I am always looking for new Christmas cookie recipes or links...I like making cookie platters at Christmas time...and it's always fun to find a new gem.
So, if you bake...

Maybe I'll share some of mine too...

ME
Yes! Do you dip them in chocolate or put sprinkles on them, too? I always think I'd like to try them out, and then I run out of time with all the other things...TRavine wrote: ↑Fri Nov 18, 2022 11:33 pm Wonderful topic, Mim!
Do you people know vanilla crescents? I'm not sure if they are an Austrian thing or known internationally. They are quite the traditional thing here. My great grandma's cousin used to work as a cook for some fancy Austrian Count a hundred years ago and the secret recipe of vanilla crescents she made specifically for him is still in use in our family today.
I even veganized it, which is easy (you only have to swap the butter for margarine, as the recipe doesn't contain milk or eggs). I'll ask my mom to send it to me tomorrow, then you can have it, if you like.
do think that part of creating a family life is establishing those shared rituals, as
important as getting out the same old familiar box of decorations for the tree each year.
Now, it’s true that children are too excited about their presents to take a lively interest in
breakfast on Christmas Day, but consider making these all the same: there’s something
so warmly reassuring in knowing that soon this cinnamon-sweet smell of baking and
oranges will come to signify Christmas morning to them.
You may find it easier to measure out the cranberries, flour, baking powder,
bicarb and sugar the night before, so that all you’ve got to do is mix together the orange
juice, milk and eggs, melt the butter and combine all the ingredients on Christmas
morning itself.
for the muffins:
200g plain flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
75g demerara sugar
good grating fresh nutmeg
1 clementine or small orange
approximately 50ml milk
60g unsalted butter, melted
1 large egg
150g dried cranberries
12-bun muffin tin with papers
for the topping:
2 teaspoons demerara sugar
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
Preheat the oven to 200ºC/gas mark 6.
In a large bowl, combine the flour, baking powder, bicarb and sugar, and grate over a generous amount of fresh nutmeg. Squeeze the orange or clementine juice into a measuring jug, then pour in milk on top till it comes up to the 150ml mark. Add the melted butter and the egg, and beat to combine. Pour the jug of liquid ingredients into the bowl of dry ingredients and stir till the ingredients are more or less combined, remembering that a lumpy batter makes light muffins. (Bearing this in mind, you could easily get the children to make up the mixture.) Last of all, lightly fold in the cranberries and fill the muffin cases or cups. The amount of cranberries specified here makes for heavily fruited muffins; if you want them sparser, use half the amount.
Mix together the demerara sugar and ground cinnamon and sprinkle over the tops of the muffins. Stick them in the oven and bake for 20 minutes, by which time the air should be thick with the promise of good things and the good things themselves golden-brown and ready to be eaten – as they are, or broken open and spread heapingly, mouthful by mouthful, with unsalted butter and marmalade.
Makes 12.
I LOVE the drawing!
You are very welcome, Mim!mimosa wrote: ↑Sat Nov 19, 2022 11:08 pm Wow, Tom! Thank you! I appreciate it so much.
What an effort... I cook like that but I don't bake that.
Thank you for trying to get the recipe. I am glad I have a kitchen scale. Dutch people also use a scale...i have a recipe that I wanted that also comes on grams. We generally use the American imperial system as well as some metric.
ME
Oh yes, my mom has used soaked flax seeds as egg replacement a few times. Worked really well! There are so many ways to do it. You can also replace the egg with a tablespoon of applesauce or mashed banana.mimosa wrote: ↑Sun Nov 20, 2022 2:07 pm there was some random egg substitute recipe that works with flax...only allowed up to two eggs...like (ground?) flax seed and water soaked...have you heard of that? one egg equals 1/4 cup...uh 60 ml.
Do you all seriously bake where you have measure everything on a kitchen scale? I have pre-measures measuring spoons and cups and we just scoop and dump/pour. Or maybe it's the aunthentic way to bake by weight...lol.
Obviously in a case where you make something all the time, you'll know what it looks like measured and it's a "here, this is looks right" and do it.
I might have try the muffins, merry, I don't think I've really done anything with orange anything...pumpkin, blueberry, banana, apple, chocolate, coffee, spice, etc.
ME
Then you can't just quickly mix something up....that would certainly change the way I made a double batch of muffins for school in the morning when the mood strikes me. I'm using a time crunch to get it done so the kids can grab and go. I can't see weighing 4 c cups of flour. I really can't imagine baking any other way...LOL.TRavine wrote: ↑Sun Nov 20, 2022 2:25 pm
Oh yes, my mom has used soaked flax seeds as egg replacement a few times. Worked really well! There are so many ways to do it. You can also replace the egg with a tablespoon of applesauce or mashed banana.
Haha, yeah I think like 95 per cent of our recipes here use measurements in grams. It has only been in recent years that measuring cups became more popular here.
(They are mighty convenient though!)
I have actually wanted to get some for a while. I don't really bake myself. I do love to cook but baking always seems an effort...maybe because of the skales...lol So I might try it your way, Mim. Maybe I'll do it more often then.
Yes you should.
Hi merry,
Well, I was hoping to get your kitchen topic moving with Christmas baking...and it wasn't really a Miller topic needing its own space. I don't know your full audience/contributors. So if you think it'll "move" better in the Christmas forum, go right ahead.merry wrote: ↑Tue Nov 29, 2022 2:26 pm Mimosa, those look absolutely gorgeous! honestly, stunning! How appetising they all look!
I laughed that Reuben thinks you should get back to making chocolates - I bet he does!
How lovely of you to make those cookies for the people looking after Malachi![]()
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Do you want this topic moved to the Christmas forum? Up to you.
Tom, if you can veganize the recipes I've shared, I will call you a magician! They all have gluten, eggs, dairy, and some have nuts. I don't know how else it works. The following recipe is an adaptable one for vegans, I believe.
Oh, no worries, MimTom, if you can veganize the recipes I've shared, I will call you a magician! They all have gluten, eggs, dairy, and some have nuts. I don't know how else it works.
Those sound delicious indeed!!CHOCOLATE HAYSTACKS
Measure 1/2 c butter or margarine (I bet coconut oil would even work), 2 c sugar, 1/2 c milk (use whatever you would use) and 4 tbsp cocoa powder in large saucepan. Bring to a boil and boil for about 2 minutes. Take off the heat and add 1 tsp vanilla. Add in 2 1/2 - 3 cups oats and 1 c shredded coconut...drop by tbsp onto a waxed-paper surface to set. This should make a about 30-35 or so.
merry,merry wrote: ↑Sat Nov 19, 2022 10:28 pm
This is not my recipe and it's muffins not cookies but I did make these one year and they were nice.
for the muffins:
200g plain flour
3 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
75g demerara sugar
good grating fresh nutmeg
1 clementine or small orange
approximately 50ml milk
60g unsalted butter, melted
1 large egg
150g dried cranberries
12-bun muffin tin with papers
for the topping:
2 teaspoons demerara sugar
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
Preheat the oven to 200ºC/gas mark 6.
In a large bowl, combine the flour, baking powder, bicarb and sugar, and grate over a generous amount of fresh nutmeg. Squeeze the orange or clementine juice into a measuring jug, then pour in milk on top till it comes up to the 150ml mark. Add the melted butter and the egg, and beat to combine. Pour the jug of liquid ingredients into the bowl of dry ingredients and stir till the ingredients are more or less combined, remembering that a lumpy batter makes light muffins. (Bearing this in mind, you could easily get the children to make up the mixture.) Last of all, lightly fold in the cranberries and fill the muffin cases or cups. The amount of cranberries specified here makes for heavily fruited muffins; if you want them sparser, use half the amount.
Mix together the demerara sugar and ground cinnamon and sprinkle over the tops of the muffins. Stick them in the oven and bake for 20 minutes, by which time the air should be thick with the promise of good things and the good things themselves golden-brown and ready to be eaten – as they are, or broken open and spread heapingly, mouthful by mouthful, with unsalted butter and marmalade.
Makes 12.