Friday, December 18, 2009

Christmas is almost here! Have you baked cookies yet? Here are my two all time favorite Christmas Cookie recipes. I am pretty sure if you leave a plate of these out for Santa, you will be a BIG hit with the old guy!
I am wishing you and yours a very Merry Christmas!

This is my favorite cookie of all time, and I love cookies, so that is saying a lot! The recipe is from Pelagia Frosch of Detroit. Mrs Frosch is the mother of my dear friend, Inge Richter. Every Christmas she sends a huge box of Lebkuchen to Inge. I’ve tried to highjack the UPS guy before he delivers them, but so far I have been unsuccessful!

I hope you find the time to bake them; if you love spice cookies, you will be a big fan of Lebkuchen!
Thank You, Mrs Frosch!

Lebkuchen

1 pound honey
1 pound sugar
1 heaping teaspoon cinnamon
1 heaping teaspoon ground cloves
1 dash ground ginger
1 rounded tablespoon baking soda
1 stick butter, softened
1 cup milk
3 large eggs
2 1/2 pounds flour
1/2 pound ground walnuts
cocoa for color, adjust to your liking
for glaze:
powdered sugar
warm water

Cream the butter, sugar, honey and then add eggs. Sift all of the dry ingredients together. Add the dry ingredients alternately with the milk and the ground nuts to the creamed mixture. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
Roll out the dough on lightly floured surface. Cut with 1 1/2-2" cookie cutters, usually round or star shaped. Bake on greased cookie sheets for 15 to 20 minutes. When cool enough to remove from baking sheets, glaze with mixture of powdered sugar and water. These cookies can be kept for months in a cool place if stored in a metal can along with a whole apple.
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My next favorite cookie is the Italian Cuccidati, a fig stuffed cookie. They are a lot of work if you do the traditional shaping and decorating, but you can just do half moon shape and use a simple glaze. I think they are definitely worth the extra effort! The photo is by the Food Network.

Cuccidati, Italian Fig Cookies
Filling:
8 ounces dried figs, chopped
6 tablespoons brandy
1 jar honey (8-ounce)
2 ounces raisins
2 ounces dates
2 ounces dried cherries
2 ounces citron or candied pineapple
1 cup walnut pieces, toasted
1 cup whole, blanched almonds, toasted
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2 pinches ground clove
Rind of 1 lemon (remove any white pith)
Rind of 1 orange (remove any white pith)
Pastry:
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/3 cup sugar
3/4 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
8 tablespoons butter, chilled and cut into small pieces
3 eggs (1 whisked with 1 teaspoon water, to make an egg wash)
1/4 cup milk
Icing:
1 cup confectioners' sugar
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon milk (1 to 2)
Colored sprinkles, or small dots
1. Make the Filling: In a bowl, combine the figs with 4 tablespoons of brandy and let soak overnight or up to 4 weeks.
2. In a food processor, combine the soaked figs, the remaining 2 tablespoons brandy, and all the remaining filling ingredients. Process until chopped and well combined. (Alternatively, run all the ingredients through a meat grinder. Some Italian women bring their filling ingredients to the butcher and have him grind it for them.) Keep chilled until ready to use.
3. Make the Pastry: In a food processor, combine the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt and pulse to mix. Add the butter and pulse until it looks like fine crumbs. In a small bowl, whisk together the 2 eggs and milk. While the motor in running, pour the liquid through the feed tube until just combined and a dough is formed. Form the dough into a disk and chill 30 minutes.
4. On a floured work surface, roll out the dough 1/8-inch thick. With a sharp knife or pizza cutter, cut out large (3-inch long) almond shaped pieces from the dough. Transfer the pieces to a sheet pan; then chill.
5. To form the cookies, have ready the filling, the chilled dough pieces, the egg wash with a pastry brush, and a sharp knife. Paint the edges of the dough pieces with egg wash and place 1 teaspoon of filling shaped into an oval in the center of half the pieces. Top each with a second piece of dough and carefully pinch the edges together to seal. Trim the excess dough from around the edges.
6. Make each dough package look like a bird or fish, by shaping and cutting decorative lines. You can split 1 end to look like a tail, carve rows of lines to look like feathers or fins, cut a curved line for the gills or beak opening, and a hole for the eye. (There are many different shapes they're made into, such as wreaths, slippers, and crescents.) Re-chill the cookies.
7. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.
8. Brush the cookies with the egg wash. Bake the cookies until lightly golden brown, about 20 minutes.
9. Meanwhile make the Icing: In a bowl, whisk together all the ingredients.
10. Toss the cookies with the icing while they're still hot and sprinkle with the colored sprinkles, or leave them plain. The icing makes the cookies look like porcelain when they're done.









Ponte Vecchio, Florence, Italy

Ponte Vecchio, Florence, Italy
oil painting by Kay Tucker

Somerset Autumn on Wea Creek

Somerset Autumn on Wea Creek
Oil Painting by Kay Tucker, Private Collection

Floral

Floral
oil painting by Kay Tucker

Kansas Storm

Kansas Storm
oil painting by Kay Tucker, Private Collection

Watercolor Collage

Watercolor Collage

Tempo al Tempo....All in Good Time

Tempo al Tempo....All in Good Time
48"x36" sculptural painting by Kay Tucker