Chewy Sugar Cookies and KING ARTHUR FLOUR GIVEAWAY!

Christmas seems to get more and more hectic each year when you have a family. Shopping, decorating, lists, baking, Christmas cards, wrapping, watching your budget, crafting, and all of the other little things we do to make the season special for our families.

While our kids and spouses get to sit back and enjoy the season, we rush and run around to create more magic, more, More..MORE!! ~laughs~ It gets a little harried, but I have one thing I do that I look forward to every year. Each year around this time, I start cookbook shopping. Not an ordinary book, but a big old thick cookbook with a nice hardback cover that I can really curl up with.

I really enjoy looking over my different options, reading reviews, pondering the pros of this one or that…and then I finally make my decision. I always order it by mail (Usually Amazon.com) so that it arrives sealed up in a box. Here is the important part: I do not open that box! I wrap it the day it comes in and place it beneath the tree with my name on it.

The remaining weeks are spent with me casting longing glances beneath the tree and looking forward to Christmas morning where I unwrap my prize and spend the better part of that day curled up in the recliner leisurely flipping through pages, enjoying my new toy as my kids enjoy theirs.

For two of the past few years, those books have been from King Arthur Flour. I love cookbooks, but it takes a lot for me to get really excited over one. There are four cookbooks in print right now that I trust completely. I own two King Arthur Flour cookbooks, so they hold two of those places!

You know how you see a new recipe, want to take it to an event, but feel you need to “try it out” first to make sure it tastes good? My favorite cookbooks are the ones which I trust completely, they require no trials or testing. You can choose a recipe and make it for the very first time to take to a grand event and know it will be perfect and loved by all. That’s how King Arthur recipes are.

The two King Arthur books I have (and love) are The King Arthur Flour Baker’s Companion: The All-Purpose Baking Cookbook and the The King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion: The Essential Cookie Cookbook. Ready for the exciting news?  

The incredibly kind folks at King Arthur flour are going to give one of my reader’s their very own Cookie Companion! All you have to do to enter is post in the comments your favorite Holiday memory or activity. It can be a one line post or a few paragraphs, whichever you prefer! In one week, I will choose a number at random and the poster of the corresponding comment will win this fabulous cookbook in time for holiday baking!


This cookbook is the essential guide on cookies. Just for sugar cookies alone there are 15 recipes and at least as many for our beloved chocolate chip! Each recipe features an introduction which describes the cookie texture and flavor..allowing you to choose exactly the type you are looking for with ease and confidence.

I still haven’t chosen my cookbook for this year. I need to pay another visit to King Arthur Flour’s site…

Now on to these delicious cookies…

My son has always loved the sugar cookies they sell in the malls. He calls them “sprinkle cookies” because they are covered in colorful sprinkles. I made these for the first time a few years back and he was elated when he came home from school. He actually thought I had been to the mall just to buy him cookies! They taste so wonderful and really beg to be dunked into a glass of milk. These are classic Santa cookies! You won’t believe the texture. When you pick them up, they feel like a regular cookie, but biting in reveals a tender chewiness unlike any other.

You’ll need: unsalted butter, sugar, brown sugar, light corn syrup, vanilla, baking powder, baking soda, salt, egg, all purpose flour, and decorating sugars for coating.
The original recipe also calls for 1/4 tsp nutmeg or 1/4 tsp lemon oil and states that it is optional. I don’t know why I’ve never liked nutmeg, but I’ve always left it out whenever it was called for or substituted cinnamon. In this case, I just left it out. I don’t have lemon oil so I left that out as well. I tend to not buy anything that I don’t normally have on hand anyway. I just don’t like to buy things for one use because….well mainly because I am cheap. But then again y’all already know that by all of the great value brand items you see in the pic!
I want to apologize for not using King Arthur Flour in this! I always use King Arthur when making yeast breads and it has been proven to be a superior flour than others. I love King Arthur, but don’t always get to the store that sells a good selection to buy it! Hey, I DID buy real butter for this recipe though! (Don’t tell on me, but I usually just use margarine…shh!)
Place butter in bowl.
Now folks, from here on out you will be seeing me make a DOUBLE version of this recipe. However, the recipe at the bottom is for a single version. Y’all know me..if three dozen is good, six dozen is GREAT!


Add in white and brown sugar as well as light corn syrup.
~insert tangent here~
We always use Karo brand corn syrup. My daughter’s name is Katy Rose and that has become her nickname as well. I do get strange looks when I’m out and talking to my Karo though…
Hey, Southerners are known for nicknaming everyone they love. I think I’ve mentioned my nickname ages ago but for those of you who missed it…
My entire family calls me “Poochie”, and I even answer to it. My friend, Michael, has always called me that as well. (Michael says I do not talk about him enough on here…Michael Romine – teaches Marketing to high school students – in high school he was like 6’4″ and weighed about eighty pounds soaking wet. I called him string bean then :) Feeling the love now, Michael?)
Anyway, I got my nickname when my brother came to see me after I was born in the hospital. He took one look at me, spit on me, and said I was ugly and looked like a Poochie Dog. Only in the south would that moment offer up a nickname considered a term of endearment!


Add vanilla.
Add eggs…
Mix that up well.
Add in flour.
You should probably do this gradually but I have the patience of a gnat so I just dump it all in at once.
Mix that up well…until it looks like this!
If you don’t take a pinch of this to taste you aren’t living, this dough is heavenly!
Have one of your kids dump the entire bottle of red sprinkles into a bowl.
They’ll think this is cool. They think they don’t get to dump things out enough.
Add the green as well and stir. Or have them stir..I’m using my son for this because Karo is taking a nap.
Brady said to be sure and show y’all this and to tell you that it is a smiley face, just in case you couldn’t tell. :)
Preheat your oven to 375 and spray a baking sheet with cooking spray.
Roll dough into one inch balls…or one inch-ish.
and then let your kidders roll them in the sugars.
like this. :)
Place about two inches or so apart on a cookie sheet.
Like this.
Bake for ten minutes and then remove.
Let cool on cookie sheet for five minutes and then remove to cooling racks (or platters) to continue cooling.
My grandmother’s best friend, Miss Millie, called my mother to tell her I had gotten my nails done and they looked “so pretty”! ~laughs~ Thanks, Millie! I decided to treat myself. Miss Millie is my second grandmother and she reads Southern Plate every day!
Y’all say “Hi” to Miss Millie in your comments!
Chewy Sugar Cookies

Ingredients

  • From Page 55 Of The The King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion: The Essential Cookie Cookbook 3/4 Cup (1 1/2 sticks) unsalted butter
  • 3/4 cups granulated sugar
  • 1/2 Cup brown sugar
  • 1/4 Cup light corn syrup
  • 2 tsp vanilla
  • 1/4 tsp nutmeg or 1/4 tsp lemon oil (optional, your choice - I left both of these out)
  • 1 1/2 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 large egg
  • 2 1/2 cups unbleached, all purpose flour
  • 1/4 cup coarse or granulated sugar, for decorating

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 375. Lightly grease (or line with parchment) two baking sheets. In a large mixing bowl, beat together butter, granulated and brown sugars, corn syurup, vanilla, nutmeg, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and egg. Stir in flour.
  2. Place coarse sugar in shallow dish. Drop dough by tablespoonfull (a tablespoon cookie scoop works well here) into sugar, rolling the balls to coat them. Place on prepared baking sheets. (We just dig out hands in the dough, grab a bit, and roll it up in a ball - I've never owned a cookie scoop!)
  3. Bake cookies for ten minutes until the edges are just barely beginning to brown, they'll look soft. If you bake these cookies too long, they'll be crunch rather than chewy. Remove from oven and cool on baking sheet for 5 minutes, then transfer to rack to cool completely.
Google Recipe View Microformatting by ZipList Recipe Plugin

Don’t forget to leave a comment about your favorite holiday memory to be entered to win the cookbook!!!




Don’t forget to sign up for my email newsletter to receive printer friendly versions of each recipe featured on Southern Plate. Terri says I need to mention the cookbook free shipping special again, too.. ~points to sidebar up near top~



 

Posted by on Nov 11 2008. Filed under Cookies, Dessert. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

159 Comments for “Chewy Sugar Cookies and KING ARTHUR FLOUR GIVEAWAY!”

  1. Rosasharne

    Halloween is my best friend’s birthday, so every October 31 was devoted to parties with painted pumpkins, trick or treating in large groups, candysorting, it was good.

  2. Life at the Lake

    I have many memories of baking and decorating “cut out” sugar cookies at Christmas with Mom and my brother and sisters. My mom was an excellent cook and we usually made “goody boxes” full of all sorts of baked goods to deliver on Christmas Eve to shut-ins or family friends. I have tried to carry this tradition on with my own children. One of my other favorite activities is our Christmas Eve tradition of attending our church Candlelight Communion then taking the kids on a drive to look at Christmas lights. I LOVE Christmas and all the traditions that go along with it!

  3. Rebecca from Ca.

    My favorite Christmas memory is of the stockings that my southern grandmother crocheted for us. Even though she is no longer with us, I still have and use mine from my childhood. Before she passed, she made me two extras; one for my future husband and one for my first child. They now use theirs and I am crocheting another for my second child since she taught me how to make them. Each year when I see them hanging on my fireplace, it brings back such wonderful memories of watching her crochet and listening to her stories.

  4. Emilee

    My favorite Christmas memory was having my Grandpa read the story of the baby Jesus out of the bible. To hear his voice tell the story was amazing and so humbling. I long to hear his voice again as he has been gone for 6 years now.

  5. goin-crazy

    My favorite Christmas memory (that I did not even catch on to until I was older) is always having presents under the tree. We lived out of state for a few years, when I was young, before I even started school. We would always travel the 8 or 9 hours home to be with family for the holidays. We were always gone on Christmas day and we were always worried that Santa would not find us if we were not home. There were 3 little girls (me and my sisters) and dogs making the trip so we always left at night. My dad worked overnights so he would drive and we would sleep and I suppose this kept my parents sane. Right before we pulled out of the driveway, my parents would always go back into the house because they always “forgot” something. They would come back out with some obscure item. We would go to our holidays, come home and have tons of presents from Santa under the tree. Now I understand. They kept all our presents hidden and made that one last trip in the house to put our presents under the tree.

  6. Brooke

    My favorite christmas memory is when my parents bought me my first bike. I was so excited and I put hundreds of miles on it. It was yellow with a little plastic basket and long pink strings that hung down from the handlebars. I can’t wait to make those memories for my little boy.

  7. Anonymous

    My favorite memory is baking and decorating sugar cookies with my Mother.Waking up at the crack of dawn on Christmas morning and just staring in amazement at all the presents. Those were truly happy times and memories that I will treasure always.

  8. toohotforturtle

    One of my favorite memories is filling up a thermos with hot cocoa, and heading out for an evening drive to see all the Christmas lights. I remember as a kid looking at all the twinkling lights with awe and wonder. I still go out with my son and still have the same sense of awe.

  9. Anonymous

    We were teenagers when Momma decided to start baking cookies. Momma is the Microwave Queen. So this really took us all by surprise. She kept doubling and tripling the recipes because she said it didn’t make that much. She had 7-8 different recipes she wanted to make.

    We wound up with so many cookies that Our entire chirstmas gift list was sick of them and we still had leftovers for a month! I smile when I think of it.

    Brittainy S

  10. Chrissy

    My favorite Christmas memory is picking out an ornament for each of my children. Every year they get a new ornament, hopefully one that depicts their year or accomplishments, or interests. They always look forward to what I have chosen for them. The hope is that when they leave home they will have a set of ornaments to decorate their very own Christmas tree.

  11. Jodi

    I think my absolute favorite memory was the first Christmas we had with our new baby girl! She wasn’t even a month old. Every Christmas that we can spend together with family is special!

  12. Anonymous

    My favorite memory is reading the night before Christmas every Christmas eve. We continued it with my kids too.

    I can’t wait to try the sugar cookies! My kids will love them! :) Sonya

  13. The Jillybean

    My favorite memory is the year I was 16…I had been pretty bad that year and when we got up Christmas morning my sisters had all kinds of stuff. I had nothing..not that I deserved anything. But my Dad kept insisting I go through my stocking even though I really didn’t want to. Well, in the bottom…CAR KEYS! I bout passed out.

  14. Shawna

    A new tradition I am going to start this year is to buy a tablecloth, good quiality white or light colored tablecloth and use it as a “sign in book” of sorts. Every year, everyone who attends Thanksgiving and X-Mas signs the cloth with a fabric pen and then get someone who knows how to sew to embroider the names and the year so you have a running “sign in book” of all your family, friends and guests to your holiday parties.

  15. Kim

    My favorite Christmas memory is simply putting up and decorating our Christmas tree! It always marked the beginning of the Christmas season in our home and I will never forget those times I had with my dear mom!!!

    Thanks for the giveaway!

  16. Janelle

    My favorite Christmas activity is making things with my kids. We make ornaments for the trees and all SORTS of baked goodies. Their favorite is the dipped and decorated pretzel rods we do every year. We have very special moments and memories every holiday season from this time we spend together, and the ornaments we make grace our tree every year so we have warm reminders.

  17. Petra/Germany

    my favorite holiday memory goes back to when i was about 7 or 8. We had single panel windows and iceflowers on them where normal during the winter time (have not seen any since). we used to watch to see if we could see the “christkind” (christchild) arrive on the eve of the 24th. That year we were sure we heard it in the living room and saw it leave in a sparkling streak. we found the proof of angel hair at the window in the living room (now of course i know it was my father who created this wonderful memory). It makes it even more special since this is really one of the very few good memories i have of him.

  18. arisa

    any holiday that involves memories of all my family together is my favorite! they’re so few and far between that they are my favorites. these sugar cookies look so good…i can’t wait to make them!
    arisacuppATgmailDOTcom

  19. 3 Sons

    Our favorite activity is our Happy Birthday Jesus! party on Dec. 24th. We have appetizer/party food as well as cupcakes and sing Happy Birthday to Jesus.

    Hollie

  20. Claire

    To me, Thanksgiving is great because it’s when my dad’s side of the family gets together. We are spread out over the country and this is the only time we see everyone. I love it! Christmas is quiet, just my parents and my brother. I just enjoy the relaxed celebration of Jesus we have together…and the cooking. I get my fill of baking during Christmas!

  21. Swedie

    My absolute favorite part of Christmas was always our big family get-together on Christmas Eve.

    Swedie

  22. Camille

    One Christmas when I was about 6 my youngest sister was not yet 3 and would not leave the Christmas tree alone. One evening I kept going to tell my dad (who was home alone with us) that my sis was playing with the tree, but he figured it was nothing. He finally went to check — to find my sister with about 3 strings of lights over her shoulder trying to yank them off the tree — the tree was about to tip over and decorations were flying everywhere.

    She is still our beloved trouble maker, 30 years later! :-)

  23. stacy

    My favorite Christmas memory, other than my wedding, is all of the holiday cooking that we do in my family. My grandmother was at the center of it all, making fudge, divinity, peanut brittle and cookies, for family and friends. I’m hoping this year is a little slower, so I can introduce my daughter to the tradition.

  24. Anonymous

    My favorite Christmas memories are with my aunt and grandmother. Each year we would get together and make all kinds of food: pear honey, apple butter, cookies, banana nut bread, and on and on. We would package them up and make them into presents for all of the rest of the family. We would spend weeks test baking and actually making the baskets.

    My grandmother passed away last month so this Christmas seems a little lonely already but I am going to do everything I can to try to honor her memory :)

    ~Christie

  25. Grannie K

    I love the sugar cookie recipe. Growing up we always made refridgerator cookies from a recipe my mom had gotten in a high school home ec class. They are great and now my kids love them too. When I got married my husband’s family always had sugar cookies during the holidays. I hate to cut out cookies (lazy), but I would do it to carry on his tradition. Then the kids grew up and it was the two of us. I started to do the sugar cookies like refridgerator cookies and put them in rolls and cut them off as I needed to cook them. I think your recipe will bring back the tradition and everyone will be happy…because as you well know “if mom ain’t happy; ain’t nobody happy”. Jeff will have his sugar cookies and I won’t have to cut them out. We have many traditions and it’s funny but most of them involve food. Hummmmm.

    Thanks for sharing your talents with us.

    Camille

  26. deaconsbench

    One of my lasting favorite Christmas memories was the array of food my mother prepared for us. It was usually the same foods, and a few of them she prepared only on a special occasion. This, of course created anticipation!

  27. Anonymous

    Christmas with my daddy on his last Christmas alive was truly my all time best memory. My dad was dying but still wanted to do something for me but we didn’t have any money so gifts were out of the question. I ask could I have a tree that year and out he went to cut me a cedar. I have never seen anything more beautiful than our plain tree sitting in the living room but the smell alone was devine. We had a gas heater in the room and of course it soon was a brittle spruce and ended up on the carpet! Mom was ticked off about that and told me I had to pick every bit of it from the carpet. I didn’t mind it was worth it but as bad as my Dad was he got in the floor with me and help me and we had lots of giggles and it made me love him even more that he went through so much just to bring me a little happiness.
    Shirley Moore

  28. Cheryl

    My favorite holiday memories are going to each of my grandmothers homes on Christmas Eve. As a child it felt like I was getting a jump start on Christmas. Now looking back I see all the valuable time spent with my family.

  29. Rachel

    These cookies look delicious. Some of my favorite Christmas memories include eating (gorging myself really) all the wonderful food my family cooks!

  30. Ohio Girl(Shan)

    My favorite Christmas memory was Christmas morning at my mom and dads house. My 2 sisters and I were married and out of the home. At this point my parents had 6 grand kids (they now have 9)my mom had gone so overboard on the kids that we spent all morning watching them open gifts and then there was no floor space so we had to stop take out all the trash and put gifts in cars and start all over. At that point ALL the kids said they were tired and didn’t want to open any more. Have you ever heard from kids they didn’t want anymore presents? That was a great morning.

  31. Cee

    First off, King Arthur flour ROCKS, I am looking at my catalog now. LOL. now my favorite Christmas memory would have to be when we lived in Alaska, Mom and me and my sister would make cookies and some of our side dishes for the next day on Christmas eve. Well as soon as all our baking adventures would end, we would sit down to watch Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer, and all of a sudden they would break in from the show and tell how the Airforce had spotted a (UFO) and they were scrambling the jets to see exactly what was going on. During this process, they would tell how they saw multiple blips on the radar and finally they would come back and say they got a visual, and it was Santa Clause starting his desention to start delivering gifts. Well my parents put us off to bed as fast as our feet would take us, and I would put out cookies and milk for him and carrots for the reindeer, and off to sleep we would go. Then my mom and dad would come and wake us up, saying they heard him in the house and waited till he left to come get us… then we would run to the tree and see our goodies…. Amazing how our local Air Force would give us such a memory.. i can still hear the jets in my head to this day…

  32. BillGent

    My favorite memory will be this year. My sister was 14 when I was born. She gave birth to her son Jeff when I was 4. Jen, my niece was born 4 years later. My mom babysat everyday so I grew up along with them. They were more siblings than nephew and niece.

    We lost Jeff and his 16 month old baby several years ago in a carbon monoxide accident from an old space heater. In February Jen and her 10 year old daughter were in a horrible car accident. We almost lost Jen twice. We were summoned to the hospital to say goodbye. If any of you have lost someone to an accident.. you know it can happen again at anytime.
    Good news is, Jen and her daughter made it. Jen spent 6 full months in the hospital, She wasn’t supposed to walk for a year but she made it 6 months because she is very impatient.

    God heard the prayers of thousands of people across the world. I am thankful to God beyond belief for getting her through. I am more grateful for everyday I wake up and I count my blessings and thank him for them.

    This Christmas will be my favorite.

  33. Southern Plate

    I wanted to take a moment to thank everyone of you for posting here. I have had a hard time getting into the Christmas spirit (not that I don’t LOVE Christmas, it just doesn’t feel like Christmas is coming yet to me) and reading all of these is just really turning things around for me.

    These are all so heartwarming, thank you so very much for sharing. I hope you’ll all take time to read through them, they are truly special.
    Gratefully,
    Christy

  34. April in CT

    Every year up until my nanny passed away we would gather at her house for Christmas dinner. The whole family would come and she cooked ALL the food. I wish I had known then what I know now about how much work that is! She made it look effortless and each and every dish was fabulous. Spending the holidays at her house are by far my favorite memory. We’ve started a new tradition in that my mother in law and her honey come to our house and I cook. My first year was…interesting! I’ve gotten it down pat now though and look SO forward to making all the food. I know nanny is with me when I cook.

    I use mostly King Arthur and LOVE it. I’ve started incorporating whole wheat flour into my recipes and theirs is awesome. The white whole wheat is excellent too! Thanks for such a cool give away just in time for the holidays. :)

    Hi Miss Millie!!!

  35. Wanda

    My most memorable time of the holiday’s were going to my Grandmother’s in Theodore, Ala. (sadly she has been gone for some time now) for Christmas dinner. I since have moved away but my brother bought and lives in her house now. She was the best cook I have ever known. How she could take the vegetables from her garden, a turkey, a chicken or two from her chicken coupe and prepare the whole meal for all of us, there were atleast 40 relatives sometimes even more, I have no idea. It was always more than enough food and sooo very delicious. I miss those times and miss her more than her awesome cooking. I have tried to keep her tradition alive, although I’ll never be the cook she was. I am very fortunate to have found your site. Everyday I look at the new recipes and try them out as soon as I have the opportunity.

  36. Elizabeth

    I think all the cookies and baking is the thing that makes it Christmas for me. My Mom and Nana taught me to bake Christmas cookies which I still do every year, hundreds of them for everyone. I am like you and can pour over a new cookbook for hours just dreaming about the results.

    I am really enjoying your website not only the recipes but the stories as well. My husbands family is from the South and it is a new and fascinating perspective that I have never seen before and I am finding that I love it. Thanks for sharing not only the recipes, which I love, but yourself and your family.

    Elizabeth

  37. erisraven

    My favorite holiday memory was the first year I was at college. A bunch of my friends weren’t going to get to go home for the holidays that year, and had crappy dorm food to look forward to.
    So I invited everyone over to my apartment for a Christmas party and dinner. Now, I’d never been what you’d call the most ‘domestic’ person, and my friends didn’t believe I could boil water. In truth, I could bake, but I’d never really cooked a meal in my life, much less a turkey! Nonetheless, I spent a week figuring out what to do, and putting things together. (Reynolds Turkey bags are lifesavers…)
    We had a great party, watched Rudolph (hey, you have your traditions, I have mine – watch it every year.), and had dinner. They were all shocked at the food. The really funny part to me was that I had just moved into the apartment, and it was my first one. I had a TV, a Christmas tree, and that was all that was in the living room besides pillows. We sat around, ate sitting on pillows in the floor, and had a grand old time!
    I got told later that they raved about the party, and that I’d saved their Christmas. That to me was the best part of all!!!

    PS – Hi, Miss Millie!

  38. Dragonlady

    My favorite Christmas memories are of when my girls were little and how excited they were on Christmas Day, that always made my heart feel full…
    Brenda
    bvdragonlady1@aol.com

  39. Amber

    Every Christmas we bake cookies then we go and look at Christmas lights. It is always exciting to see who has the best house!

  40. ThoughtKnott

    My favorite Christmas memory is always going to my grandparents house and our entire family would come over on Christmas Eve and we’d just enjoy spending time together. My grandparents have now passed on and I miss them dearly.

  41. kingsqueen

    I remember my grandmother making pie crusts for holiday pies when I was little. She would let me drag up a chair and “help”. I got my own little ball of dough that I got to roll out by myself. When I was done basically playing with it, she would let me sprinkle on some sugar and cinnamon, then she would bake my very own little “pie” for me to eat.
    A lot of my memories are tied to food – what does that say about me? LOL
    (Hi Miss Millie!)

  42. Donna in VA

    Cookbooks make me weak in the knees. I am surrounded by them in every room in my house.
    My holiday tradition is pretty . . . well, traditional. I bake ALOT! And I make an enormous dinner while we listen to Christmas music. Then at the end of the day, I’m completely wiped out!

  43. BillGent

    Christy,

    This place is special as are you. The site is catching on because of your personal touch. It is like our grandmothers are still here, cooking in the kitchen, still slipping us a piece of turkey or divinity even though mama said “NO!”

    Everybody please remember that even though you may not have everything you want or need..You’re family situation may not be at it’s best..there are hundreds of thousands of people who would trade places with you in a second.
    Count those blessings! Force yourself if you have to..then make these cookies and give them to someone.

  44. Mom24

    I just love all the Christmas’s and I’ve been very lucky, that I get to see my children’s excited faces as they round the corner to the living room and see that Santa came.

  45. david12939@yahoo.com

    i remember Christmas at my Nana,s ( she,s gone , I,m 53 yrs old and I still call her that , I do,nt think I ever called her grandma a day in my life ) . She would make cookie dough , all kinds and then we would do cut outs. She would show me how to do the cutters then she would put them in the oven and then when they cooled I would get to frost and decorate them !!

    This was back in the early 60,s when they had the real bubble lights for the tree and I was never allowed to touch them cause they got hot.

    She had a big dinning room talbe that would fit just about everybody and we would all gather around that and have the best Christmas feast ever !! She did it all , she would,nt hear of anyone bringing anything but their appetites !! She is gone now and has been for a long long time but now I do Christmas cut out cookies with my grandaughter and I think back of doing this with my Nana every Christmas .It is a memory I will cherish forever. david12939

  46. Bev

    So many memories. My favorite goes back to when I was a little girl. My Mom always had a huge dinner with so many relatives, grandparents, aunts and uncles, siblings, etc. We prepared by Mom baking sugar cookies and my younger siblings and I got to frost them however we wanted. Then Mom started baking pies and preparing special salads. On the big day everybody started coming. It was so festive. Our house was small. My family was 6 kids plus Mom and Dad. We lived in a 2 bedroom house with a very small basement and very small kitchen. Mom set up the dinner table plus card tables in the living room all end to end so everyone was at 1 large table. All my aunts and older cousins and sisters helped Mom in the kitchen. What a tight squeeze that was! The smells were heavenly. But the taste was even better! Most of those relatives are gone now and my family has dwindled down. Those that are left are spread out far and wide. But memories will live on. I miss them all so much.
    Hi Miss Millie!

  47. Shana

    A big Hello to Miss Millie!
    My favorite holiday baking memory….Dad’s Nestle Tollhouse cookies….he’d make them with chocolate chips and a batch with white chips just for me! Soon thereafter, I started making sugar cookies…and my FONDEST memory would be my youngest stepbrother polishing off the plate of cookies within 48 hours. Every year, the boys would fight over the cookies…..Gosh I miss my family.

  48. sweepea

    for various reasons, the holidays were often a private, quiet, even solemn time in my family. and i thought that was how it was in all families, until my first long term boyfriend–

    he came from a large, bustling catholic family who ate BIG, and his mother started heavy duty cooking and baking in november, with the work and festivities not ending until ephiphany in january!

    over the course of the years, she not only welcomed me into the family’s festivities, but also included me in the preparation and enjoyment of providing for her family with such goodies and meals over the season.

    what previously looked like thankless (though delicious!) enormous work and preparation, i later understood to be stretching a dollar for many in creative joy, and it ultimately reinforced my love and appreciation for baking.

    though we aren’t together anymore, those are the most valued moments and gifts i received from those holidays, and something that i try to share with others each year, no matter how tight the budget or time. it’s really the point of the season, and i am grateful to share!

    p.s. for all those bakers: if you aren’t using the King Arthur website, do yourself a favor and include it in your research of recipes and techniques!

    they offer simple to understand approaches and explanations, as well as tried and true recipes. and i’m certain their website is a reflection of their cookbooks!

  49. Rebel

    One of my favorite traditions at Christmas time was baking and decorating cookies with my kids which I am now doing with my granddaughter. It is so special.

  50. sweepea

    and ‘scuse my manners, really mama taught me better–

    (waving and grinning)

    !!!Hello Miss Millie!!!

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