Tag Archives: Christmas treats

Cookie Press Magic

“Danish Butter Cookies” is one of my favorite Christmas baking recipes*.  I like to use it as a warm-up for some of the more serious baking.

Danish Butter Cookies baking Victoria, BC
photo by SVSeekins

YOU’LL NEED:

1 cup butter
1 cup sugar
1 egg
2 cups flour

TIP: The key to this recipe is to have the ingredients at cool room temperature.

If the butter is straight out of the fridge, it’s too cold.  BUT too warm isn’t good either.

mixing the butter & sugar, Danish Butter Cookies baking Victoria, BC
photo by SVSeekins

Forget about microwaving the butter for just a few seconds to take the chill out. The result is lovely, smooth dough which mushes into a mess in the oven.

I’ve learned to keep my hands out of the dough for the same reason.

STEP ONE – Cut the butter into small pieces.  Add the sugar.  Mix well.

blending the butter & sugar well, Danish Butter Cookies baking Victoria, BC
photo by SVSeekins

STEP TWO – Add the egg, beating until the mixture is light & fluffy.

More beating is better than less.  When I think it’s enough, I do it some more just to be sure 🙂  Using the electric mixer is super easy, so I’m not exhausting my arm like I’d be using a spoon.

cookie dough mixed, firm & not too soft, Danish Butter Cookies baking Victoria, BC
photo by SVSeekins

STEP THREE  – Slowly blend in the flour.

Slowly being the trick to stop the flour from flying all over the room when the mixer paddles hit it.  No need to over do it.

The dough should be firm & a bit crumbly.  I usually feel like I’ve added too much flour, but this is the way it needs to be to go through the cookie press well.

filling the cookie press, Danish Butter Cookies baking Victoria, BC
Christmas Elf Barbara Hansen, photo by SVSeekins

STEP FOUR – Pre-heat the oven to 375 F.
(190 C)

STEP FIVE – Fill the cookie press with dough.

Yup, I’m tempted to use fingers to stuff it all in faster, but a spoon is best for keeping the dough cool.

Pack in as much cookie dough as possible, pushing out air pockets.

filling the cookie press, Danish Butter Cookies baking Victoria, BC
photo by SVSeekins

Screw on the top handle & click it a couple of times until the dough oozes through the cookie-form disc.  Click once or twice more to prove it flows smoothly.  Break off the excess & return that to the bowl for later use.

STEP SIX – Press cookies onto a ungreased cookie sheet.

using the cookie press, Danish Butter Cookies baking Victoria, BC
photo by SVSeekins

One click –
One cookie.

The cookies will spread out only a little bit during baking so they can be arranged fairly close to each other on the pan.

It’s the quick flick of the wrist when shifting the press that breaks the dough cleanly between cookies.  If the dough is too warm, it’s not as easy.  When it’s all working, it’s like magic.  It makes all that prep work worth it  🙂

using the cookie press, Danish Butter Cookies baking Victoria, BC
photo by SVSeekins

If it’s just not working & I’m getting really ticked off, I take a zen moment & eat a little cookie dough.  An easier option is to roll a teaspoon of dough into a ball with my hands & place on the cookie sheet.
Not as fun, but it works.  Less angst.

STEP SEVEN – Bake in a 375 F oven for 8-10 minutes.

Danish Butter Cookies baking Victoria, BC
photo by SVSeekins

Yeah, that doesn’t seem like much time, but it works.  I watch through the window until there’s just a hint of brown along the edges. The cookies at the very front of this pan are over-done.

STEP EIGHT – Cool the cookies on the pan for a few minutes to let them stiffen.  Then shift them to a cooling rack.

Enjoy some yourself while they’re still warm 🙂

cookie forming disc selection for the cookie press, Danish Butter Cookies baking Victoria, BC
photo by SVSeekins

* I copied the original recipe into my cookbook so long ago that I really don’t remember who or where it came from.  I can’t take credit for the list of ingredients, but I’ve embellished the instructions through many failures & successes. 

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Baking Party Nerves

What’s more fun than going to the mall in December?  Well, many, many things… FAR higher up on my list is a party.

holiday music
photo by SVSeekins

It’s an opportunity to pull out some seasonal music…. go through the cupboards… and dress up in something special…

That’s when I like to head to the kitchen.  The season is about getting together with family & friends. Playing together in the kitchen is no exception & one of my favorite kind of parties.

Christmas baking is mostly created for others as gifts.  Gifts of time & effort…. gifts from the heart …. Guilt Free calories.

gathering ingredients
photo by SVSeekins

Every year it surprises me how much skill is required to make a truly good butter cookie or an extremely fine shortbread. I mean, recipes look like paint-by-number instructions.  It SHOULD be so easy.  Gather ingredients, combine – – ta da!

But sometimes greatness balances on humidity & barometric pressure.  For real!  My Dad told me this & I’m totally going with it.

Either way, every baker experiences failure.

How can he / she best deal with that disappointment?

Christmas Tins & sprinkles
photo by SVSeekins

Well, to use a culinary cliché:  When faced with a lemon, make lemonade.

This year I made peanut brittle.  Sort of.  It looked perfect … but was cement in the Pyrex.  Through extreme ingenuity I was able to rescue the pan, but not the candy.

It turns out we’d stumbled upon the procedure for creating an incredibly tasty batch of sprinkles for ice-cream.  It was really good, but still wouldn’t cut it for gifting.

Danish Butter Cookies
photo by SVSeekins

So I moved on to cookies.  Gosh, cookies are so PARTICULAR!  Thirty seconds one way or another can make the difference between raw & burnt.  Well not burnt – but BROWN..

I reckon that a gradient of brown cookies should go into every gift, proving that they were handmade.  This sounds totally reasonable, so that’s what I do.

But there are still a few really brown cookies leftover that just won’t do… They’re tasty, just too dry…. So, now I’m thinking they could be crushed & replace graham wafer crumbs in another recipe… Do you think that would work?

AB wearing 'something special'
photo by SVSeekins

I also need an evolutionary plan for the fudge that  didn’t harden even after I’d meticulously heated it up past the important soft-ball temperature.  It turned out like really stretchy toffee…. Granted, toffee is a delicious treat.  Perhaps  I’ll wrap it in wax paper & rename it?  Maybe not.. too sticky.  Ideas?

It’s amazing how any challenge seems easier when taken on together.  We keep each other on track, share skills, and offer support & laughter… And when it comes right down to it,  we relax & spike the lemonade.

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© SVSeekins and Garden Variety Life, 2013