The Best Cookie Recipes for the Holidays (or Anytime)

The Best Cookie Recipes for the Holidays (or Anytime)

1. The Essential Sugar Cookie from Delish

 

2. Linzer Cookies from Ahead of Thyme

 

3. Peanut Butter Blossoms from The Pioneer Woman

 

4. Homemade Gingermen from Bigger Bolder Baking

 

5. Slice & Bake Chocolate Orange Shortbread Cookies from Girl vs. Dough

 

6. Peppermint Patty Stuffed Chocolate Cookies from I Am Baker

 

7. Snickerdoodles from Spoon Fork Bacon

 

8. Pecan Pie Cookies from Crazy for Crust

 

9. Snowball Cookies from The Cookie Rookie

 

 

10. Christmas Shortbread Cookies from Five Heart Home

 

 

Fried Green Goodness

Fried Green Goodness

Now, being a recent transplant to the south, proper (Arizona is technically a southern state, but not really a “southern” state, if you know what I mean) I’ve been embracing my new-found cultural heritage. And from a culinary point of view, you simply cannot be properly southern without eating — and making — fried green tomatoes.

If a menu offers it, I gotta have it, everywhere I go.

Lest I go broke eating out and ordering appetizers all the time, I figured it was high time to give it a go myself, despite my culinary limitations.  And let me be clear here, just because I’ve started a food blog, that doesn’t mean I fancy myself a cooking expert. Far form it after 47 years of bachelorette-hood. But with my determination to overcome my microwave dependence, I’m going to learn to cook if it kills me.

And given my culinary skills, it just might.

But I’m experimenting with different recipes for this classic southern comfort dish, and while there are a million ways to prepare it, this is the general idea. Ironically, the movie “Fried Green Tomatoes” was playing this weekend on HBO. I highly recommend watching it whether you saw it many years ago or never have, and I have to read the book, which I am sure is much better than the movie, like they always are. Kathy Bates is hilarious as a frustrated housewife taking women’s self help classes to try to give her life some meaning and get her husband’s attention from the TV.

That poor woman has the worst luck with husbands in her movies.

But the movie centers around the story of two friends who open up a cafe in 1920′s Alabama to make  a new home for themselves as sort of fringe characters –  Ruth has left her abusive husband and although it’s never clearly stated, Idgie seems to be a lesbian in a time where that probably didn’t even have a name. The cafe also becomes home to a cast of characters, from a drunk they take under their wing, to the black folks that eat out back.

It’s a movie about a lot of things… the power of friendship, overcoming tragedy, and how groups of misfit people can come together to form their own family, amongst other things. And as they always say on those food competitions, cooking with love. And like they always say on “Chopped” when their dishes are torn apart by judges, they “cooked it with love,” like that somehow makes up for it.

So I say unto you, I hope you like this, but if you don’t… I cooked it with love, bitches.

Start with three to four firm green tomatoes. This could be a challenge to find unless you live in the south or have your own garden.

Slice them up to approximately 1/2 inch thick slices:

FriedGreenTomatoes005 Sunday dinner: Fried green tomatoes

Set up on plate or bowl with your wet ingredients of one egg and a half cup buttermilk (You can use regular milk if you don’t have buttermilk), and another with your breading mix. This is where most of the variations come in — I’ve seen various mixes of cornmeal, flour, panko crumbs and bread crumbs. But so far, my favorite is 1/3 cup each of flour, cornmeal and plain bread crumbs, with a healthy dose of pepper and seasoned salt, to taste. If you want a little heat, add a pinch or two of cayenne or Cajun seasoning.

Yeah, I know that’s not very precise, but I won’t be confined to such mundane things as measuring spoons with my new culinary emancipation. At least not on this. I’m free at last, I tell you!

FriedGreenTomatoes008 Sunday dinner: Fried green tomatoes

Start with the dry mix, dipping your tomato slices in and covering both sides.

FriedGreenTomatoes009 Sunday dinner: Fried green tomatoes

Then dip in the wet bowl (bowls being much better but plates showing it better for photo purposes), the one more time in your dry mix. Voila, that ‘mater is ready for fryin’.

FriedGreenTomatoes013 Sunday dinner: Fried green tomatoes

For frying oil, I recommend peanut or even coconut oil to minimize the damage, but if you’re on a budget, I mean really… we’re talking about fried tomatoes, so so-called healthy oils aren’t going to make it wholesome, now are they? The Pioneer Woman, Ree Drummond recommends adding some butter to your oil in her pork chops recipe, which seems like a swell idea for my fried green tomatoes, as well. So I recommend 1/2 cup oil and one tablespoon butter heated on medium heat. Then carefully add your tomatoes so you don’t splash yourself with hot oil.

FriedGreenTomatoes018 Sunday dinner: Fried green tomatoes

Fry for 3-5 minutes before turning, cooking each side to a golden brown.

FriedGreenTomatoes023 Sunday dinner: Fried green tomatoes

Thank goodness for long lenses so I didn’t get spattered in the name of art.

FriedGreenTomatoes024 Sunday dinner: Fried green tomatoes

Most people serve these up with some kind of sauce or remoulade, but like the fried green tomatoes recipe itself, you’ll find about a million variations for the special sauce. I like this one from Simply Recipes or this buttermilk dipping sauce from the Neelys.

Want a handy, dandy visual reference? Or just like pretty food pictures? Pin this to your pinterest account for reference:

friedgreentomatoes Sunday dinner: Fried green tomatoes

Mmmmm, these are tasty. What’s your favorite variation of fried green tomatoes?

Hmmm… Brussels Sprouts?

Hmmm… Brussels Sprouts?

I am obsessed with two things currently: cast iron cookware and roasted vegetables. Instead of seeing them as a “tolerable” food I “should” be eating, I have discovered the joys of roasted Brussels sprouts and carrots.

Ain’t it grand when good food is healthy for you too? That is a rhetorical question, folks.

I’m also trying to get my 10″ Lodge frying pan good and seasoned, which means oven cooked bacon everyday now that I’ve seasoned it a couple of times the conventional way. It occurred to me when looking at all that leftover bacon grease from a handful of slices I needed to be using it for cooking other things, and had already been planning on trying roasted Brussels sprouts.

There are a million recipes floating around online for roasted Brussels sprouts, and this particular batch was sprouts, crushed garlic, and pepper. As I cooked them in leftover bacon drippings with a little olive oil to stretch it and completely coat the sprouts, I felt it was salty enough. You may want to add a little salt yourself.

Or if you really want to be lazy efficient, pick up a pack of pre-seasoned and pre-cut sprouts at Trader Joes.

For thriftier folks, wash your Brussels sprouts, trim off any damaged outer leaves, cut the base off and slice the bigger pieces in half. I mixed the ingredients in my iron skillet since some of the oil I wanted to coat my veggies with was already in the pan after cooking bacon (400 degrees for 20 minutes FYI).

Add three cloves of crushed garlic if you are a garlic lover like me, a little extra olive oil to make sure all Brussels sprouts are coated in oil, and season with pepper and/or salt to taste. Mix those little suckers around to make sure they are good and coated with oil.

Roast your Brussels sprouts at 400 degrees for 25-30 minutes, stirring them 2-3 times to make sure to maximize the carmelization to all sides.

These smell downright heavenly and have become a new staple of my diet. Sure, there is a little bacon fat in there, but it’s better than fixing up boiled veggies with no vitamins or flavor left, then drowning them in butter to compensate, right? Yes, that’s another rhetorical question.

Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

Mmmm, if you want a really decadent dessert/comfort food, what is better than bread pudding? Okay, there might be some things better, but it’s definitely near the top of the list. This is delicious even before the sauce, and downright heavenly with it. If you live alone, be sure to invite someone over so you don’t just sit and eat it all at once. It’s that good.

You could use plain bread, but I say the more raisins the better. I love the vanillas from King Arthur, and I used a Mexican vanilla they sell for this recipe.

RaisinBreadPudding014 Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

 

RaisinBreadPudding131 Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

First, you combine the bread and raisins in a large bowl, then melt the butter in the milk before adding to the dry mixture.

RaisinBreadPudding05 Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

RaisinBreadPudding061 Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

Then you let it all soak up that milky, buttery goodness for 10 minutes. Add remaining pudding ingredients and pour into a greased 1.5 quart casserole dish. Bake at 350 degrees for 40-50 minutes until center is set.

RaisinBreadPudding16 e1399422971221 Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce
It already looks pretty darned good, doesn’t it? Wait till you smell it. When I made this, my landlords also owned the house next door and had a man doing contracting work. He always commented about the heavenly smells coming from the kitchen, poor guy!

But now, it’s time for the icing on the cake, so to speak, or the sauce on the bread pudding.

Combine all sauce ingredients but the vanilla in a saucepan (1 quart) and cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally until mixture thickens and comes to a boil. Add vanilla.

RaisinBreadPudding151 Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

Then pour all that  that warm, gooey love over bread pudding. To. Die. For.

RaisinBreadPudding221 Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

RaisinBreadPudding182 Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

RaisinBreadPudding182 Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce

Serves 6
This is not only dessert but comfort food in one warm, sweet treat.
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Pudding
  1. 8 slices of raisin bread (4 cups)
  2. 1/4 cup raisins
  3. 1/4 cup butter
  4. 2 cups milk
  5. 2 eggs, slightly beaten
  6. 1/2 cup sugar
  7. 1/2 tsp nutmeg
  8. 1 TBSP vanilla
Sauce
  1. 1/2 cup sugar
  2. 1/2 cup brown sugar
  3. 1/2 cup butter
  4. 1/2 cup heavy cream
  5. 1 TBSP vanilla
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Cube bread and combine with raisins.
  3. Heat milk and butter in saucepan till butter is melted and pour the mixture over the bread.
  4. Let soak for 10 minutes.
  5. Add remaining ingredients and pour into a greased 1.5 quart casserole dish.
  6. Bake 40-50 minutes until center is set.
Sauce
  1. Combine all but the vanilla in a saucepan (1 quart) and cook over medium heat, stirring occasionally until mixture thickens and comes to a boil.
  2. Add vanilla.
  3. Serve warm over bread pudding

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RaisinBreadPudding20 Raisin Bread Pudding with Vanilla Caramel Sauce