Fwd: [Sca-cooks] my recipe for the 19th-

Anne juliane.rose at gmail.com
Sun Dec 19 08:53:20 PST 2004


Thank you for sharing those wonderful memories!  And the recipe.  :)  
Your grandma sounds truly special.

Many blessings to you and your family.

Anne

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Laura C. Minnick <lcm at jeffnet.org>
Date: Sun, 19 Dec 2004 01:02:06 -0800
Subject: [Sca-cooks] my recipe for the 19th-
To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org


It's only barely the 19th, but best to do this while I'm remembering!

My Mennonite Grandma, who started out huge but got smaller and more
bird-like the bigger I got, was a baker of some reknown in her circles. I
remember her kitchen as neat as a pin, filled with the scent of yeast dough
and suffused with warm light through her lace curtains. At Christmas time
she baked pan after pan of wonderful cookies- coconut macaroons,
'Thumbprint' cookies filled with red or green jelly, gingerbread men with
cinnamon candies for buttons and eyes, lacy shortbread snowflakes, and
peanut butter cookies- she let me help by criss-crossing the fork on top.

But mostly for Christmas she baked Pfeffernuisse.

When Grandma moved into a nursing home, my Uncle Herman put most of her
stuff up for sale at a garage sale- including her cookbooks, filled with
notes and spare recipes in her spidery handwriting. (My aunts nearly killed
him when they found out he'd sold the cookbooks. And he had no clue why
they were upset.) Fortunately, the last time she was out here in the
northwest to visit (been 20 years, because we have a picture of Annie on
Grandma's lap during that visit) I extracted from her a recipe for
Pfeffernuisse. It just isn't Christmas without them, and I can imagine her
looking over my shoulder, giving instructions, like she did when I has a
tiny girl, standing on her old yellow stepstool...

Pfeffernuisse

5 eggs
2 C dark brown sugar
2 tablespoons dark coffee
1/2 t mace
1/2 t ginger
1/2 t nutmeg
1/2 t cardamom
1/2 t cloves
1/2 t allspice
1/2 t salt
1 t black pepper
1 t cinnamon
1 t ground lemon peel
1/2 anise seed (bashed up a bit in a mortar) and/or 1/2 tsp anise extract,
depending on taste
1/4 dark molasses
2 t baking powder
6 C flour

In a large bowl, beat the eggs until they a a thick, lemon-colored foam.
Add the brown sugar and coffee (I can't drink coffee anymore, so I use make
up a little using instant. It works). In a small bowl or teacup mix the
spices, blend them together well, and add to the sugar and egg mix. Add the
molasses and baking powder, and blend well.

Work in the flour one cup at a time. The dough should be quite heavy and
fairly stiff. Chill in refrigerator about 1 hour. (Sometimes I leave it
overnight to fully develop the spice flavors.) On a floured board, work
dough into ropes about the thickness of your thumb- cut into bits about
5/8" long. Arrange on cookie sheets (greased, I think. I don't have it
written down) closely but not touching. Bake at 300 for 22-25 minutes.
Cookies should be lightly browned on the bottom, and dry. Roll in powdered
sugar as they're cooling if you like. Grandma didn't, Mom did. I do when I
feel like it. Store cookies in a tupperware (or similar with lid)
container. The flavors develop more fully after a couple of days, but
somehow they're never around that long...

'Lainie
___________________________________________________________________________
The penalty good men pay for not being interested in politics is to be
governed by men worse than themselves. -- Plato

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~  Not all who wander are lost .... ~
 
Well-behaved women rarely make history.
 
"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt
of in your philosophy."

--From Hamlet (I, v, 166-167)



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