duties, and often
> gets canceled altogether. (Obviously I'm not talking about rfc people,
> so don't y'all get your undies in a bunch.)
I agree, keep the chocolate chip cookies. Unlike some, I do a lot of
baking and chocolate chip are still a favourite. Besides, who can look
down on cookies of any kind and that is coming from someone who makes a
lot of cookies yet seldom eats them herself. Cookies are feel good
food. I'd rather make cookies at Christmas time that I know will be
enjoyed instead of fussing over cookies that look good - not to say my
cookies don't look good - as in the fancy icing and stuff.
>
> I am sure that your recipients adore your cookies. Keep on baking.
Oh yes, do keep on baking Margaret. As long as someone including
yourself enjoy your efforts, go for it :)
>
> Happy Channukah.
>
> gloria p
|
|
|
| ~patches~ |
Mr Libido Incognito wrote:
> S'mee wrote:
>
>>One time on Usenet, damselicious@gmail.com said:
>>
>>>On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:10:48 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
>>><barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>><cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
>>>>home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
>>>>butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
>>>>participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
>>>>a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
>>>>Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
>>>>recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
>>>>opinion.
>>>
>>>I feel the exact same way. Chocolate chip cookies are every day
>>>cookies. Nothing special about them, to me. Crash's favorite
>>>Christmas cookie? Chocolate chip.
>>>
>>>But ya know what? We've gotten away from posting recipes. I'm gonna
>>>go do that now.
>>
>>I'll beat ya to it -- I think I got a lot of the notes here in RFC:
>>
>>Shortbread Cookies
>>
>>1 cup butter, softened
>>3/4 cup sugar, granulated or powdered
>>1/4 tsp. salt
>>2 cups flour
>>
>>In a mixing bowl, cream the butter. Add sugar gradually and mix well.
>>Combine flour and salt; add to creamed mixture. Shape into 2 rolls, 1
>>1/2 inch in diameter. Wrap in waxed paper and chill for at least 4
>>hours. Cut into 3/4 inch slices. Place on greased cookie sheet or baking
>>parchment. Bake at 300°F for 20 minutes or until slightly browned on
>>edges. Cool for 5 minutes; remove to a wire rack to cool completely.
>>
>>Some nice ways to make shortbread:
>>
>>* Knead some miniature semi-sweet chocolate chips into the dough before
>> making a log and slicing.
>>* Roll log in coarse sugar before baking.
>>* Press a pecan or walnut half into the cookie before baking.
>>
>>
>
> I put Chocolate chips in my Shortbreads....That way they meet all
> expectations.
My shortbread recipe uses corn starch. It is one of my tried and true,
wouldn't change for anything recipes.
|
|
|
| ~patches~ |
Mr Libido Incognito wrote:
> Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>
>>In article <6NSdnRn72uvwoTHenZ2dnUVZ_tednZ2d@comcast.com>,
>> Julia Altshuler <jaltshuler@comcast.net> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Melba's Jammin' wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>><cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
>>>>home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
>>>>butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
>>>>participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
>>>>a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
>>>>Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
>>>>recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
>>>>opinion.
>>>
>>>Here's the way to organize cookie exchanges or dessert potlucks. On one
>>>side of the page, put the following list: chocolate, nuts, lemon or
>>>orange, raspberry or apricot jam, spice such as cinamon and ginger. On
>>>the 2nd list, put: drop cookies, cut-outs, bars, crust with something on
>>>top, pressed. Then you make sure everyone chooses a flavor idea from the
>>>first list and a cookie type from the second (cross off each as it is
>>>taken). For example, chocolate could be chocolate chip (drop), a rolled
>>>cookie cut into rounds, congo bars, a shortbread crust with chocolate
>>>chips on top, or a pressed cookie with cocoa. That way you get variety.
>>> I use similar reasoning when putting together a tin of cookies for a gift.
>>>
>>>
>>>--Lia
>>
>>Nice plan. But if I had to sign up for anything, be it flavor or type,
>>I'd take a pass. Ixnay. If I've only got two dazzling holiday cookie
>>recipes, you'll get one of those--even if they fit a category someone
>>else 'claimed'. I do think, however, that people should take a sworn
>>oath that they won't bring CCC, Oatmeal, or PBC.
>
>
>
> I lean more towards the Holiday baking of bars and squares...A Favorite
> is that Pecan Pie bar Wayne posted last year. The only change I made to
> it was using brown sugar in the shortbread crust...It is a winner.
My winner holiday bar is scotch teas. They are awesome and always get
rave reviews. IMO, they are great because they are made from simple
ingredients that most cooks would have on hand and they are practically
fool proof.
|
|
|
| Margaret Suran |
Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 15:26:01 -0500, Margaret Suran
> <margaret@no.spam.for.me.invalid> wrote:
>
>
>>Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help
>>answer this: What about people like me, who can bake little else but
>>Chocolate Chip cookies. I make them with love and send them out at
>>Christmas time. Or did, until now. I probably won't, any more. I
>>never knew that they are considered to be second class cookies, at
>>least at this time of year. :o(
>
>
> I've hurt someone who makes Mother Theresa look like a bitch.
>
> Please forgive me.
Carol, I was poking fun at myself. I just answered someone else, who
was also concerned that my feelings may be hurt and sent me an email.
They are not. :o)
However, I was surprised to learn that there is a class distinction
between cookies. Blue color cookies, white color cookies,
professional cookies, what other kinds?
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 17:30:45 -0500, Margaret Suran
<margaret@no.spam.for.me.invalid> wrote:
> However, I was surprised to learn that there is a class distinction
> between cookies. Blue color cookies, white color cookies,
> professional cookies, what other kinds?
Dunno. But I'm pretty sure that Spritz are white collar cookies.
Carol, rolling eyes
|
|
|
| Melba's Jammin' |
In article <dohmgq0k14@news2.newsguy.com>,
Margaret Suran <margaret@no.spam.for.me.invalid> wrote:
> Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
> > On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:10:48 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
> > <barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
> >
> >
> >><cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
> >>home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
> >>butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
> >>participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
> >>a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
> >>Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
> >>recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
> >>opinion.
> >
> >
> > I feel the exact same way. Chocolate chip cookies are every day
> > cookies. Nothing special about them, to me. Crash's favorite
> > Christmas cookie? Chocolate chip.
> >
> > But ya know what? We've gotten away from posting recipes. I'm gonna
> > go do that now.
>
> Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help
> answer this: What about people like me, who can bake little else but
> Chocolate Chip cookies. I make them with love and send them out at
> Christmas time. Or did, until now. I probably won't, any more. I
> never knew that they are considered to be second class cookies, at
> least at this time of year. :o(
Nope, not the same thing, Margaret. Not even close. A gift of your
chocolate chips cookies is a treasure. They demand ice cold milk. Or
steaming hot coffee. But you wouldn't want to go to a stupid cookie
exchange with them. I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but they're
just not Christmassy enough. It's nothing to do with being a second
class cookie. Christmas cookie plates are all about "ooooh, what is
THAT delectable-looking morsel? Oh, my, that's just too pretty to
each, but I'll just force myself." More than one pretty face have
proved to be shallow, but no one cares if the cookie plate is pretty and
varied. Maybe some green sparkle sugar on top. . . .
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-22-05
|
|
|
| serene |
On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 16:18:39 GMT, sarah bennett
<anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
> chewy gingerbread hearts with
>candied ginger.
Oh, my. Recipe, please?
serene
|
|
|
| Julia Altshuler |
Margaret Suran wrote:
> However, I was surprised to learn that there is a class distinction
> between cookies. Blue color cookies, white color cookies, professional
> cookies, what other kinds?
Is it time to break into song? "Oh, I'm a little cookie, yes I am, and
I was made by the Cookie Man, and on my way to the cookie pan ...
http://www.peteseeger.net/littlecookie.htm
--Lia
|
|
|
| Wayne Boatwright |
On Fri 23 Dec 2005 09:10:48a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Melba's
Jammin'?
> In article <%VUqf.4126$oW.120@newssvr11.news.prodigy.com>,
> sarah bennett <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>
>> Julia Altshuler wrote:
>> > Nancy Young wrote:
>> >
>> >> There's something about chocolate chip cookies that doesn't say
>> >> Christmas to me.
>
>> > That's because chocolate chip cookies aren't sufficiently special.
>
>>
>> I made some as part of some cookie tins that I made as gifts. But what
>> should I know from Christmas cookies? I'm Jewish :)
>
> <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
> home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
> butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
> participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
> a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
> Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
> recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
> opinion.
I understand what you're saying, as it's also happened to me. However,
when a cookie plate or platter has many varieties (which it should, IMHO),
then a few chocolate chip cookies make a nice addition, especially when
made with a top quality chocolate chips. I usually put large pieces of
pecans in mine, as well.
--
Wayne Boatwright *¿*
__________________________________________________
________________
And if we enter a room full of manure, may we believe in the pony.
|
|
|
| sarah bennett |
Newsgroups: rec.food.cooking
X-Trace: newssvr21.news.prodigy.com 1135395755 ST000 67.38.5.142 (Fri, 23 Dec 2005 22:42:35 EST)
User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.2 (Windows/20050317)
X-Accept-Language: en-us, en
MIME-Version: 1.0
In-Reply-To: <necpq11j7eos2pel0t95deshct470t8u7a@4ax.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Complaints-To: abuse@prodigy.net
NNTP-Posting-Date: Fri, 23 Dec 2005 22:42:35 EST
X-UserInfo1: [[PGG_SE[RUYB\X[CXOFO_P@]JT@QDDMEPWXODMMHXMTWA]EPU
UEAE[YETZPIWWI[FCIZA^NBFXZ_D[BFNTCNVPDTNTKHWXKB@X^
B_OCJLPZ@ET_O[G\XSG@E\G[ZKVLBL^CJINM@I_KVIOR\T_M_A
W_M[_BWU_HFA_]@A_A^SGFAUDE_DFTMQPFWVW[QPJN
Xref: spool6-east.superfeed.net rec.food.cooking:1148775
serene wrote:
> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 16:18:39 GMT, sarah bennett
> <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>
>
>>chewy gingerbread hearts with
>>candied ginger.
>
>
> Oh, my. Recipe, please?
>
> serene
from 1975 edition of Joy of Cooking (the gingerbread part, at least):
preheat oven to 350 F
blend until creamy:
1/4 cup butter and 1/2 cup white or brown sugar (I use white)
beat in 1/2 cup molasses.
sift together:
3 1/2 cups flour
1 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp cloves
1/2 tsp cinnamon
2 tsp ginger
1/2 tsp salt
add sifted ingredients to the butter mixture in three parts, alternating
with 1/4 cup of water.
cut up some candied ginger into small (1/4 inch and smaller) pieces, to
make about a cup.
roll out the gingerbread to about 1/4 inch thickness, scattering the
dough with candied ginger before the last few passes with the roller
(gingerbread dough is so thick that it is hard to get the candied ginger
to be evenly distributed otherwise).
cut into cookies with a cookie cutter, bake on a greased cookie sheet or
on parchment paper (I think parchment works much better)
bake for 7-9 minutes, or until the cookies spring back slightly when you
press on them. I overcooked some of mine, so they are crunchy, not
chewy, though :) still yummy!
--
saerah
"Peace is not an absence of war, it is a virtue, a state of mind, a
disposition for benevolence, confidence, justice."
-Baruch Spinoza
"There is a theory which states that if ever anybody discovers exactly
what the Universe is for and why it is here, it will instantly disappear
and be replaced by something even more bizarre and inexplicable. There
is another theory which states that this has already happened."
-Douglas Adams
|
|
|
| serene |
On Sat, 24 Dec 2005 03:42:35 GMT, sarah bennett
<anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>serene wrote:
>> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 16:18:39 GMT, sarah bennett
>> <anisaerah@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>chewy gingerbread hearts with
>>>candied ginger.
>>
>>
>> Oh, my. Recipe, please?
>>
>> serene
>
>from 1975 edition of Joy of Cooking (the gingerbread part, at least):
Thank you SO much!
serene
|
|
|
| Wayne Boatwright |
On Fri 23 Dec 2005 01:26:01p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Margaret
Suran?
>
>
> Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
>> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:10:48 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
>> <barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
>>
>>
>>><cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
>>>home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
>>>butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
>>>participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
>>>a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
>>>Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
>>>recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
>>>opinion.
>>
>>
>> I feel the exact same way. Chocolate chip cookies are every day
>> cookies. Nothing special about them, to me. Crash's favorite
>> Christmas cookie? Chocolate chip.
>>
>> But ya know what? We've gotten away from posting recipes. I'm gonna go
>> do that now.
>
> Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help
> answer this: What about people like me, who can bake little else but
> Chocolate Chip cookies. I make them with love and send them out at
> Christmas time. Or did, until now. I probably won't, any more. I
> never knew that they are considered to be second class cookies, at
> least at this time of year. :o(
Oh, Margaret, you simply cannot stop baking your wonderful chocolate chip
cookies! You do make them with love (and good chocolate), and any
recipient should be delighted to receive them. You might refrain from
sending them to the "Christmas Cookie Snobs" out there. :-)
I made a batch just yesterday for David, as it is his very favorite cookie,
at Christmas or any time of the year.
--
Wayne Boatwright *¿*
__________________________________________________
________________
And if we enter a room full of manure, may we believe in the pony.
|
|
|
| Melba's Jammin' |
In article <Xns9735D1EE8CCDBwaynesgang@217.22.228.19>,
Wayne Boatwright <waynesgang@waynes.gang> wrote:
> On Fri 23 Dec 2005 09:10:48a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Melba's
> Jammin'?
> > <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
> > home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
> > butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
> > participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
> > a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
> > Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
> > recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
> > opinion.
>
> I understand what you're saying, as it's also happened to me. However,
> when a cookie plate or platter has many varieties (which it should, IMHO),
> then a few chocolate chip cookies make a nice addition, especially when
> made with a top quality chocolate chips. I usually put large pieces of
> pecans in mine, as well.
You're wrong.
"-)
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-22-05
|
|
|
| Margaret Suran |
Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> On Fri 23 Dec 2005 01:26:01p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it
> Margaret Suran?
>
>
>>
>> Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
>>
>>> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:10:48 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
>>> <barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after
>>>> coming home from one with chocolate chip cookies.........
>>>
>>>
>>> I feel the exact same way. Chocolate chip cookies are every
>>> day cookies. Nothing special about them, to me. Crash's
>>> favorite Christmas cookie? Chocolate chip.
>>>
>>> But ya know what? We've gotten away from posting recipes. I'm
>>> gonna go do that now.
>>
>> Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help
>> answer this: What about people like me, who can bake little
>> else but Chocolate Chip cookies. I make them with love and send
>> them out at Christmas time. Or did, until now. I probably
>> won't, any more. I never knew that they are considered to be
>> second class cookies, at least at this time of year. :o(
>
>
> Oh, Margaret, you simply cannot stop baking your wonderful
> chocolate chip cookies! You do make them with love (and good
> chocolate), and any recipient should be delighted to receive them.
> You might refrain from sending them to the "Christmas Cookie Snobs"
> out there. :-)
>
> I made a batch just yesterday for David, as it is his very favorite
> cookie, at Christmas or any time of the year.
>
Dear Wayne, Once more, you speak with your heart, not with common
sense. I will have to learn how to make something different for next
Christmas.
Before I subscribed to rfc, my Holiday Cookies were Vanillakipferln,
little ground almond butter crescents, that were dipped into Vanilla
Sugar when they came out of the oven, still hot.
I would hand them out, not send them, as they are very delicate and
break easily. Sending them would have meant that only cookie crumbs
would be in the containers, at the end of their journey.
Look for an email, as soon as I find a few minutes.
Merry Christmas to you, David and whoever else happens to see this.
|
|
|
| Michael \Dog3\ Lonergan |
Margaret Suran <margaret@no.spam.for.me.invalid> looking for trouble wrote
in news:dojjor1ce3@news2.newsguy.com:
>
>
> Wayne Boatwright wrote:
>> On Fri 23 Dec 2005 01:26:01p, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it
>> Margaret Suran?
>>
>>
>>>
>>> Damsel in dis Dress wrote:
>>>
>>>> On Fri, 23 Dec 2005 10:10:48 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
>>>> <barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>> <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after
>>>>> coming home from one with chocolate chip cookies.........
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> I feel the exact same way. Chocolate chip cookies are every
>>>> day cookies. Nothing special about them, to me. Crash's
>>>> favorite Christmas cookie? Chocolate chip.
>>>>
>>>> But ya know what? We've gotten away from posting recipes. I'm
>>>> gonna go do that now.
>>>
>>> Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help
>>> answer this: What about people like me, who can bake little
>>> else but Chocolate Chip cookies. I make them with love and send
>>> them out at Christmas time. Or did, until now. I probably
>>> won't, any more. I never knew that they are considered to be
>>> second class cookies, at least at this time of year. :o(
>>
>>
>> Oh, Margaret, you simply cannot stop baking your wonderful
>> chocolate chip cookies! You do make them with love (and good
>> chocolate), and any recipient should be delighted to receive them.
>> You might refrain from sending them to the "Christmas Cookie Snobs"
>> out there. :-)
>>
>> I made a batch just yesterday for David, as it is his very favorite
>> cookie, at Christmas or any time of the year.
>>
>
>
> Dear Wayne, Once more, you speak with your heart, not with common
> sense. I will have to learn how to make something different for next
> Christmas.
>
> Before I subscribed to rfc, my Holiday Cookies were Vanillakipferln,
> little ground almond butter crescents, that were dipped into Vanilla
> Sugar when they came out of the oven, still hot.
>
> I would hand them out, not send them, as they are very delicate and
> break easily. Sending them would have meant that only cookie crumbs
> would be in the containers, at the end of their journey.
>
> Look for an email, as soon as I find a few minutes.
>
> Merry Christmas to you, David and whoever else happens to see this.
>
I see it. and i'm happy. I Got great gifts. Love you.
Michael
--
....Bacteria: The rear entrance to a cafeteria.
All gramatical errors and misspellings due to Ramsey the cyber kitten. He
now owns all keyboards and computing devices in the household and has the
final say on what is, or is not, posted.
Send email to dog30 at charter dot net
|
|
|
| Damsel in dis Dress |
On Sat, 24 Dec 2005 01:08:59 -0600, Mr Libido Incognito
<not@invalid.not> wrote:
> To me a home-made chocolate chip cookie is a delight no matter who or
> when it is made, especially if it is good chocolate (low in parafin
> content). And a christmas cookie (in my case bars) are made with company
> such as a child or 3. Xmas cookies bring a glow to the eyes of a 3 yr
> old or a 33 yr old, when made with help from family or loved one (in my
> case my 33 yr old Daughter). Baking is baking...But baking with a loved
> one is a gift. A special Xmas gift...even if you bake in August and
> freeze it.
>
> I fondly remember decorating with green sugar shortbread cookies with my
> mom, these cookies tasted even better knowing I helped her in making
> them even though they looked like a cookie decorated by a 5 yr old; like
> they were. It is a tradition I hope will continue in my family for many
> years.
That's lovely, Alan. Thank you for sharing this. It made me feel
good to read it.
Merry Christmas!
Carol
|
|
|
| Ophelia |
"Mr Libido Incognito" <not@invalid.not> wrote in message
news:_t6rf.18915$yj4.12234@fe13.lga...
> To me a home-made chocolate chip cookie is a delight no matter who or
> when it is made, especially if it is good chocolate (low in parafin
> content). And a christmas cookie (in my case bars) are made with
> company
> such as a child or 3. Xmas cookies bring a glow to the eyes of a 3 yr
> old or a 33 yr old, when made with help from family or loved one (in
> my
> case my 33 yr old Daughter). Baking is baking...But baking with a
> loved
> one is a gift. A special Xmas gift...even if you bake in August and
> freeze it.
Oh yes:))))))))))) That is just the way I feel:))))
>
> I fondly remember decorating with green sugar shortbread cookies with
> my
> mom, these cookies tasted even better knowing I helped her in making
> them even though they looked like a cookie decorated by a 5 yr old;
> like
> they were. It is a tradition I hope will continue in my family for
> many
> years.
Wonderful memories:))
Good memories are a real blessing and in the end... are all we have!
Ophelia
--
http://www.qpat.co.uk/
|
|
|
| Boron Elgar |
On Sat, 24 Dec 2005 06:45:39 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
<barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
>In article <Xns9735D1EE8CCDBwaynesgang@217.22.228.19>,
> Wayne Boatwright <waynesgang@waynes.gang> wrote:
>
>> On Fri 23 Dec 2005 09:10:48a, Thus Spake Zarathustra, or was it Melba's
>> Jammin'?
>
>> > <cough> I quit going to neighborhood cookie exchanges after coming
>> > home from one with chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut
>> > butter cookies; and my contribution to the exchange (a dozen for each
>> > participant) had been highly decorated cut-outs. The ones that jazz up
>> > a cookie plate. I want CC, PB, and oatmeal, I'll make my own, thanks.
>> > Allow me to suggest that you deep six the CCs unless you know the
>> > recipient never turns the oven on. No offense intended. Just my humble
>> > opinion.
>>
>> I understand what you're saying, as it's also happened to me. However,
>> when a cookie plate or platter has many varieties (which it should, IMHO),
>> then a few chocolate chip cookies make a nice addition, especially when
>> made with a top quality chocolate chips. I usually put large pieces of
>> pecans in mine, as well.
>
>You're wrong.
>"-)
I can solve this very easily.... those of you that insist on CCC
baking at holiday time need to send their cookie platters to me first
for inspection. I will carefully remove any chocolate chip cookies,
make sure they are fostered out to good homes, and then send on the
platters.
Boron
|
|
|
| S'mee |
One time on Usenet, Margaret Suran <margaret@no.spam.for.me.invalid> said:
<snip>
> Carol, you are not supposed to eat cookies!!!! But you can help
> answer this: What about people like me, who can bake little else but
> Chocolate Chip cookies. I make them with love and send them out at
> Christmas time. Or did, until now. I probably won't, any more. I
> never knew that they are considered to be second class cookies, at
> least at this time of year. :o(
Margaret, don't listen to the "No Choc Chip" contingent -- I love
chocolate chip and would happily eat them at any time of year, if my
blood sugar would let me. I'll bet you make great cookies, too...
--
Jani in WA (S'mee)
~ mom, Trollop, novice cook ~
|
|
|
| Melba's Jammin' |
In article <j51rq1lb1a2m7aj0bo442sorm8jom2ad9q@4ax.com>,
Boron Elgar <boron_elgar@hotmail.com> wrote:
> On Sat, 24 Dec 2005 06:45:39 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
> <barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
> >> I understand what you're saying, as it's also happened to me. However,
> >> when a cookie plate or platter has many varieties (which it should, IMHO),
> >> then a few chocolate chip cookies make a nice addition, especially when
> >> made with a top quality chocolate chips. I usually put large pieces of
> >> pecans in mine, as well.
> >
> >You're wrong.
> >"-)
>
>
> I can solve this very easily.... those of you that insist on CCC
> baking at holiday time need to send their cookie platters to me first
> for inspection. I will carefully remove any chocolate chip cookies,
> make sure they are fostered out to good homes, and then send on the
> platters.
>
> Boron
Who says people aren't helpful any more? Whatta Woman!
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-22-05
|
|
|
| Boron Elgar |
On Sat, 24 Dec 2005 15:35:08 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
<barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
>In article <j51rq1lb1a2m7aj0bo442sorm8jom2ad9q@4ax.com>,
> Boron Elgar <boron_elgar@hotmail.com> wrote:
>
>> On Sat, 24 Dec 2005 06:45:39 -0600, Melba's Jammin'
>> <barbs.challer@earthfink.net.invalid> wrote:
>
>> >> I understand what you're saying, as it's also happened to me. However,
>> >> when a cookie plate or platter has many varieties (which it should, IMHO),
>> >> then a few chocolate chip cookies make a nice addition, especially when
>> >> made with a top quality chocolate chips. I usually put large pieces of
>> >> pecans in mine, as well.
>> >
>> >You're wrong.
>> >"-)
>>
>>
>> I can solve this very easily.... those of you that insist on CCC
>> baking at holiday time need to send their cookie platters to me first
>> for inspection. I will carefully remove any chocolate chip cookies,
>> make sure they are fostered out to good homes, and then send on the
>> platters.
>>
>> Boron
>
>Who says people aren't helpful any more? Whatta Woman!
An exhausted one today.
Three sour cream coffee cakes.
Two batches of pignoli cookies.
Two batches of chocolate walnut macaroons.
Two batches of Chocolate Rice Chex Candy.
Tomorrow I am making a goose, red cabbage with bacon and apples, and
rutabagas.
Monday we are having potato latkes with sour cream and apple sauce.
Oy, it is so hard to straddle the Yiddishe-Goische fence at this time
of year.
And next week we all start taking Lipitor intravenously.
Boron
|
|
|
| Melba's Jammin' |
In article <2hhrq1t5puqahtvak1b7gnj9qokdgrns29@4ax.com>,
Boron Elgar <boron_elgar@hotmail.com> wrote:
> Two batches of chocolate walnut macaroons.
> Two batches of Chocolate Rice Chex Candy.
>
> Tomorrow I am making a goose, red cabbage with bacon and apples, and
> rutabagas.
>
> Boron
I love macaroons. What's the Rice Chex Candy thing? Rob made his red
cabbage while Chris and I were at the Mall of America this morning.
We'll take it north.
--
http://www.jamlady.eboard.com, updated 12-22-05
|
|
|
|