Cookies for Santa
If you’re like me, this year you may have felt like the tradition of baking and exchanging Christmas cookies wasn’t quite the same. After all, it’s about more than just the cookies. It’s the nostalgia. Spending time together, sharing and passing down recipes and making memories. It’s about teaching the younger generation to create in the kitchen, and of course, feed Santa’s sugar tooth. Sharing baked treats with neighbors, friends and family is a big part of why we bake, bake, bake during the holiday season. Baking Christmas cookies actually dates back to medieval times when it originated as a way to share gifts when visiting friends and family. In the 17th century, the Dutch and German brought Christmas cookies and cookie cutters to the United States, changing the cookie game!
Christmastime is tamale-time
The abundance of great Mexican food is something our family has missed ever since moving from the Phoenix metro area back to the Pacific Northwest. Heck, my son grew up practically drinking salsa (true story). One year at Christmastime, my husband came home with tamales that his Hispanic colleagues had brought into the office. I was sold. Fast forward, years later we decided to embark on our own tamale-making family adventure. However, there’s no getting around the fact that tamales are time consuming. Lucky for me, I have my husband Ted (aka Theodoro at least when we take a Mexican vacation) to thank for taking the time to document our tamale-making process in writing and photos. Our favorite tamales are a chicken salsa verde version and although they may not necessarily be authentic, they are delicioso.
The merriest kitchen and food gift guide
Since we are all home cooks this year, edible gifts and gifts for the kitchen top the most-wanted gift list and are the most fun to give! Treat a friend, your sister, your son, or whoever is the cook in the family with something practical, beautiful, delicious or just plain fun. Buying for yourself is totally permitted as well. Keep reading for some wonderful and unique ideas. I hope you discover the perfect something!
Cheers to the underappreciated pear
Appearently December 5 is World Pear Day and kicks off National Pear Month. Yet, who knew? The pear just doesn’t get a fair shake. My formative experience with pears was watching my mom canning them. I don’t remember ever eating a fresh pear as a kid. Rather, they came from a jar, canned in syrup, or chopped up in fruit cocktail. Only when I visited my brother-in-law’s family farm in southern Oregon about 10 years ago did I come to appreciate the beauty of the often-overlooked pear.
What I’m making for Thanksgiving
There’s no debating that this year’s Thanksgiving looks different. People are opting out of traveling, and smaller gatherings are the norm. The media has given us permission to make this year simple and even to skip the turkey! But keeping it small doesn’t mean you can’t be creative. You may find that you have more time together since everyone can work from home and there’s nowhere to go. I say this is the year to try new twists on side dishes, prepare your turkey a new way or make several desserts to be eaten throughout the week.
Dessert for breakfast (part 2)
Cranberry orange scones and Thanksgiving morning pie
My favorite morning routine this time of year is to sit quietly by the fireplace and enjoy a cup of coffee and a warm scone in all its buttery gloriousness. Pretty close to perfection. This is how I plan to start my Thanksgiving day. I’ll take my time and look leisurely through the lists I’ve made and figure out my prep and oven schedule for the day. When everyone else wanders down the stairs, they can help themselves to coffee and cranberry-orange scones, yogurt and homemade granola studded with dried cranberries, or dare I say, pumpkin pie!
Dessert for breakfast (part 1)
Over-the-top pancakes, waffles and French toast
I’m a firm believer that eating dessert in the morning – when you have the entire day ahead of you to work off those calories – is not only acceptable, but beats eating dessert before you go to bed (looking at you pint of Vanilla Swiss Almond Häagen-Dazs). Seriously is there a better time for dessert than breakfast? If you type “is it okay to eat dessert for breakfast” in your browser’s search bar, you’ll be rewarded with results that totally validate this decision. As much as I love something sweet in the morning with my coffee, I find it’s best to balance that sweet tooth with a savory protein. That’s why fried eggs go with pancakes (I confess that I’m a syrup and yolk mixer), sausage goes great with French toast and all that syrup, and it’s why someone decided to add bacon to maple bars. While grabbing a cookie with your coffee could do the trick, why not serve up some extra-decadent pancakes, waffles or French toast this holiday season?
Score a healthy-ish homegating
Finally! Pac-12 football has returned albeit without raucous tailgating in parking lots. Instead we’ve turned to “homegating” in front of the TV. Either way, football is best enjoyed with a delicious spread of food. Beer and Jell-o shots aside, what comes to mind are wings, nachos, pulled pork, ribs, chili, meatballs, pigs-in-a-blanket, sliders, bacon-wrapped jalapeno poppers, pizza, chips and dips. Lots of meat. Lots of dips. Lots of cheese. The idea of prepping food to enjoy at home isn’t new for those of us who have always been homegaters. But because our team’s first game coincided with my son’s birthday weekend (and he doesn’t eat dairy, sugar or gluten), I needed to plan a healthier menu … but (obviously) not forego all indulgences.
The allure of cookbooks
In this digital age, cracking open a glossy new cookbook still makes my heart beat a little faster. There’s something about holding a heavy cookbook in your hands, opening the spine for the first time, touching the pages and anticipating what’s inside. The recipes and all the glorious food porn. Cookbooks are the best books. You can devour them like a novel from front to back or go straight to a recipe you can’t wait to try. Cookbooks offer a new adventure every time you open one and speak volumes sitting on a kitchen windowsill or coffee table. Yet, basically every recipe is available online. So … what is the allure of hard-copy cookbooks?
Ganache-covered clove-spiced applesauce bread
Everything is better with ganache. And who doesn’t love to say "guh-naash" – that heavenly mixture of heavy whipping cream and decadent chocolate named by the French and used in the best desserts. Despite its fancy name, ganache is simple to make and very forgiving. You can whip ganache and frost cakes with it, roll it into truffles, or sneak it by the spoonful. My favorite is to pour it over a tart or cake in all its glossy gloriousness. So when I started thinking about how to reinvent the applesauce bread that my mother used to make (okay, and I also saw this sweatshirt on @fancysprinkles Instagram - scroll down for pic), ganache was the obvious choice. Voilá. Ganache-covered clove-spiced applesauce bread.
Peanut-Butter Monster Mash Cookies
With this year’s Halloween already being dubbed “quarantine-oween”, trick-or-treating won’t look quite the same. The good news is that families and businesses are coming up with creative ways to safely celebrate the holiday including handing out pre-packaged candy from a distance and setting up grab-and-go tables. Small in-house parties limited to immediate family or school-bubble buddies will most likely be popular this year as well. Luckily, little monsters and zombies can still experience the fun of choosing a costume (with a great mask) and indulge in the candy and sweets associated with Halloween. No need to go door-to-door. Instead, send the kids to the kitchen. Turn on Monster Mash and bake up a batch of Peanut-Butter Monster Mash Cookies.
Crash course in winter squash
Do you know your squashes from your gourds from your pumpkins? Or which ones you can eat and which are better left for carving or decorating? They all belong to the family Cucurbitaceae and are all technically classified as fruits. Squash is soft-shelled and delicious (sweeter than summer squashes) while gourds are hard-shelled and meant for ornamental purposes. There are hundreds of different varieties of winter squash and some varieties are confusingly called pumpkins. With so much information to wade through, I’ve put together a crash course in winter squash that outlines some basics of how to choose, store (and cut!) this versatile winter stable. I’ve also included suggestions on how to prepare five of my favorite varieties.
Pumpkin ice cream 4 ways
Starbucks Pumpkin Spice Latte (the cult-like PSL) is the most popular seasonal beverage in the company’s history, with more than 424 million cups sold and its own Twitter account. This iconic taste of fall in a cup is festive, provides a sense of belongingness and connectedness, and like it or not, subconsciously urges you to imbibe before it’s no longer available. Following the craze started by the coffee chain, brands continue to stock grocery shelves each year with novel pumpkin spice products (pumpkin-spice cheesy powder on your Kraft Mac and Cheese, anyone?) promising us comfort and all the cozy fall feels. “Should-never-have-been-invented” variations aside, I’m all for extending the pumpkin season beyond the obligatory Thanksgiving pie. Give me pumpkin in breads, pancakes, cookies or basically any baked good, as well as in my coffee—and especially in my ice cream.
This Momma’s Chicken Pot Pie
As a kid, I remember loving the individual frozen chicken pot pies in the aluminum pans that you cooked for (I swear) an hour, dumped out on your plate and anxiously watched the steam escape. Then there was Marie Callender’s—perhaps the restaurant credited for making chicken pot pie famous—which has been pretty much relegated to the freezer aisle alongside other various brands. The thing with most frozen chicken pot pies is that when you pierce the crust, about three carrots, a handful of peas and a few big chunks of chicken run out in a too-thin gravy. They all come with quick microwave instructions, but let’s be honest, this method is a far cry from the delicious, comforting smell of a chicken pot pie baking in the oven. This momma says homemade is the only way to go.
Sweet-potato biscuits and a side of chili
What I love about the beginning of fall are the crisp mornings and lower angle of the sun, the sound of football on TV and the permission to bake! While tailgate food is on somewhat of a hiatus this year, the annual assault of pumpkin spice is in full force nudging bakers everywhere. In a stubborn attempt to hang on to summer as long as possible, I refuse to have a pumpkin latte until October. But I may have already snuck a pumpkin donut from the bakery and I’ll admit to planning meals of pumpkin and squash, sweet potatoes, soups and stews, apples, and scents of maple, ginger and cinnamon. The first official day of autumn inspired me to cook up a cozy dinner of warm sweet potato biscuits with honey butter and a quick pot of chili.
Quick pickling: It’s no big dill
For someone with memories of my mom in the kitchen for days at a time canning jar after jar of dill and bread & butter pickles, pickling never was on my radar as something I wanted to try. But in recent years, I’ve benefited from the pickling efforts of my self-proclaimed “food sister.” She’s pickled cucumbers, beets, carrots, green beans, jalapeños, banana peppers … you get the picture. Anything from her garden is fair game for pickling. But when she said she makes both “pickles” and “refrigerator pickles” and started tossing around words like “ferment,” I decided to take a closer look.
Make (birthday) cake!
Birthdays—complete with cake and a round of obnoxious singing—are one of the most joyful celebrations to take place in a kitchen. I’m a firm believer that everyone, regardless of age should be celebrated on their special day. Candles in a donut, ice cream pie or stack of pancakes are all perfectly acceptable. It’s the love that goes into the celebration that makes all the difference. Sure, birthdays lose some luster as we age. But what’s wonderful is that once we have kids, we can start counting all over again.
Stress baking: food for the soul
What a year 2020 has been. Three months into the year and the pandemic became real in the U.S. and stay-at-home orders were the new norm. Six months into the year and my dear dad unexpectedly passed away. And now, three months later, my beautiful home state of Oregon, along with the rest of the West Coast, is on fire. This past week I’ve felt stuck in my house more than ever. In an effort to stop obsessively checking the evacuation level and air quality maps, I ended up in my kitchen. Stress baking. Anxiety cooking. Call it what you will.
The perils of turmeric
Sounds like a suspense novel, yes? Dun dun dun dahh. Curcumin is the active component that gives turmeric its potential anti-inflammatory and antioxidant health benefits, including prevention against heart disease, Alzheimer’s, cancer, and even depression and arthritis. So, the real mystery is why did it take me until 2020 to actually purchase and cook with turmeric?
Blueberries and beyond
Blue (any shade of blue) has been my favorite color since childhood. So my love for blueberries may be preordained. Besides being a delicious superfood full of good things like antioxidants, phytoflavinoids, potassium and vitamin C, blueberries win the blue ribbon in the “stays fresh” and “freezes nicely” categories.