Tag Archives: Christmas Cookies

Bourbon Pumpkin Pie Biscotti and Torani Syrups

A few weeks ago SheSpeaks and Torani Syrup offered me the opportunity to try out a couple of syrups in my holiday baking and brewing. I have used the syrups in the past – we love Italian sodas around here – so I was happy to accept.

torani syrup recipes

 

Torani has been around since the 1920s, helping baristas and everyone else create flavored coffees and other beverages. You don’t see a lot of people using the syrups in baking recipes though, and there is where you miss out. Instead of just adding vanilla or almond to baked goods you have an entire array of over 100 flavors – and, unless they are sugar free, they are made with pure cane sugar.

Score!

This week, as you may have seen on the Restless Chipotle Facebook page, I made cookies to send to my sons that are in the Air Force, one in Japan and one in Korea. Biscotti was on the list. I decided to take my pumpkin pie biscotti and upgrade the flavor profile with the Torani Pumpkin Pie Syrup and a little drop of bourbon… Continue reading

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Copycat Cranberry Bliss Bars

cranberry bliss bar

A couple of years ago Starbucks started serving Cranberry Bliss bars – basically a blondie with cranberries, ginger, and orange that is topped with a thin frosting, sprinkled with more dried cranberries and then drizzled with white chocolate. It was an instant hit – right a long with their pumpkin latte.

These are great to have as a snack in the afternoon. Pour a cup of hot coffee and watch the snow fall as you contemplate the amazing combination of white chocolate and cranberry once again. They are beautiful on a cookie plate or a dessert buffer.

Seriously.

What is it about memories that are so different than the reality? Continue reading

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Filed under Bar Cookies, Dessert

Christmas Cookies: One Dough – Five Kinds

 

cookies

I hope you have some time because this may end up being the longest post on this blog. Go get a cup of coffee — I’ll wait.

One of the things I love about Christmas is the baking. I used to give a cookie plate to just about everyone in town from the mailman to the fire department, not so much any more because of time.  Anyway, it can take an entire day to make a decent assortment of cookies to put on the plates, right?

christmas cookies

This is a foundation refrigerator cookie recipe. I am giving you five types but you can come up with your own variations.  Included in this recipe are:

  • Butter cookies
  • Pecan cookies
  • Cherry pecan cookies
  • Rolled sugar cookies
  • Chocolate pinwheels

But, here’s the thing. I am giving you the skills you need to create an infinite number of recipes from just this one. Need ideas? How about these —

  • Dried cranberry and walnuts
  • Raisins
  • Mint and chocolate pinwheels
  • Mini chocolate chips
  • Mini M & Ms
  • Lemon, lime, or orange zest
  • Candied ginger
  • Candied fruit
  • Chopped white chocolate
  • Use two of them and sandwich ganache in between
  • Dip them in melted chocolate – white or milk
  • Decorate the tops with icing
  • Coconut
  • Maple flavoring

Seriously.  Hundreds of possibilities.

The other cool thing about these is that they are basically homemade slice and bake cookies. You make up a batch in an hour on a rainy Saturday, roll the dough into cylinders, wrap in waxed paper, and freeze them for up to three months. When you want a dozen cookies or six cookies or the whole batch you can just thaw for a few minutes, slice them, and bake them.

Really, does it get easier than that?

A really cool way to give a cookie assortment is to give the cookies on a vintage plate or platter. You can get red and green baking cups and use them to keep the cookies in one place. It sounds like an expensive gift but it’s really not. Keep your eyes open at thrift shops and garage sales and you may be able to pick up pretty plates for a few dollars. eBay is another possibility.

christmas cookie mix

Don’t limit it to plates. Choose vintage tea cups for small gifts, casseroles, whatever catches your eye. Not only does the recipient get some rockin’ cookies — they have the plate to keep forever. Wrap them with cellophane or plastic wrap, add a ribbon and it’s a fabulous gift for less than $5.

Here are the step by step images — Skip to the recipe if you are in a hurry.

ingredients

This is what you are going to need plus whatever additions you plan  on making. Not much is it? Simple is good. Make sure that you do bring the butter and the egg to room temperature before you use them it will make your dough go together much easier and the flavor will be better because everything will blend better.

cookie dough

 

Once you have the dough made you’ll divide it into equal parts. I started with four and then decided to split some of the dough up again so I could make both pecan and pecan cherry cookies.

chocolate dough

For pinwheels take 1/4 of the dough and divide it into two parts, one a little bigger than the other. To make the chocolate dough you will melt chocolate and knead it into the dough you are using. Just keep kneading it with your hands until the chocolate is completely blended in.

cookie dough

Knead your chosen ingredients into the different doughs. The one above is the pecan cherry and dang it was good. Chill the dough for about 30 minutes or until it is easy to work with.

pinwheel cookies

For the pinwheels roll out both the chocolate and vanilla dough. Put the largest sheet of dough on a lightly floured counter. Put the smaller sheet on top and then roll the two up together. Easy, right?

Shape the rest of the dough into cylinders and then roll them up in waxed paper. Chill the rolls at least and hour freeze it up to three months.

cookies

For shaped cookies omit the cylinder step. Roll the dough out flat on a floured surface and cut with cookie cutters. Add sugar, sprinkles, or leave them plain until after their baked so you can frost them.

cookie dough

When you are ready to bake them you only need to unwrap the dough (let it thaw a little before slicing if it has been frozen) and slice it into 1/8 — 1/4 inch thick slices. I like using a serrated knife but try several knives to determine what works best for you.

pinwheels

Bake the cookies on a lightly greased baking sheet for about eight minutes and let them cool. That’s it.

I’ll be sharing my foundation drop cookie recipe soon. With these two recipes you can have a huge variety of Christmas cookies.

Christmas Cookies: One Dough – Five Kinds

Prep Time: 15 minutes

Cook Time: 10 minutes

25 minutes

Yield: 72 cookies depending on size

Christmas Cookies: One Dough – Five Kinds

An easy slice and bake foundation dough that allows you to create several different types of cookies from one easy recipe.

Ingredients

  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 cup unsalted butter
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla
  • 3 cups of flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon baking poweder
  • 1/3 cup half and half
  • 2 ounces bittersweet chocolate
  • 1/2 cup of pecans, mini chocolate chips, and whatever other ingredients you want for the cookies

Instructions

  1. Cream the sugar and butter together until well blended.
  2. Beat in the egg and vanilla.
  3. Mix the dry ingredients together.
  4. Add the dry ingredients alternately with the milk starting and ending with the dry ingredients.
  5. Beat until it becomes a soft dough.
  6. Divide the dough into four equal parts.
  7. Divide one of the parts into two parts. Add the melted chocolate, Kneading in until the dough and chocolate are completely blended.
  8. Divide a second part into two parts. Add chopped pecans to one and chopped pecans and chopped candied cherries to the other. Knead in until well mixed.
  9. Chill for about 30 minutes or until it is easy to work with.
  10. For the pinwheels
  11. Roll out both the chocolate and vanilla dough n rectangles keeping the vanilla a little bigger than the chocolate.
  12. Place the chocolate rectangle on top of the vanilla one and roll up into a cylinder.
  13. Wrap in waxed paper and refrigerate until it is chilled, or up to a week. You can also keep the dough frozen for up to three months.
  14. For the other cookies
  15. Take each of the flavored doughs and form into a cylinder.
  16. Roll the cylinder in colored sugar, sprinkes, chopped nuts, or whatever you like.
  17. Wrap in waxed paper and chill.
  18. To Bake
  19. If dough has been frozen let it sit for about 15 minutes to soften a little.
  20. When you are ready to bake preheat the oven to 375F.
  21. Lightly grease a cookie sheet.
  22. Slice discs from the cylinder 1/8 to 1/4 inch thick.
  23. Place on the cookie sheet.
  24. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes.
  25. Let cool.

Notes:

Nutrition information is not given with these because the counts will change depending on what ingredients you use. You can freeze the cylinders for up to 3 months. Just slip the waxed paper covered cylinders into freezer bags.

http://www.restlesschipotle.com/2012/10/christmas-cookies-one-dough-five-kinds/

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Bailey’s Deep Chocolate Rolo Cookies

There is only one more thing better than chocolate and you know what it is, right? More chocolate….and booze….. in a form you can eat out of your hand. Yes, they could be better – they could have 0 calories but that just isn’t happening.

Rolos are like gold around here. You can get a bag of them and bribe my kids to do almost anything. I used the basic Rolo recipe in my cookbook and then I posted a peanut butter version here on the blog… I suppose it was just time to take them one step farther…

rolo cookies

Baileys is awesome in anything. Continue reading

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Cream Cheese M and M’s Cookies

December first! Christmas season is in full swing and it is the month of cookies.

I did some research and I really could not find an answer that I felt answered the question of where the tradition of baking Christmas cookies came from. I imagine that it came from some of the early traditions of the Pagans and the Romans who celebrated the Feast of Saturnella, the winter solstice, and other important holidays at this time. The early church was underground out of necessity – to be a Christian meant that you were in constant danger of arrest and death. So, rather than having a celebration that was different from those of the people around them, they adapted many of the traditions of the cultures they lived in.

Small cakes were sacrificed to various gods and given to neighbors and friends.  Continue reading

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Filed under Cookies, Holiday Cooking