
The assignment:
Part A: Please share your Favorite Christmas/Holiday Cookie Recipe(s)!
Part B: Share a memory, story or tradition about baking any Christmas/Holiday goodies.
Part C: Share a verse that is upon your heart this week.
My Favorite Christmas Cookie Recipes
Chocolate Chip Cookies
(makes 5 dozen)
3 c. soft wheat flour
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. salt
1 c. butter (2 sticks), softened
3/4 c. sugar
3/4 c. brown sugar
1 tsp. vanilla
2 eggs
1 c. semisweet chocolate chips
Preheat oven to 375*F. Combine flour, baking soda, and salt in a small bowl. Beat butter, sugars, and vanilla in large mixer bowl. Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Gradually beat in flour mixture. Stir in chocolate chips. Drop by rounded tablespoonfuls onto ungreased baking sheets, and bake for 8-10 minutes or until golden brown. Let stand for 2 minutes; remove to wire rack to cool completely.
Snowballs
(makes 5 dozen)
1/2 c. powdered sugar
1/4 tsp. salt
1 c. butter (2 sticks), softened
1 tsp. vanilla
3 c. soft wheat flour
1/2 c. chopped almonds
powdered sugar for rolling
In large bowl, combine sugar, salt, and butter; mix well. Add vanilla. Gradually stir in flour. Work nuts into dough. Cover and chill until firm. Preheat oven to 400*F. Form dough into 1-inch balls; place 1 inch apart on ungreased cookie sheets. Bake for 8-10 minutes, or until set but not brown. Roll immediately in additional sugar. Cool on wire racks, then roll in sugar again.
And a healthy one…

Honey Cookies
(yield depends on form)
4-1/4 c. soft wheat flour
1 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. salt
1 c. butter (2 sticks), softened
3/4 c. honey
1 tsp. vanilla
1 egg
Combine flour, baking soda, and salt and mix thoroughly. In a separate bowl, beat butter, honey, and vanilla with an electric mixer until creamy. Add egg; beat well. Add half of dry mixture and mix well, then add remaining dry mixture and mix thoroughly. Divide dough into thirds, place each piece on a piece of plastic wrap, flatten to 1/2″ thickness, wrap, and chill until firm. Heat oven to 350*F. Roll out on lightly but thoroughly floured surface to 1/4-1/2-inch thickness, sprinkling the top with flour before rolling. Cut out with cookie cutters and place on cookie sheet. (This dough is pretty sticky, so keep everything well floured and try to work fairly quickly.) Bake for 5-7 minutes, just until set. Cookies should still be soft. Cool for 1 minute, then remove to wire rack. Allow to cool completely before storing. We have also made these into thumbprint cookies: roll into balls, make deep indentations in each one with your thumb, and fill each one immediately after baking, with jam. (I’m working on other variations, as well. I like that this doesn’t have any white flour or refined sugar in it!)

Our Holiday Baking Tradition
For as long as I can remember, my mom has been baking cookies and taking cookie plates to the neighbors every year at Christmastime. When I got married (well, a couple years later, when I got “with it” enough 🙂 ), I adopted the tradition, as well. We usually include the old stand-by chocolate chip cookies (above) and snowballs (above), along with cut-out sugar cookies. (I decided last year that decorating the sugar cookies was too much stress – it’s really not my forte – so I bought a set of snowflake cookie cutters from King Arthur – which I promptly forgot about and, therefore, have not used yet.) I also include some fudge, and a mini loaf of whole wheat bread in case we have neighbors who must avoid the sugar.
My Verse for the Week
This has absolutely nothing to do with cookies or baking, but this is a verse that I read during my quiet time this morning, which I need to memorize. I just updated my sidebar to make this my current sidebar verse, as well, because I so need the reminder. Rejoicing in Yahweh is an act of my will, and I need to do it even if I don’t feel like it. And I always have something – namely, my salvation – to be thankful for and take joy in, even when everything else is going wrong. (If you noticed my previous sidebar verse – this month’s memorization – you will recognize that this is an ongoing theme for me lately!)
Though the fig tree may not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines; though the labor of the olive may fail, and the fields yield no food; though the flock may be cut off from the fold, and there be no herd in the stalls – yet I will rejoice in the LORD, I will joy in the God of my salvation. -Malachi 3:13-15
Great cookie recipes! Must give them a try some time.
~Chrissy
I love your verse!
And… what a blessing it must be for your neighbors to get tasty homemade treats from you. It seems to be an art that has been being forgotten with all of the hustle and bustle of shopping and such.
Blessings, Beckie :o)
P.S. I can’t wait to try your honey cookies — yummy!!
I love giving cookies and breads at Christmas time too. Often I don’t frost either, but just sprinkle with colored sugar before baking.
HI!
Those cookies sound great! I’m not all that great at sugar cookies either, but the kids always have fun trying to decorate them, so I keep trying year after year-not that I’ve improved! LOL!. 😛 I, too, always use the standby chocolate chip cookie too. I think this year I’m going to top them with a mint KISS truffle-yum! (have you tried those? If you like mint they are awesome!!!)
Blessings!
Bobbi
Mmmmm. I haven’t tried the mint truffles (or the cherry ones), but those sound yummy!
Stephanie, it never occurred to me to sprinkle colored sugar before baking; I’ll have to give that a try. 🙂