Sunday, December 6, 2020

Italian Christmas Cookies

first made 2020

Recipe by Kimschmee

READY IN: 20mins   SERVES: 24      Oven: 375F

YIELD: 2 dozen cookies       

INGREDIENTS

DIRECTIONS

  • Firstly, sift the flour and baking powder together into a bowl.
  • Then, in a larger bowl, cream butter and sugar. Beat in eggs and add vanilla, then pour the dry ingredients into the wet and mix.
  • Knead and add flour as needed to keep dough from sticking to hands. Pinch off dough, roll in your hands to form a log and then twirl into shape. Place on greased cookie sheets.
  • Bake at 375 for 10 minutes.
  • Combine the next 3 ingredients until creamy.
  • Dip cookies into icing and sprinkle with trim. Place on wire rack with wax paper on counter to collect the dripping icing and sprinkles.

 

I found this on Facebook, searched and same recipe here:

https://www.food.com/recipe/italian-christmas-cookies-519340

Pecan Pumpkin Spice Chocolate Chip Cookies

Chris and Astrid made these -

By Amanda Mack, courtesy of Bon Appétit magazine.

"Meet the Holiday Triple Threat Cookie," says baker Amanda Mack, the owner of Crust by Mack in Baltimore. A chocolate chip cookie spiked with homemade pumpkin spice, crunchy pecans, and gooey pumpkin puree. This recipe makes big cookies. To make 40–48 smaller cookies, use a No. 60 cookie scoop (about 1 Tbsp.) and bake about 10 minutes. 

   
Makes 20-24

Ingredients:
1 Tbsp. ground cinnamon
1½ tsp. ground ginger
1 tsp. ground nutmeg
¾ tsp. ground cloves
3 cups (375 g) all-purpose flour
1¼ tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. Diamond Crystal or ½ tsp. Morton kosher salt
1¼ cups (2½ sticks) unsalted butter, softened until just slightly firm
1½ cups (packed; 300 g) light brown sugar
1 cup (200 g) granulated sugar
3 large eggs
¼ cup canned pumpkin purée
1 Tbsp. vanilla bean paste or vanilla extract
4 oz. (112 g) semisweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
1½ cups (9 oz./255 g) dark chocolate chips
1½ cups (174 g) coarsely chopped pecans

Preparation:

Step 1: Place racks in upper and lower thirds of oven; preheat to 350°. Mix cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and cloves in a small bowl to make pumpkin spice. Whisk flour, baking soda, salt, and 1 Tbsp. pumpkin spice in a medium bowl; set remaining pumpkin spice aside for making pies, quick breads, or another batch of cookies.

Step 2: Combine butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Beat on medium speed, scraping sides of bowl as needed until fluffy, about 3 minutes. Reduce speed to low and with motor running, add eggs one at a time, mixing to incorporate after each addition before adding the next. Beat in pumpkin purée and vanilla paste. Gradually add dry ingredients and beat just until combined (be careful not to overmix). Set aside a handful or so of each of the chopped chocolate, chocolate chips, and pecans. Using a rubber spatula, gently fold remaining chopped chocolate, chocolate chips, and pecans into dough.

Step 3: Using a No. 20 cookie scoop (about 3 Tbsp.), drop balls of dough onto two parchment-lined baking sheets, spacing at least 4" apart. (If using a half-sheet pan, bake 2 cookies per sheet. For a full sheet, you can fit about 4.) Gently press reserved chocolate and nuts into tops of dough balls.

Step 4: Bake cookies, rotating pans top to bottom and front to back halfway through, until golden brown around the edges, 11–13 minutes (subsequent batches may take 2–3 minutes longer). Let cookies cool on baking sheets 5 minutes.

Step 5: Using a thin metal spatula, carefully transfer cookies to wire racks and let cool completely.

Step 6: Do ahead: Dough can be made and formed into balls 3 months ahead; freeze on baking sheets until solid, then transfer to resealable freezer bags or an airtight container. Cookies can be baked 3 days ahead; store airtight at room temperature.

JeanMarie Brownson's Chocolate Cherry Peanut Butter Oatmeal Cookies

Prep: 25 minutes   Cook: 12 minutes  Oven: 350oF

Makes: about 90 cookies

These chocolate cherry peanut butter oatmeal cookies have it all going on: oats, nuts, dried fruit, and chocolate. The scent of them baking will warm your house, through and through. These cookies are made without flour. For the best crunch, be sure to use old-fashioned rolled oats, not the finer-textured quick-cooking varieties. I like natural peanut butter for its deep peanut flavor. Store the cookies in a covered container up to several days or freeze up to 2 months.

Ingredients:

¼ cup (½ stick) unsalted butter, softened
¾ cup each: granulated sugar, packed dark brown sugar
2 large eggs
1¼ teaspoons baking soda
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup extra-crunchy natural peanut butter, at room temperature
3 cups old-fashioned rolled oats (can make with Gluten Free)
½ cup salted, toasted pumpkin seeds (pepitas), roasted hulled sunflower seeds or roasted peanuts
½ cup dried cherries (chopped if large), dried currants or small dark raisins
8 ounces milk or semisweet chocolate bars, roughly broken into ¼-inch pieces


1. Heat oven to 350 degrees. Beat together butter and sugars in large bowl of electric mixer.  Beat in eggs, one at a time, until smooth and creamy. Beat in baking soda and vanilla. Beat in peanut butter until incorporated. Use a wooden spoon to stir in oats, pumpkin seeds, cherries and chocolate pieces.

2. Use a teaspoon to make balls about 1 inch in diameter. Place on 2 parchment paper-lined baking sheets spacing them about 2 inches apart. Flatten slightly with a spoon. Bake until set and bottoms are slightly golden, about 12 minutes.

3. Cool cookies on pan, 5 minutes. Transfer with a metal spatula to a wire rack to cool completely. (You can reuse the paper-lined baking sheets to bake the remaining cookies.) Nutrition information per serving: 67 calories, 3 g fat, 1 g saturated fat, 6 mg cholesterol, 8 g carbohydrates, 2 g protein, 34 mg sodium, 1 g fiber

https://www.chicagoreader.com/Bleader/archives/2015/12/03/jeanmarie-brownsons-everything-cookie-can-slake-a-stoners-hunger

 2022 - made batch as bars, using standard baking sheet, lined with parchment.  it is difficult to bake center without overbaking edges. Try dropping to 325F next time?

Results 2020

2020 Results: Definitely a different year. 

Results:

1. Almond Brittle - Cathy I
2. Almond Galettes - Boug
3. Apple Butter Cookies - Lori S
4. Benne Cakes - Boug
5. Biscotti, pistachio cranberry  - Cari
6. Bread, white cob with black olives and rosemary - Ose
7. Butter Balls - Lori S 
8. Butter Cookie, Jaimie's - Vicki
9. Caramel Corn, Maple Pecan - Sarah
10. Cashew Butter-nut Crunch - Vicki
11. Cherry Christmas Slices - Boug.
12. Chip and Dip - Emily
13. Chocolate Blossoms, Hershey Kisses - Vicki
14. Chocolate Candy Cane Cookies - Boug
15. Chocolate Cherry Peanut Butter Oatmeal Cookies - Boug
16. Chocolate Chip, David's famous - Vicki 
17. Chocolate Chip, Double  - Vicki
18. Cinnamon Rolls - Sarah
19. Ginger Molasses - Chris W
20. Ginger Molasses - Lori S 
21. Gingerbread - Dark Chocolate - Lori S
22. Gingerbread - Men - Pixie 
23. Ginger Snap - Vicki 
24. Ginger Snap - Jorie
25. Granola - Chris W 
26. Hershey Blossom - Vicki
27. Italian Christmas Cookies - Boug
28. Keto Bacon cookie - Michael
29. Keto Chocolate Chip - Michael
30. Keto Spice Cookie - Michael 
31. Kiefle - Martin
32. Lemon Lace Cookies - Boug
33. Matterhorn Meringue - Cathy I 
34. Mint Chocolate Pudding Cookies - Vicki
35. Nut Cups, Deb's - Cari
36. Oatmeal - Iced - Lori S
37. Oatmeal crisp - Vicki
38. Oreo Truffle - Cari
39. Pecan Pumpkin Spice Chocolate Chip Cookies - Chris W
40. Rugelah - Martin
41. Salted Carmel Truffle - Jorie
42. Shortbread, coffee  - Cari
43. Shortbread, Raspberry Almond - Vicki
44. Shortbread, Salted Caramel - Cari
45. Speculoos Buttons - Boug
46. Springerle - Cari 
47. Spritz, Anderson family - Vicki
48. Spritz, DiCosola family - Deb
49. Sugar Cookie, Martha Stewart’s Chewy - Vicki
50. Sugar Cookie - Pretty Pink (Piggy) Bats - Emily
51. Sugar Cookie, Unfussy - Kathy M

Instead of getting together at Connie's house as we have for the last 10 years or so - we went virtual.

Date was chosen on a weekend Connie and Samantha were not working - unfortunately they were unable to attend.

Boug created a Facebook group for Cookie day  - Private - drop a line and we can send an invite - a few weeks in advance. Zoom would only give us a 40 minute or so window. FB allowed us to be on unlimited. I counted about 15 people stopping in and chatting or staying on with the camera pointed toward their cooking areas. 

Many others posted recipes, discussed ideas, shared links. 

Some baked cookies, others bread or candy, some just said hello!  It was early for many to do holiday baking. And many may not have an outlet for lots of baked items.  All in all - it was a sharing of a simple family tradition. Our own family holiday.

Friday night, I tested out the Room link and good thing too as I had to download a different browser. Vicki and I were doing various refrigerator recipes from our own homes.

I think the overall opinion was - there is something so helpful about working from your own kitchen - especially for those of us who love cooking. Us with small galley kitchens, well, we are used to them. Just made us use other rooms of the house. The virtual aspect helped a lot! Kept all of us feeling we were with others. Helped when we had questions - a shout out to other bakers always brought an answer of some sort. Being able to pop in and out - kept it lively.

Special shout out to Cari and her quiz questions! I did not know we needed to study for this - but we all learned some history. Heck - I didn't even realize 2017 was our biggest year ever at 44 varieties.

I'll end up updating this blog post as I receive info from the bakers on what was made and the recipes.  Thanks for playing this year - I hope all your yummies turn out great!