Easter Nests

The Easter Bunny has been rather busy the last few weeks. Dusting off the plastic eggs, hunting down the best tasting jelly beans (taste testing a few along the way), searching for the right things to go into everyone’s baskets, and sending happy mail* with an Easter flair. The other day Ms. Bunny came across the most adorable chocolate nests filled with candy eggs. "chocolate nests"

Those chocolate nests made her think of Grammy Thompson’s Scandinavian Cookies. The cookies are shaped like little nests which you fill with jam instead of eggs, but they’re equally cute and rank very high on the adorable scale. I guess you’re getting a pretty good idea of how my brian functions seeing how I jumped from chocolate nests to sugar-coated cookies which somewhat resemble nests.

"Scandinavian Cookies"

Grammy T. usually brought us these cookies every year at Christmas time** and the tin she brought them in was full! My Mom was sweet enough to give me the tin after Grammy passed away, along with a hand-written recipe card for these particular cookies. I think of Grammy every time I make a batch and put them into her tin. With a week to go until Easter there’s a batch of these adorable cookie nests coated in pastel colored nonpareils waiting for Ms. Bunny to drop a dollop of jam in each.

"Grammy T's scandanavian cookie box"

There should be several other treats Ms. Bunny will be making for Easter this upcoming week including a ginormous batch of Peeps & Kisses as well as some fun Easter shaped sugar cookies, so stay tuned.

Scandinavian Cookies

1/2 cup butter

1/2 cup vegetable shortening

1/2 cup firmly packed brown sugar

2 egg yolks (save the whites and freeze for later use)

2 cups sifted flour

colored sugars, non-pareils (or sugarettes as my Mom called them), and/or finely chopped nuts

seedless jam or jellies for filling

Preheat the oven to 300ºF. Cream the butter, shortening, and brown sugar until smooth and no streaks of butter remain. Add the egg yolks one at a time, beating until the batter has lightened. Blend in the flour (if you don’t sift the flour before measuring these cookies will be too dry and crumbly). Roll the dough into small balls, then roll the balls into the sugar or non-pareils, or nuts and place on a cookie sheet that has been lined with parchment paper. Make a depression with one of your fingers in the top of each cookie and bake 5 minutes. Quickly press down the centers again and bake an additional 10 minutes. Cool. Do not fill with jam or jelly until you are ready to serve the cookies as it will make the cookies soggy. If you are giving these as gifts I suggest you find a teeny tiny jar to put in the cookie box or you can use one of those plastic containers for dressing you get at a salad bar. Barring either of those suggestions slip in a note suggesting they spoon in the jam of their choice.

Makes about 47-60 cookies depending on how small you roll the balls of dough.

"Cream all the butter/shortening and sugar until there are no streaks"

"rolling cookie dough in nonpareils"

"scandinavian cookies ready to bake"

Here is one of the HappyMail eggs I sent out. Turns out if you’re willing to put first class postage on something weighing 13 ounces or less you can pop it in your mailbox or one of the big blue mailboxes found all over the U. S. Pretty cool. So far I’ve mailed Easter eggs, flip flops (one at a time), plastic water bottles, and plastic sushi boxes (not filled with sushi of course).

"Happy Mail getting ready to send "

**For Christmas I roll these cookies in red and green nonpareils or colored sugars.

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Breakfast Sundaes

I am worried about the future of real maple syrup in my life. Between wonky winters like the one we just had and the invasion of Asian longhorned beetle I am in a bit of a panic about whether or not there will be any pure maple syrup to pour over my pancakes, waffles or on top of a bowl of yoghurt in twenty or thirty years. Seriously, what is there that can take the place of maple syrup? Nada, niente, rien.

"Maple Sugaring by Paul Sample"

Maple Sugaring by Paul Sample. Courtesy of a private collection.

I grew up in maple sugaring country. I didn’t even know what Aunt Jemima’s was until I was in high school. To me and mine maple syrup tastes like liquid gold and costs nearly as much (prices across New England range from $34-$70/gallon in 2010). Part of the expense is the 40-50 gallons of sap which are needed to make one gallon of maple syrup. Someone has to collect it and then spend hours as well as cords of wood boiling it down until it reaches maple syrupy perfection. If you were to figure in the labor and fuel costs it’s actually cheap, even at those treetop per gallon prices. To justify buying it I tell my kids to make sure they lick their plates clean so none of the syrup goes to waste. If we have company we surreptitiously use our fingers to swipe up every last drop.

In our town of 1600 there are at least two sugar shacks and several families who boil-there-own. It’s a five-mile drive (one way) to get a gallon of milk, but a ten minute walk to buy a gallon of syrup. Our neighbors up the road have been making maple syrup for over forty years. They started off just boiling enough for their family, collecting the sap with a pair of oxen and cooking it down on a fire outside. Over the years they built a sugar shack, changed from collecting sap in buckets to gravity fed plastic tubing, and finally a few years ago switched from heating with wood to propane. Occasionally they celebrate the maple syrup season by inviting the neighbors over for a free pancake breakfast. On those days the line to get into the sugar house can snake half a mile or so down the road with everyone bundled up against the cold and mud which inevitably heralds the running of the sap. To help keep the folks waiting warm Mrs. Bean would send out paper coffee cups filled with Maple Syrup Sundaes.

"Bean's Sugar House"

The first year I gobbled up three maple syrup sundaes they were so good. By the time I got into the sugar shack I was too full to eat any pancakes. Maple Syrup Sundaes are brilliant in their simplicity. Thick and creamy oatmeal drizzled with fresh maple syrup, a handful of dried fruit, and a dollop of whipped cream.

"Toppings for Maple Syrup Sundaes"

Since I ate my first MMS I’ve played around with the idea and added chopped nuts and wheat germ to my offerings plus I’ve expanded from raisins to a variety of mixed dried fruits (I especially like dried tart cherries and slivers of apricots). The kids root around in the fridge to see if there are any maraschino cherries left over from my food styling jobs so their morning sundaes can look like the ones they get at the local ice cream parlor. I’ve also brought a crock pot full of cooked oatmeal* into winter-cold morning meetings along with a basket full of plastic containers filled with different toppings so people can make their own sundaes. Everyone is always thrilled to have an alternative to bagels and donuts. It doesn’t really matter how you dress it up maple syrup sundaes are a great way to start any day.

"Oatmeal Sundae"

Maple Syrup Sundaes

Cooled Oatmeal

Pure Maple Syrup

Dried Fruit (raisins, currants, apricots, blueberries, cherries, craisins, etc.)

Chopped of Slivered Nuts

Toasted Wheat Germ

Whipped Cream

Maraschino Cherries

Ladle some oatmeal into a bowl and top with your favorite toppings. Enjoy.

"Irish steel cut oatmeal

*I put steel cut Irish oatmeal into a crock pot the night before to cook on low. Pack up all the fruit, nuts, maple syrup and other toppings along with some spoons and bowls and the next morning you simply need to unplug the crock pot, load it all into the car, and go.

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Snip, Snip (Favorite Tool #5)

I remember the first time I used a pair it was a revelation. You may ask how scissors can open your eyes, but you only ask because you have not cut things up with a pair of Joyce Chen scissors. They were recommended by all my food styling teachers and mentors, each of whom had multiple pairs in their kits. Twenty-five years ago $20 seemed like a lot to pay for a small pair of scissor, but I quickly learned these scissors more than pay you back for that investment. They can clip herbs from the garden as well as cut apart a chicken. They’re handy when I need to snip the end off a disposable pastry bag or trim a leek so it is ready for its closeup at a photo shoot. In my opinion there really is no need to have another pair of scissors in your home kitchen (though I do have additional scissors in my food styling kit the ones I reach for most often are my Joyce Chen’s).

"joyce chen scissors"

They come in different colors, but since the tools in my food styling tool kit are marked with red I bought the original red handled ones. When my children were younger I found these brightly colored scissors had the extra bonus of being easy to find when “by accident, Mom” they were sometimes left behind in the herb garden and I needed to retrieve them by flashlight. These days we keep two pairs in our kitchen drawer ready for whatever may need a snipping.

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Recipe Card Winners!

I am so impressed with how organized my readers in respect to how they organize and keep their recipes – bravo to all of you. This morning I wrote out everyone’s name who entered the recipe card contest and picked two winners – Jessica N. and Vickie S. Congratulations! I will now be putting pen to paper and sending each of you all the recipes (to date) from this blog.

"recipe card winners"

This past week NPR did a piece on how blogs (and the internet) have replaced “your grandmother’s recipe box” as the place to get ideas for what to cook. It was amusing to consider the irony of my blog which is focused completely on recipes that come from my grandmother’s recipe boxes (yes that is plural), my kitchen drawers, and the many bookshelves in our house, that I then share with folks through the wonderful world wide web. Of course the winners of this contest will receive their prizes the old fashioned way – via the U.S. Postal service.

"recipe card boxes"

Some of our family's recipe card boxes

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Winter Grilling and Anniversaries

My parents did it and so did my husband and I. We met on a blind date and then married exactly one year later. My parents went on their blind date in 1959, married in 1960, and had me in 1961. Shawn and I had our blind date in 1993, married in 1994, and our daughter Isabelle was born in 1995 (amazingly she actually managed to be born on my parent’s wedding anniversary). Today is 19 years from that blind date with my husband and 18 years from our wedding day.

"wedding day march 6 1994"

March 6, 1994

Over the intervening years a lot has changed while a lot has stayed the same. We still live in the same house, though we own it now instead of renting it. Our family is slightly larger now–Russell arrived two years after his big sister. We have different pets than when we started out. All in all though things are pretty much the same. Shawn still fixes things and puns a lot. I do most of the cooking and say everything three times. Every so often we mix it up. I’ll fix a something (and feel really proud of doing so) and Shawn will brave my territory and step into the kitchen to cook dinner. Actually he steps through the kitchen and out to the grill.

"shawn grilling anniversary lamb"

Grilling in winter

Grilling in the winter is something I grew up with, which is a bit strange given that I grew up outside of of one of the snowiest areas in the northeast – Syracuse, New York and now reside in western Massachusetts. Logic has little to do with it, it’s primarily tradition – my grandfather did it, my Dad still does it, as does my husband. Really all you need are a warm coat, enough charcoal, and sometimes a fedora (my grandpa always wore a fedora while grilling). There are times in New England winters when it really is too cold to grill, at least with charcoal. If you choose the right day though, and have plenty of charcoal along with a warm pair of boots you’ll end up with a divine dinner.

"anniversary dinner menu"

So that’s what we had–grilled lamb, boiled potatoes, brussell sprouts sauted in garlic, salad, and chocolate brownies. Yum. I only set the table. Sorry there’s no recipe, but I wasn’t the cook. Shawn said he rubbed the lamb with crushed garlic, salt, pepper, olive oil, and thyme before putting it on the flames and I am here to testify that it was DELICIOUS!!!

"winter grilling"

Grilling lamb

So thanks sweetie for 19 amazing years and an incredible anniversary dinner – xoxoxo

"anniversary dinner"

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