I'm a genealogist, and the volunteer librarian at a private local and family history library. I natter about my research, largely neglected, and my library, which is undergoing some big changes trying to survive in a world of Ancestry.com and Google.
Showing posts with label Holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Holidays. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 14, 2011
Advent Calendar of Christmas Memories: Fruitcake!
Today's prompt for the Geneabloggers is: Fruit Cake – Friend or Foe?
My Dad always liked fruitcake, so for many years I got him one for Christmas; you'd be amazed how many odd mailing lists that gets you on. Me, I always preferred my grandmother's fruitcake cookies, which are fresh and don't have any alcohol.
Grandmother's Fruitcake Cookies
6 tablespoons shortening
1/4 cup sugar
3 1/2 cups flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
3 teaspoons baking soda
1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1 cup walnuts, chopped
2 cups raisins
1/2 cup candied citron
1 cup molasses
1/4 cup sour milk
candied cherries
Plump raisins in hot water.
Cream shortening and sugar.
Sift together flour, salt, soda, nutmeg and cinnamon.
Toss walnuts, raisins and citron in dry ingredients.
Mix molasses and milk.
Add dry ingredients and molasses alternately to creamed mixture.
Shape into logs about 2 inches round and chill.
Preheat oven to 350.
Slice logs about 3/8 inch thick and arrange on baking sheet.
Place 1/2 candied cherry on each cookie.
Bake 10 minutes.
Store in a very airtight container.
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Advent Calendar -- Holiday Foods
My grandfather was an owner of the Jo-Mar Dairy in Salina, KS, and one of our family's Christmas food traditions stems from that...sort of. The dairy used pewter ice cream molds to make colorful holiday treats; vanilla ice cream was molded into holiday shapes and then painted with food coloring. I'm told that they were beautiful, but very labor intensive. By the time I came along, the dairy no longer sold molded ice cream for the holidays, and my grandfather had brought some of the molds home.
For many years, we tried, and mostly failed, to make molded ice cream at home. The molds were individual serving sized, so there wasn't a lot of mass to the ice cream, and the difference between too cold to pop out of the mold and to warm to hold the detail was a pretty small temperature band that's hard to find in a kitchen already warm from cooking a holiday dinner. I'm sure that having small "helpers" added to the challenge, as well! Still, it felt special to have them, even if they didn't stand up properly or have totally crisp details.
In 2003, we tried again. Success!
Of course, nowadays, those molds are collectibles and people are warned not to use them for food because of lead concerns. Pity.
For many years, we tried, and mostly failed, to make molded ice cream at home. The molds were individual serving sized, so there wasn't a lot of mass to the ice cream, and the difference between too cold to pop out of the mold and to warm to hold the detail was a pretty small temperature band that's hard to find in a kitchen already warm from cooking a holiday dinner. I'm sure that having small "helpers" added to the challenge, as well! Still, it felt special to have them, even if they didn't stand up properly or have totally crisp details.
In 2003, we tried again. Success!
Of course, nowadays, those molds are collectibles and people are warned not to use them for food because of lead concerns. Pity.
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