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Are you wondering if you have the time to bake homemade Christmas
cookies this year? Every year at about this time we all start to
get a little panicked that the holidays are coming up fast and
we're not really ready yet. Here are a few little-known tips and
tricks, for almost every type of cookie, to help you get the most
out of the time you spend baking.
Cutout Cookies
Don't struggle with dough sticking to your rolling pin. Instead,
roll out your dough between two sheets of waxed paper. This will
eliminate the sticking problem.
Do your cutout cookies always seem to turn out dry, tough, and
tasteless? The trick with the waxed paper will help with this.
Assuming that you started with a good recipe, the problem is that
you are overworking your dough and working too much flour into
it. Using the waxed paper will help you to manipulate the dough
less, and the dough won't pick up any extra flour.
Refrigerator (Icebox) Cookies and Pinwheels
Ever notice how your roll of icebox or pinwheel cookies gets flat
on one side from sitting on the refrigerator shelf? Keep them
nice and round by standing them upright in a tall drinking glass
while they're chilling.
Do your cookies flatten further when you try to slice them? Try
rotating the log 1/4 turn after each slice.
Having trouble with the cookies crumbling as you try to slice
them? Start with a log that has been frozen for several hours.
Then use a very a very sharp to slice through.
Cookie Press Cookies (Spritz)
Having trouble getting your cookies to form properly? When your
dough doesn't seem to stick properly, put your baking sheet in
the freezer for an hour or two, while keeping the dough at room
temperature. Then when you press out your cookies onto the frozen
sheet, the dough will stick to it just like your tongue sticks to
a frozen metal pole when you lick it (assuming you've ever been
silly enough to try this).
Don't forget you can pick up your mistakes and put them back into
the press.
Bar Cookies
When making bar cookies, create a liner for your baking pan by
turning the pan upside-down and covering it with aluminum foil,
making sure to form the corners and leaving an overhang of an
inch or two. Then, remove the foil, turn the pan right side up,
turn the foil over and place it inside the pan. It will make a
perfect liner for your pan. If required by your recipe, grease
the liner. Then continue baking your bar cookies as directed.
Once baked, you can lift out the entire batch of bars and place
it on a cooling rack to cool completely. You can then immediately
re-use your baking pan for another batch without having to wait
for the previous batch to cool, and you won't have to wash the
pan.
All Cookies
Eliminate the need to grease your baking sheets and wash them
later by lining them with parchment paper. Parchment paper can be
re-used several times and gives excellent results.
Do your cookies seem to brown too much, or cook too fast? Buy a
dependable oven thermometer and check your oven temperature. Your
oven's internal thermometer may not be accurate. Or, perhaps you
are using a non-stick baking sheet or pan. The dark color of the
non-stick coating can make your baked goods brown too fast. Try a
shiny metal pan instead or lower your oven temperature by 25
degrees.
Are your cookies not browned enough, or take too long to cook?
Again, verify the oven temperature. Or, perhaps you're using an
insulated baking sheet or pan. Insulated bakeware can prevent
your cookies from reaching the desired temperature in the right
amount of time. Try using a non-insulated pan, or raise your oven
temperature by 25 degrees.
For more information on minimizing the work involved in holiday
baking, consult these articles:
Recommended Reading
Christmas Cookies Are for Giving: Recipes, Stories and Tips for Making Heartwarming Gifts
by Kristin Johnson, Mimi Cummins
More than a cookbook, Christmas Cookies Are for Giving is a celebration of family, friends and the joy of giving. Stories, recipes, tips and more...
Smells of cinnamon...cookie cutters...rolling and baking...eating dough...warm times with friends and family...Christmas cookies are a universal symbol of sweetness and family tradition at Christmas. But the joy of Christmas cookies goes beyond eating. In Christmas Cookies Are for Giving, Kristin Johnson and Mimi Cummins reawaken the fun of giving Christmas cookies, as they remember doing when they lived next door to each other when young children.
From the original short story "The Giving Christmas Cookie," which shows a family brought together by a special cookie recipe at Christmas, to nearly 50 scrumptious recipes with mouth watering photos, to the timely, easy directions for making homemade "Gifts in a Jar," Christmas Cookies Are for Giving shows that old-fashioned Christmas gifts are an antidote to cynicism about Christmas. The secret to celebrating your family and friends may not be in the mall, but in your pantry where you’ll find the ingredients to make Butterball Santas, Cranberry Decadent Cookies, and Vanillekipferl—The Giving Christmas Cookie.
Give this book as a present, and you may be rewarded when someone you love bakes the goodies in this book for you.
(courtesy: Amazon)
Create My Own Soup
Children's meals have to be easy, delicious and nutritious. Getting kids to eat vegetables is a major task.
Finding a way to get vegetables into the mouths of kids is easy if they are part of the fun. Creating ways to
get kids to help with the preparation and the cooking of kids' recipes is part of the fun.