Friday, December 14, 2018

Friday Night: Christmas Thoughts

I haven’t quite given up on Christmas yet.

Yet.


I have a couple of co-workers who cheerfully sing and shout, “Christmas!” whenever a Christmas song is played on the local radio station (which is shockingly often). They’re asking me what level of Christmas attire they will be allowed to wear to work on Christmas Day. (Christmas pants!?!) They are unapologetic and refuse to be ground under the grumblings of the rest of us. They may be saving my life.

I don’t know what happened….well, maybe I do. I’ve always loved Christmas. As a child, I couldn’t wait for the season. I listened to my vinyl Christmas records as much as I could. I refused to stop believing in Santa Claus. As an adult, I baked and made candies, made homemade gifts and hand-decorated wrapping paper. I even still listened to Christmas music voluntarily.

And then, somehow, Christmas became a job. There were so many things to do. So many people to please. Food gifts, which I loved to give, often fell into the, “I don’t like this,” category, and didn’t seem worth fussing over. And then The Day Job became the Christmas job, quite literally. I’m in management and am not supposed to be part of the holiday rotation, but food service staffing is ridiculously sparse. It appears that I will be working on Christmas again this year, which will be three of the last four years. I also will have a difficult time getting enough days off in a row to make the 300-mile trip to visit my family. My husband’s family is three times further away, and we see them even less often.

There are also, of course, people I miss at the holidays, but, while their absence is painful, the memories are peaceful, funny, and warm.

I’ve never thought I’d need to be Whoville-ed into checking my own special brand of cynicism, but I’ve been exposed as a Grinch, or nearly so. My co-workers have put me in my place without really intending to. They also have to work for the holidays. They also won’t get to visit faraway family, or don’t have much family to visit. They’re determined to enjoy themselves, however, and, by the end of last week, I was feeling not a little shame.

And so I stocked up on my favorites…

**From the stores. There are a few store-bought treats that are only available at this time of year, and their perceived rarity makes them even more delicious. My husband has to have a box or two of dark chocolate covered cherries with liquid centers. I particularly love white fudge dipped Oreo cookies, white chocolate-peppermint covered pretzels, and minty M&M’s.

**Ideas. Many of my favorite things at this time of year are ideas: crafts I don’t have time to make, new dessert and cookie recipes I hope to try, old favorites I want to enjoy. For example, I want to make a peppermint infused version of a basic white cake (like this one I put berries in). I think it would be good with chocolate ganache on top or a minty version of this Simple Butter Frosting.



I also have ideas for eggnog butter cookies, cranberry pie, and big decadent cheesecakes.

**Old favorites. I’ve already had a chance to make batches of some of my favorite cookies for Christmas, such as Peanut Butter Cookies with Peanut Butter Cups, Milk Chocolate Chip and M&M Cookies, and Sugar Cookies. I also have ingredients on hand to make Mint Chocolate Cookies, Eggnog Muffins with Streusel Topping, Caramel Corn, peanut brittle (I use the Better Homes and Gardens recipe), and fudge.

 
Yes, I’m making my way through this holiday season, trying to enjoy a new path to new traditions, starting with a Friend-mas celebration this weekend. I’m doing my best to express my appreciation to the co-workers who are helping me see the light. And seeing light somewhere is really what we need to do. These literally dark days call for as much celebration as we can manage. Sweet treats, family and friend traditions, giving gifts and graciously receiving them, and decorating (my tree is up and partially decorated!): these things help us get through the cold and snow and ice and 4:00 pm sunsets. This power we have over the potential for our environment to turn us into Grinch-y Scrooges is what makes us human. Enjoy the season however you can!



Monday, December 10, 2018

26 Cookies for the Holidays


It’s time! It’s time! It’s time! It’s time to create and consume cookies with impunity! Christmas comes with an automatic, unlimited, infinitely renewable License to Cookie. We must use this privilege. Perhaps even abuse it! Maybe we won’t lose it if we don’t use it, but we certainly will be judged differently if we try to apply for such a decadent license later than January 1.


A perusal of The Archives will leave you with little doubt that my favorite sweets to make over the years have been cookies and bars. As far as I’m concerned, they all qualify as Christmas Cookies, because they’re all cookies, except for the bars, which are pans full of cookies all run together, then cut apart again.

 
Here are 26 favorites of various shapes and flavors. Each is equally welcome on my holiday cookie platter.

Drop cookies are probably the easiest to manage. In most cases, the doughs can be wrapped well and frozen, so you can pull cookie dough out of the freezer to bake fresh cookies just about any time. (I prefer to do this than to freeze baked cookies.) Most of these recipes are some variation on classic chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies, and peanut butter cookies.







Other cookies may involve some extra shaping, such as rolling out and cutting, shaping into logs and slicing, or rolling into balls. Most of these also come from doughs that can be frozen.




Mint Chocolate Cookies (made this way or that way; pictured above)
Ginger Molasses Cookies (pictured at top)
Sugar Cookies (great with Simple Butter Frosting; pictured above and below)


Finally, here are some brownies and other bars. There’s often a lot less fuss with a pan of bars that you can just whip up, bake off, and cut up to share. These freeze better as bars and aren’t suitable to freeze as doughs/batters. Don’t forget: you can exponentially increase your flavor genius by adding or swapping different fruits, nuts and candies into these easy treats. (I suppose this applies to all of the above as well!)




Fudgy Mint Brownies (pictured above)



There are so many ways to exercise your license to cookie, satisfy your sweet tooth, and make your family and friends happy! Get in the kitchen and get your cookie on!





Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Honey Raisin Bread


 
While I love baking breads with at least some whole grain flour in them, I’m also happy to make a richer, fluffier, sweeter loaf on occasion. This one, which is also studded with dark raisins, is made with all bread flour, and is nearly as indulgently satisfying as dessert.

I always feel a bit irresponsible when writing about a kneaded yeast bread recipe on these pages. Not because of the carbohydrate loaded nature of the final product. (It has never been my goal to be nutritionally elite.) It’s because of the somewhat careless way I put together a loaf of bread. Success in baking is usually accomplished by applied accuracy. Recipes for really great fancy baked goods have measurements that consider tiny increments like grams and milliliters. My bread recipes tend to use language like, “3 cups bread flour, or more as needed,” or brief descriptions of what the dough should be like when it’s time to stop kneading or adding flour.

 
This recipe is no exception. I started with a cup of warm milk. I wanted to sweeten and enrich the bread, so added ¼ cup of each honey and soft, unsalted butter. I knew this would hold about 3 cups of bread flour, so that’s what I kneaded in. It was about right. The dough came together in my stand mixer, smooth and elastic, slightly tacky. Perhaps more or less flour would be needed if I used a different brand. Perhaps kneading by hand instead of with a stand mixer and a dough hook would change the results. Really, I’m happy to keep the recipe somewhat flexible so that bread can be made the way the bread maker likes to make it.

 
This dough could probably take in some other flavors, such as cinnamon or pumpkin pie spice. You could also use a different dried fruit, such as craisins, or chopped dates, figs, or apricots, or a mixture of any of those. Nuts could be mixed in, too. I liked the sweetness of this recipe, though you may be able to back off the honey, or replace it with another sweetener, with some minor adjustments to the flour content. You could probably put some whole grain flour in as well.

The butter keeps the bread soft as well as rich, making it a lovely breakfast or afternoon snack. It also makes pretty fabulous French toast. Bread pudding would be great, too. This is a good one to have in your recipe file for tinkering. Or just eating plain, lightly toasted and gently buttered.


Honey Raisin Bread
If you do not want to use a stand mixer to mix and knead the bread, you can mix it in a large bowl and knead by hand on a floured surface.

1 cup milk
¼ cup unsalted butter
¼ cup honey
2 ¼ teaspoon (1 envelope) active dry yeast
3 cups bread flour, or more as needed, divided
1 teaspoon fine salt
¾ cup raisins

1. Combine the milk and butter and heat until the milk is about 100 F. The butter does not need to be completely melted. Pour into the bowl of a stand mixer.

2. Stir in the honey and yeast. Let stand about 5 minutes, or until the yeast is foamy.

3. Add about 1 ½ cups flour and mix with the paddle attachment to make a batter. Cover the bowl with a towel and let stand for 15-30 minutes. The mixture should be risen and puffy in appearance.

4. Sprinkle the salt over the dough. Add about half of the remaining flour. Knead on medium-low speed using the dough hook. Continue adding the remaining flour and kneading it in to make a smooth and elastic dough that is still slightly tacky. This will take about 10 minutes of kneading time.

5. Remove the dough from the bowl and knead in the raisins by hand to distribute them evenly.

6. Spray a large bowl with cooking spray, or grease it as desired. Shape the dough into a smooth ball and place it in the prepared bowl. Spray or grease the dough ball. Cover the dough loosely with a sheet of plastic wrap. Cover the bowl with a towel. Let stand for about 1 hour, or until roughly doubled in size.

7. Gently deflate the dough and reshape it into a ball. Let stand 5 minutes. Line a baking sheet with a silicone baking mat or parchment paper. Shape the dough into a log and place it on the baking sheet. Cover loosely with a towel.

8. Let the shaped dough rise for about 1 hour or until roughly doubled in size. Preheat oven to 350 F.

9. Slash the dough in several places with a sharp blade. Bake at 350 F for 40-45 minutes or until the bread is golden brown and the bread sounds hollow when tapped on the bottom. Cool completely.

Makes about 12 servings.


Sunday, November 4, 2018

17 November Favorites


 
With the commercial popularity of Halloween and Christmas, November can start to feel like a flyover month, a space for cleaning up one set of decorations and pile of candy wrappers and planning the next one. I refuse to fly over Thanksgiving, or any of the delicious, comforting foods that I’ve featured on these pages in this final month of fall. Pumpkin, cranberries and apples are headliners in my favorite November posts, of course, and there are other delicious baked goods and late season vegetables that contribute to the comforting table.

Here is a list of 17 favorites posted in this month from The Messy Apron Archives:

Pumpkin gets swirled into every meal at this time of year. Pumpkin Baked Oatmeal is a wholesome and comforting breakfast dish,

 
and Pumpkin Waffles take a bit more time, but make great weekend brunches.

 
Quick breads and coffee cakes are always welcome at the breakfast table, as well as part of a complete afternoon snack. There’s Cranberry Apple Oatmeal Coffee Cake.
 


And for a pumpkin quick bread fix, I’ve posted three different pumpkin muffins in Novembers past: Pumpkin Spice Latte Muffins, Pumpkin Molasses Muffins, and Pumpkin Cranberry Muffins.


Some of my November favorites are yeast breads, like Pumpkin Focaccia with Walnuts and Swiss


 



Other dishes with late-season ingredients: Spicy Spaghetti Squash Stir Fry






And Pumpkin Alfredo Sauce, which is great with cheese tortellini or ravioli.



For a warm-up in the colder weather there’s Mulled Apple Cider.



Of course, the big show of November is Thanksgiving. Cranberry Sauce is a must, and I rely on this simple recipe, which can be varied in so many ways.



Pumpkin pie has to be there as well, so I have posted both Grandmama’s Pumpkin Pie, which is classic and comforting



and Bourbon Vanilla Pumpkin Pie, a warm and fragrant twist on tradition.



If you don’t go for pumpkin in your Thanksgiving dessert, however, you could make Pear Apple Crumble Pie.



After celebrating Thanksgiving, there’s still some November left, so you might as well start getting ready for Christmas. Chai Spice Cashew Butter Cookies are a great way to get in the holiday baking spirit.



There are so many good things to make in November, so don’t get so caught up anticipating upcoming chaos that you miss out.