Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Christmas Cookies

My most favorite dessert on the planet is cookies.  Forget cakes, pies, even ice cream; nothing holds a candle to cookies and Christmas cookies are the BEST because they are made from scratch and there are so many varieties to chose from.

The only cookies my Mother ever made were Christmas Cookies with our neighbor, Mrs. Mixter.  We never got to actually see her make them as she did it at the neighbor’s house while we were in school.  She would bring them home in blue Maxwell House coffee tin cans lined with wax paper and hide them in the cupboard over the oven behind the Charles Chip can.  But we knew where they were.  My favorite was the rum balls dusted with white confectioner’s sugar.

She loved chips over cookies (and I have always loved cookies over chips) so we had a can of Charles Chips delivered to the house, regularly.  It lived above the oven in a cupboard by itself, except at Christmas.  When our house was robbed, my Mother told all of her friends to hide their money and jewelry in the Charles Chip can.  The kitchen, she discovered, was the only room not ran-sacked.

I loved baking cookies with my
girls when they were little!
My first encounter with making homemade cookie goes back to Mrs. Greene in 8th grade Home Ec. Class. After my first baking experience with Mrs. Greene I decided I would master the art of cookie baking and never have to deny my sweet tooth again.  Our Mother liked a clean kitchen, so messing it up with baking was not a welcome prospect. My Dad went out of town quite often and sometimes my Mother got to join him.  Since we did not have family in town, she would hire a grandmother-type matron from the yellow pages.  Our favorite was Mrs. Reeves.  She taught us to play pinochle and let me bake cookies.  My first batch rose bigger than the other cookies in Mrs. Greene’s class.   I was delighted, but quickly deflated as the taste test brought ruin to my endeavors.  Mrs. Reeves knew immediately what I had done.  Lifting that little orange box in the air she asked, her face contorting as her mouth frowned in bitterness, “How much baking soda did you use?”  “One half cup”, I replied.  Upon inspection of the round canister of oats, I realized it had called for ½ teaspoon.  I wondered why they used such a little box.  I had cleaned it out trying to fill that half-cup measure to the top, leveling it off with the blunt side of a kitchen knife, just like Mrs. Greene had taught me.  I quickly learned that the carpenter's adage, “measure twice, cut once” could be revised and applied to baking, “read twice, measure once”.

I have tried many cookie recipes over the years and oatmeal raisin with nuts remains my favorite.  Unfortunately to make a good cookie, sugar is a key ingredient to give it the perfect balance of chewy and crunchy.  As a nutritionist I preach against sugar as something that we can easily get addicted to, adds to weight gain and can weaken our immune system.  So you can see my great values conflict! But like all things in life there are what I call "worthy splurges".  And sometimes the benefit outweighs the cost, and Christmas is one of those sometimes.  


When my children were little we made Tasha Tudor’s Christmas Cookies every year.  They were simple sugar cookies made with real butter.  We rolled them out and cut out shapes and made a mess in the kitchen.  It was so fun and the cookies were delicious.  My husband’s Aunt Betty loved cookbooks and gave me Tasha Tudor’s Christmas book, Take  Joy! as a gift my first Christmas in their family.  I think the main reason that Aunt Betty loved Tasha Tudor so much was because of their common bond of Welsh Corgis doggy owners.  Her book shares many of their Welsh Christmas traditions, including cutting a live tree on Christmas Eve.  We have always cut a live tree, too and make sugar cookies.  Now my daughters continue the tradition with their little girls.  What are some of your traditions at Christmas? 

Tasha Tudor's Sugar Cookies
1 lb. butter
2 eggs
5 c. flour
2 c. sugar
1 tbsp. vanilla
1 tsp. baking soda dissolved in 3 tbsp. milk


Mix all ingredients together by hand. Chill thoroughly. Roll thin on parchment paper and cut out
with cookie cutters.
Bake on ungreased cookie sheets at 350 degrees about 8 minutes or until light brown around
the edges. Makes about 80 cookies.

We kept them simple and slightly dust them with nutmeg. 

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Tweeners

The weeks between Thanksgiving and Christmas can put on a lot of pounds in between the shoulders and the knees. We call these tweeners. This is not what you want to get for Christmas. For Christmas we want leaners – leaner abs and a leaner derriere. To achieve this goal you have to stay away from the tweener-bites.  These are the snacks that we graze on in between meals throughout the month of December because, well just because. Sometimes the tweener-bites become the meal and it becomes a foggy memory of calories. The grocery store shelves call our names, actually not just at the grocery store anymore, the drug store, the gas station, and the office.  There is no privacy anymore, all the cakes, candy, cookies, chocolate know your name. Forget credit card fraud, your identity is not safe anymore. It is time to change your name! Wear your sunglasses into the grocery store and maybe the holiday treats won’t recognize you and leave you alone.

It’s time to prepare for battle! Now, not in 2012 when the armor will no longer fit. Get a strategy to survive the onslaught and your tweeners will turn to leaners and you’ll leave Santa in the dust. Poor Santa, he has to eat cookies at EVERY house he visits, but you don’t. You get to choose! After all, not ALL the temptations in the month of December are really worth it. It used to be that everything was made from scratch around the holidays. Not so anymore. So why waste your calories on what is not a “worthy splurge”?

Even Santa has to take a little time for
himself to exercise and fight those "tweeners!"
When at a holiday party or in your kitchen, peruse the joint and decide what is really worth it. Then just take one small portion, eat slowly, enjoy and then move on....to the gym the next day and the day after that until when January comes you are not one of the newbies, but you are one of the regulars wondering where all these people came from. Movement is the key to not gain the 2, 4 or even 7 pounds that appear out of nowhere on January 2nd. Start your New Year’s resolution NOW! 

When you go to a party or dinner, bring something healthy, so you can be sure to have at least one healthy choice.  Surprise your friends and family with a new recipe. Below is one I enjoyed once in Napa, California and again in Beaune, France. The crème de cassis is made from black currants that are grown in Burgundy.  It can only be purchased at an ABC store. I put the two experiences together and came up with my version of Poached Pears. 

EASY Poached Pears – 12 servings
6 pears – I prefer Bosc
1 cup dried fruit – I use raisins, cherries, cranberries and sometimes dried apricots – Mix and Match
1 cup liquid – water, apple cider and crème de cassis – 1/3 each or ½ cup water and cider (or juice)
1 ½ tsp cinnamon
¼ cup chopped pistachios
1 - 80% dark cocoa bar melted (I like the Lindt or Green & Black’s organics)

My Poached Pears right before I add the
chocolate sauce and pistachios! Delicious!
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Cut the pears in halve lengthwise and scoop out the seeds and stringy part to the stem. A melon baller works great for this. 
Spread the dried fruit on the bottom of a rectangular glass, baking dish. Place the halved pears upside down on the dried fruit. Combine the liquids together in a measuring cup and stir in the cinnamon.  Then pour over the pears. Cover with foil and bake for 25 minutes or until the pears are soft (pierce with a fork). Riper pears take less time than harder pears. Meanwhile melt your chocolate and chop your pistachios.
To serve:
Place a pear halve right side up in a dessert bowl. Fill the hole where the seeds were with soft dried fruit.  Pour some of the juice over the pear.  Drizzle chocolate on top and sprinkle with nuts.

Voila! Bon Appetite!