
^^^Nope, not my table, but isn’t it beautiful?
How about a thread for party food and treats? Lots of people are entertaining in these last days running up to Christmas. Sometimes in our family we just have a night or two where we serve appetizers or favorite party treats, even if it is just a few of us here. Most of this is copied from last year. I took a look at it, expecting to juggle it around a bit, but I’d forgotten how much time I put into this one last year, with some really special (to me) recipes and ideas. I love all of these, as does my family, and I hope you will as well.
I shared this recipe last year for venison meatballs.
Of course you can use beef, but it isn’t nearly as good. I never have recipes, except for breads or cakes, so just have fun with this.
Saute an onion and several large cloves of garlic, finely chopped, in olive oil or butter until onions begin to be translucent. Add a tablespoon or two of red wine vinegar, salt, pepper, and seasonings you like to taste. I use three onion seasoning by Epicure.
Mix a pound and a half of ground venison with a half pound ground pork, an egg, bread crumbs or almond meal, and the onion mixture. Shape into small balls and bake at 375 until brown, which should take around 25 minutes, but check on them to be sure. Every oven is different. Drain and serve with your favorite sauce.
Here’s the link to a recipe for mini corn muffins with a cheddar filling. Being a Southern gal, I absolutely refuse to put sugar in my cornbread, so I’ll be leaving that ingredient out, but that’s an argument for another day. These would go very well with the meatballs.
Here’s a recipe shared with me by Treeper maryfrommarin. It’s from the cookbook Keeping the Feast, which is organized around the church’s liturgical feasts. It’s a collection of recipes from the women of St. Thomas Church, Episcopal, Abingdon, Virginia. I chose this recipe because when I was growing up, no southern hostess ever had a party or luncheon without these.
Miss Annie White’s Cheese Biscuits
1/2 pound cheese
1/2 pound butter
1/2 pound flour (about two cups)
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon red pepper
1 egg white
75 whole pecans
Grind cheese. Cream cheese and butter. Add flour, salt, and pepper. Work well. Roll thin and cut with a small biscuit cutter. Brush with egg white and place one whole pecan on top of each biscuit. Bake on cookie sheet at 425 until light brown, about 7 minutes.
Yield: approximately 75.
On to sweeter things.
I am sharing some lengthier (and fancier) recipes below. I have copies of the pages from some old cookbooks, so I no longer even know where they came from, and I can’t credit the original authors. I tried to google these two recipes, and come up with similar things, but they just don’t look as good, or I’d just link them.

First, have you ever heard of a Croquembouche Christmas tree? I hadn’t either, and while this looks so elegant and beautiful, if you read the directions, it seems quite doable. It’s made from individual cream puffs around a white foam core, put together with melted white chocolate. I have kept this recipe for years, but I haven’t made it yet. Too good to get rid of though!
Since I’m typing this out, with the help of pictures provided by my favorite Pud, Ad rem, I am not including the recipe for pastry cream and making the cream puffs, you can google those. If I make it, I plan to just buy cream puffs, and start from there. I seriously doubt my guys would know, or care.
Ingredients and supplies:
white foam cone, white parchment paper or clear plastic wrap, six large white chocolate bars, shortening, white and silver edible glitter, cream puffs, serving tray.
Wrap the cone with white parchment paper and secure with straight pins, or wrap with clear plastic wrap. Place on large serving platter. Melt 6 cups white chocolate bars and 1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon shortening in saucepan over low heat.
Beginning at the base of the cone, dip puffs into melted chocolate and position them side by side, forming a ring. Continue layers, stacking each successive ring up the tree. You may need to reheat the chocolate.
Drizzle remaining chocolate over the tree and add edible silver and white glitter. Chill up to two hours before serving.
Next, we have a pine cone Christmas cake. This one is really cool, and delicious. I have made it, and if you’d like a very special dessert that just makes your table, this one is it! Practice on those pinecone petals! There’s a technique to learn.
This one is by Rose Levy Berenbaum. There are some videos out there, I didn’t have time to go through them. The only one I watched didn’t have the recipe on it, it was part of an old news clip. You may find one though.
Ingredients:
18 oz unsalted butter
1 1/2 cups semisweet chocolate chips
10 eggs
2 cups sugar
1/3 cup unbleached flour
1/4 cup brandy
Frosting: use your favorite dark chocolate frosting here. I’m too lazy to type the steps on this one, but the recipe has chopped nuts soaked in orange liqueur or cognac folded in, if you’d like to add that.
Melt the butter and chocolate in a double boiler. Separate the eggs into large bowls. Beat yolks lightly, gradually add sugar. Beat until fluffy, then stir into chocolate mixture, mixing well, and a beat in brandy and flour.
Clean beaters and mix egg whites until stiff peaks form. Gently fold in about 1/4 of them to the cake mix. Then gradually add the rest, gently folding in. Do not over stir it and deflate the egg whites.
Grease two 9×13 cake pans, line with parchment, and grease and flour parchment. Pour batter evenly into pans and smooth with spatula. Bake at 375 for 20 minutes or until cake puffs up and springs back when gently pressed. Let cake cool a few minutes on racks before unmolding, peeling off paper, and cooling on racks.
Use butcher’s paper to make two identical pinecone oval shapes, and cut out the cakes. Crumble the cake scraps and add them and nuts if desired to the frosting. Spread a generous third of the frosting on one cake layer, top with the second, then frost the sides and top with remaining frosting.
To make pinecone petals:
Tape a sheet of parchment paper to counter. Set out a small metal spatula or table knife. Chop 8 ounces semi or bittersweet chocolate coarsely and melt in double boiler to temp of 120 on candy thermometer. Stir vigorously to cool the chocolate slightly and keep over hot water as you work. I did the melting in two batches to keep it from setting.
Dab the spatula into chocolate and press down slightly on parchment, pressing down and drawing the spatula toward you into a petal shape, thinner on one end, about 1” x 3/4”. They won’t all be exactly the same size and shape, and that’s okay. Keep making petals until you’ve used all the chocolate. You need lots, and it takes awhile to make them all.
To place the petals, start at the base, using tweezers to keep from melting the chocolate. Stagger the rows like shingles on a house. If you like, place pine nuts under some of the petals.
The only problem with this cake is that it will break your heart when you have to cut it!
On the Thanksgiving recipe post last year I had numerous requests for a favorite cookie recipe in our family. As I said, I got this from my Aunt Gay, but it was not her original recipe. They are called chocolate buttersweets, and I used to find the recipe, which we modified, on Pillsbury’s site, but they’ve removed the link. Here’s the original recipe.
We always use pecans, and I do not add the coconut. I’ve had dozens of people, and that’s not an exaggeration, tell me over the years that they don’t like cream cheese, or pecans, or whatever. No one has ever been able to stop eating these, even when they say they don’t like those ingredients.
And here’s a tip for the time and cooking challenged. These are still really good if you use Pillsbury sugar cookies, make the filling, and top with chocolate almond bark. I put a lot more filling on the cookie than shown. I add unsweetened chocolate into the almond bark. The darker, the better on the chocolate topping. And I don’t just drizzle on chocolate, I cover the cookie. Not pretty, but wow, so good.
The recipe says to fill the cookies while warm, but actually I chill the filling and use a cookie scoop to top cold cookies. Often I make the cookies days ahead, then when I am ready, I put them out on a double layer of waxed paper, fill, and then top.
I usually make hundreds of these a year, so it gets to be an assembly line for me, and usually I wrangle family help. Make twice, nope, three or four times what you think you want. And like I said at Thanksgiving, don’t trust family to deliver someone else’s cookie box. Not ever gonna happen, not with these cookies.
Also, I promised Aunt Gay’s Chex Mix. She called it nuts and bolts. This is a buttery mix, so if you like your mix drier, reduce the butter and spices proportionately. The big challenge for me on this is getting the spice to stay mixed with the butter. I’ve tried everything. Any tips?
Mix together 4 sticks melted butter (I changed from margarine), 1 tablespoon each onion salt, celery salt, and garlic salt, 3/4 teaspoon garlic powder, 4 tablespoons Worcestershire sauce. Pour the above mixture over:
1/2 box Wheat Chex, 1/2 box Corn Chex, 1/2 box Rice Chex, 1/3 box Cheerios, 1/2 bag of pretzel sticks, 3-4 cups of nuts. I use pecan halves and cashews. You have to keep stirring the butter mixture as you are pouring. I use a big throwaway roasting pan for this. It’s a great gift!
Bake 2 hours at 250*, stirring every 15 minutes. Nowadays I smoke mine at 250.
This is my own wassail recipe. It makes a small crockpot full, and the non wassail fans inhaled it, and fought over the last drops! I plan to double it for Christmas. Which means I’ll double the spices too.
Clear American Pineapple Orange Sparkling Juice, 17 Fl Oz Bottle
Single serving bottle of apple juice
Quart of cranberry juice (unsweetened)
Agave nectar to taste
Cranberries (whole, added about a cup)
Two cinnamon sticks
1 tablespoon allspice berries
3 star anise
Combine in crockpot and heat on low 3-4 hours. I also plan to add pineapple or orange slices at Christmas. You can use the sweetener of your choice, of course. This was festive and delicious. I also like to add cognac.
I hope you find joy in your preparations and celebrations. Pause and remember the real reasons we have such a joy filled season of anticipation.
It’s a family tradition…Fudge Day… or Fudge Weekend!
Last year I think we made about 30 lbs.! All varieties.
Then, it’s given away. Family, friends & neighbors, fire and police, dog groomer, chiropractor…everyone asks for it 😁
Grammy’s Fudge (makes 3 lbs.)
Ingredients for basic fudge
5 oz. can of evaporated milk
1 stick of butter
2 ½ cups of sugar
½ container (large plastic size) of Fluff …OR a whole 7.5 oz. jar
1 (12 0z.) bag of Toll House Morsels (semi-sweet, white, peanut butter, etc.)
1 tsp. extract (vanilla, maple, peppermint, etc.)
In large pan, on medium heat, cook milk and butter until the butter melts.
Add sugar. STIR to dissolve the sugar, until it comes to a boil.
Once it reaches a boil, turn down the heat to a low/simmering boil, and cook for 5 minutes.
Stir occasionally to prevent scorching on bottom, and wipe the sides of the pan with a spatula.
Turn off heat at 5 minutes and add the Fluff. Stir slightly, then add the Morsels and vanilla extract. Stir until smooth. (THEN add nuts, candy, etc., and maybe sprinkle a little something on the top)
Pour into a foil lined pan (I use a 7” x 11”, but a square pan will work, too) Refrigerate until firm. Lift out by the foil, wrap, and re-line the pan for the next batch!
We have 2 sets of everything, so we alternate. It goes quickly!
Variations with added ingredients/goodies (Vanilla extract used, UNLESS NOTED):
Maple Walnut: White morsels, Maple extract, chopped walnuts
Peppermint: White morsels, Peppermint extract, 1 box candy canes, crushed (OR pre-crushed peppermint candies. Typically sold at the holidays, in the baking section).
Peanut Butter: Peanut Butter morsels, with/without chopped peanuts and/or chopped Reese’s cups.
Turtle: Semi Sweet morsels, chopped pecans, caramel bits.
Cherry Vanilla: White morsels, almond (or vanilla) extract, chopped maraschino cherries (dry them off).
Salted Caramel: Semi Sweet Morsels, caramels bits, a sprinkling of coarse salt on top. Chopped Rolos can be added to the mix, or sprinkled on top.
M & M: Semi Sweet morsels, a bag of miniature M & M’s.
Pistachio: White morsels, almond or vanilla extract, chopped pistachios, a drop of green food coloring.
Bacon Brown sugar: White morsels, 1/4C BROWN sugar replacing 1/4C white sugar, maple extract, 1/2 C of CRISPY bacon (or a small package of REAL bacon bits)
Salted Pretzel: Semi Sweet morsels, chopped pretzels, caramel bits. Coarse salt sprinkled on top.
York: semi-sweet bits w/peppermint extract and chopped York sprinkled on top.
Butterfinger and Heath Bar: they sell packages of both varieties, chopped, next to the Morsels! added to semi-sweet, vanilla extract. Be sure to “sift” the Heath, as it has chocolate “dust” that can thicken the fudge.
S’Mores: semi-sweet OR milk chocolate morsels. Mini marshmallows and chopped/crushed graham cracker.
Penuche? I was curious! I substituted 1/2 cup of brown sugar for the white sugar in the recipe. Vanilla or maple extract can be used.
Orange Creamsicle: White morsels, orange extract, a drop of orange food coloring
Cranberry Orange: White morsels, orange extract, dried cranberries.
Amazing.
What is “Fluff”?
Marshmallow Fluff. New England thing.
Fluffernutter! Don’t ya know.
Haha! Gosh how I love all the folks who visit this site!
Humor and the best recipes…..what else do you need?
We got our Real President back where he rightfully belonged 4 years ago so
I’m reminded of a Tom Petty song.
“The Waiting is the Hardest Part”
God Bless all Treepers in every neck of the woods, fields, valleys, mountain tops and the lakes.
And God bless you Menagerie! You bring JOY to all of us this Christmas season.
Blessings! to you.
Nice post and if your humor comment included my “Fluffernutter”, it wasn’t. That is the name of a popular sandwich in Midwest. Marshmallow cream and peanut butter on white bread. Great with hot chocolate.
So SO good.
Try it with pretzels…
Love your Grammy, thank you for sharing!
Easy Rum Cake
This is a crowd pleaser and not for the faint of heart.
Can be made a week ahead and refrigerated. Rum will preserve the cake.
Works as a Bundt, or sheet cake.
Rum can be adjusted up or down depending on the crowd.
I Make with rum for adults, and without rum for kids.
Makes a great gift.
1 yellow cake mix from box (you pick)
Gold Rum (you pick)
Chopped walnuts
Follow cake mix instructions, except modify the liquid, to 2/3 cup water and 1/3 cup rum
Pour batter into greased pan and top with crushed nuts
Bake until golden, let cool.
Make Rum Glaze:
In a medium saucepan melt:
1/2 stick of butter
1 cup of granulated sugar
1 tbsp water
Bring to a boil for 5 mins, to let sugar dissolve, then remove from heat (mixture will be cloudy)
Quickly add 1/2 cup of rum and stir until mixture turns almost clear.
Let glaze cool slightly
Remove cooled cake from pan, place on serving dish that can hold glaze.
Prick the cake with a fork.
Spoon glaze over the cake and along the sides, let it soak in good.
There will be liquid on the bottom which will get absorbed.
Wrap the cake in Saran, then in foil and refrigerate.
Serve with whipped cream, or ice cream for a great holiday dessert.
Enjoy!
A twist to this.
My beloved Grandma Gladys would use a tooth pick and work over the whole top of the bundt cake, then using a spoon drizzle straight rum over the whole top until it was well soaked. then use a glaze without the rum.
My mother-in-law made the best rum balls in the world. Thanks for the recipe, we will do the cake instead.
My last boss’s wife, I mean my last boss{she signed my paycheck} made the best rumballs in the 90’s.
Trust God. Fear not.
You’re Welcome!
This cake is a real crowd pleaser, depending on your crowd.
Rum balls are great, I like Bourbon balls too.
Good luck and don’t be shy to add more or less, depending on taste.
I also make extra glaze and refrigerate it to use over ice cream.
Enjoy!
I use the original Bacardi rum cake recipe from the 70s, it’s very similar to this. I’ve sold hundreds of them. I let the glaze cool a bit before stirring in the rum so the alcohol doesn’t burn off. I don’t turn the cake out before putting n the glaze on. I just leave it in the pan, use a bamboo skewer to poke holes in the cake and slowly pour in the glaze. After awhile when it’s all soaked in I turn the cake out and pour some extra rum over it.
Yes this is similar, but with modifications to the Bacardi recipe, adding rum to the batter is one.
I originally named this the DUI Rum Cake because it was a real kicker and it stays with you.
Changed the name, so as not to scare off those who dislike alcohol.
To me the trick is NOT to use straight rum, but put it right into the hot butter/sugar and stir it a bit to let some alcohol escape. It leaves behind a much smoother flavor without that alcohol bite.
Leaving it in the sheet pan is fine, but with a Bundt, you have to turn it out and soak it on a plate.
Also, a Bundt can be decorated a bit with holly, or candy canes for the holidays.
Cheers!
Yippee! I do love reading the recipe thread.
It’s satisfying isn’t it?
Brings back a lot of good memories from better times.
My husband is on prednisone for awhile, and we are on an almost sugar free diet. Any recipes for treats savory or sweet that are sugar free or keto would be appreciated. I’d love to do some treats for him during this season.
My regards to your mister, I had to have two runs of prednisone this year and it was no party. But maybe you’ll find some friendly recipes here?
https://www.sugarfreemom.com/recipes/39-healthy-low-carb-make-ahead-appetizers/
Thank you, I’ll check it out.
IF he likes smoked fish, an Aussie savory is Smoked Salmon and Cream Cheese celery bites. No baking.
No carbs, no sugar. Salty, smokey, creamy, crunchy. If you don’t like fish, you could try smoked ham but it would need to be punchy.
That is an excellent suggestion, thank you!
You can also make a very easy “pate” with tuna, cream cheese, onion, and a splash or two of Cognac or brandy.
Soften cream cheese, drain and flake the tuna (packed in olive oil is a great option for those who enjoy the taste), finely grate a white onion to taste, and add the alcohol if you’re using it. Mix everything together until very smooth, place in an attractive crock (or use a lightly oiled mold for a more dramatic, plated presentation), and chill for at least several hours. Overnight is even better. Serve with crackers and crudites.
Just read Gold Sister’s mention of smoked oysters below, and remembered that you can do the same pate as above and substitute well-mashed smoked oysters.
Of course, if you love smoked oysters as much as I do, nothing would beat simply putting every oyster in the can on top of a Club Cracker, except that the original recipe seems to have disappeared in favor of the utterly tasteless version now on offer from Keebler, so it would have to be Ritz for me at this point.
Sounds delicious…I would even try using smoked oysters, they pack a punch.
Not sure how much sugar he can have, but here is an idea for a winter squash casserole that you can tweak. It’s basically winter squash layered with a mixture of walnuts, cranberries, Medjool dates, and apples.
Bake winter squash of your choice and in the amount for the crowd you plan to serve. I use kabocha, but you could add buttercup and butternut, any of the less watery winter squashes. Peel and remove seeds. Put flesh in bowl and mash with a potato masher until smooth. Set aside.
Make the nut mixture by using enough walnuts, cranberries, Medjool dates, and apples (any sweet apple, such a Gala) to get enough volume to make three layers in the casserole dish you are using (see next). Put the cranberries in a blender and pulse enough to “shred” them. Then add the diced nuts, dates, and apples to the blender to mix the ingredients together. You want to create a chunky mixture that you can spread. If you’re making a large casserole, you might need to work in batches.
I sweeten the nut mixture by adding real maple syrup (dark), and depending on the crowd, sometimes add a bit of whiskey. To reduce the sugar, you could use just the Medjool dates or just the apple, depending on what he likes. Sprouts sells a juice drink of pomegranate and cranberry (Knudsen I think) without added sugar and you could try adding a bit of that along with some apple. You could also substitute pomegranate seeds for the cranberries to have more sweetness without having to add any. Suggest adding a bit of cinnamon and cloves for more flavor, and especially if you are relying only on apple for sweetness.
To form the casserole, plan on three layers. Butter the size baking dish you need and put in a layer of the squash and dot with butter. Top with a layer of the nut mixture. Then add another layer of squash and dot with butter and add another layer of the nut mixture. Add the final squash layer, dot with butter, and add the final nut layer.
Bake at 350 degrees for about 30 to 45 minutes. Check halfway through and you may need to turn up the over to 375. Just be careful not to burn the nut layer on top of the casserole.
This sounds delicious. I am definitely making this for us, thank you!
I hope he will like it! Worst case you could tell him next year he gets the sweeter version and with the whiskey… It’s also good with pecans.
If you check back in, I wanted to tell you we loved this, thank you!
Great! I hope he’s doing well and Merry Christmas!
This isn’t keto but these are nice cookies. I don’t remember where I got the recipe.
Savory Oatmeal Cookies
Makes 16-20 cookies
1 cup old fashioned rolled oats
1/4 cup warm water
1/3 cup olive oil
1/4 cup lightly packed brown sugar (I use light brown sugar)
1 large egg, beaten
1 cup sifted unbleached all purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
2 teaspoons chopped fresh rosemary
1/4 teaspoon freshly-cracked black pepper
1 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese
Flakey sea salt like Maldon or fleur de sel
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment or use a Silpat.
Place oats in large bowl and sprinkle water over them.
In a small bowl, mix the olive oil, brown sugar, and egg. Pour this mixture over the oats, stir to combine, set aside.
in another mixing bowl, combine the flour, fine sea salt, baking soda, rosemary, and black pepper. Whisk to combine well. Stir in the Parmesan.
Gradually sprinkle the flour mixture over the oats in large mixture, stirring until combined.
Form tablespoon sized scoops of dough and evenly space on the baking sheet. Flatten each piece of dogh to about 1/4 inch thick. Use your hands to form an even disk. Sprinkle a pinch of salt on top of each.
Bake for 15 to 17 minutes until the edges are slightly darkened. Transfer to cooling rack. Serve with soft cheese, or alone, stuffed into coat pockets, as a mid day snack.
I hope you and your husband both enjoy them. Merry Christmas.
Thank you!
Try choczero.com for a lot of amazing sugar free treats! They not only have a bunch of yummy already made treats, they have a lot of good recipes! Their salted caramels are my favorite and taste every bit as good as sugar caramels.
Thank you!
We are sugar free here and I have found that baking my usual recipes with xylitol or monk fruit works out just fine. We have discovered a brand called Choc Zero that makes all kinds of sugar free goodies. They are monk fruit sweetened. No Sucralose or erythritol. Very good product, but they do cost a bit more than regular treats.
Thank you! I am saving all these tips and links in a file. Ordered some Choc Zero just now!
I tested both of these at Thanksgiving, and they were delicious, with minimal impact on my blood sugar (pre diabetic.) The mini-pies were a huge hit with my family members in various stages of metabolic decline, so I felt really good about providing them something they could enjoy.
https://www.thedietchefs.com/easy-keto-pecan-pie/
https://www.thedietchefs.com/keto-gingerbread-cookies/
I usually prepare and stick to the international cheese board with whole berry cranberry sauce or pumpkin butter (made with Swerve granular/brown sugar substitutes) for a dessert.
My favorite keto ice cream:
It makes about 1 cup of ice cream/2 servings.
Merry Christmas 🙂
Thank you! Look forward to trying these.
During the late 1950s when I was a lad, my mom would make many dozen sugar cookies. I was in charge of the cookie cutters. She’d add colorful sugar sprinkles to them. We’d put them in tins and hand-deliver them to neighbors and my dad’s work friends.
My wife is a gourmet cook and retired gourmet food sales rep. One Christmas in the 1990s, we made about 20 dozen gingerbread Christmas trees, each about 6″ tall. Put a ribbon on the top each so they could be used as an ornament before being eaten. We wrapped each in saran and sold them at a local craft fair. Fortunately, no Karens asked to see our food production license …. I have an unforgettable mental picture of gingerbread tree cookies cooling on every flat surface in our house!
Before I left Home Depot, I used to make hundreds of cookies and give them out to my employees and friends. I lived in a cabin with a pretty small kitchen. Like you, I had waxed paper and cookies all over the place.
My older sister dated a boy that made popcorn balls & wrapped them in a shoe box for Christmas. This was late 50s. They broke up & no more popcorn balls. Texture was perfect. They were multi colored. RFK Jr and MAHA certainly wouldn’t approve. Mouth still waters as I think of them. CTH brings out the fond memories. Have you noticed?
Yes he does and Yes we do. Like God’s House there are many branches on the Conservative Tree House and all are welcome….. to a point. That’s why it’s called The CONSERVATIVE Treehouse. Go somewhere else if you don’t like the truth or the content.
Today I made Loaded brownies. I’m very stressed out right now getting them done and the house cleaned up. I’ve worked in the bakery business for 48 years.
Mmmm! Sounds good.
I always never had much use for sugar cookies until this year. I was looking for some bread to go with my sweet potato casserole for lunch. I picked up some sugar cookies to go with it. What a treat!
Cherry Tomatoes Stuffed with Pesto
Ingredients:
Instructions:
I make fresh pesto with walnuts, aged gouda and any handfuls of greens that I have around – spinach, parsley, arugula – whirl it up in a blender/chopper, add some seasonings and it is always ready without being so expensive or needing more exotic ingredients.
I have 2 holiday faves – mincemeat cookies from my mom’s recipe and angel strudel from my mother-in-law’s recipe. Sadly, Nonesuch condensed mincemeat in the box no longer exists. Borden foods took over and a couple of years ago they discontinued the condensed version. They had recipes using the jar version, but it is not the same cookie. I’m still searching though, so if you know any company making condensed mincemeat, let me know.
The angel strudel I am going to try again after giving up on it years ago. I have my MIL’s recipe but haven’t been able to get it to come out just right. There are several online that are close to hers. I need to get the technique right.
Angel Strudel – ingredients for dough -2 cups all-purpose flour, 1 cup butter (1/2 lb.), 1/4 cup water, 3 egg yolks, 2 tbsp. vinegar . Ingredients for filling – 1 pkg. angel food cake mix, 1 lg. jar maraschino cherries, 1/2 cup sugar, 10 oz. ground walnuts.
Mix flour and hard butter with pastry blender as for pie crust. Mix the water, egg yolks and vinegar in a small dish and beat. Add to flour mixture a little at a time, stirring in with a fork. Roll dough into a long roll on a pastry cloth and cut into 3 parts. Place one piece at a time on wax paper, flatten a little and wrap. Refrigerate at least 6 hours.
Follow directions on the box to prepare angel food batter. Drain cherries, cut them in halves and save juice. Mix nuts with sugar and the juice from the jar of cherries.
Roll one piece of the dough on pastry cloth as thin as noodle dough, trying to roll into a square. Use a large spoon to spread 1/3 of the angel food batter over the surface of the dough. Spread 3 rows of nut mixture and 3 rows of cherries over the batter, alternating the rows. Work quickly as the dough will soften and be hard to handle.
Roll the strudel as tightly as you can and lift quickly into a deep greased baking pan. (If you place your hands 1/3 of the way in from the edges, you should be able to manage nicely.)
Repeat process with the 2 remaining pieces of dough. Bake at 365 degrees F for 25-30 minutes or until light brown.
You’d think with all that detail that my MIL lovingly handwrote for me many years ago, I would be able to get this right. I intend to keep trying.
The little block of Nonesuch😌
A favorite.
Ever make a mince cheese ball?
So simple.
Soften a block of cream cheese. Fold in some reconstituted Nonesuch to taste. Form into a ball or log. Chill. Roll in chopped toasted almonds or walnuts. Server with your favorite crackers.
(Works with chevre, as well.)
No I haven’t. Sounds yummy though.
https://nonesuchfoods.com/products/condensed-classic
OH, WOW, it’s still available?? All is not lost. I have the recipe and will have to have some of these after decades of missing them. Thank you so much, marymorse!!! 🥰
Maybe….
https://www.instacart.com/products/17317646-borden-none-such-classic-original-condensed-mincemeat-9-oz
marymorse and Sibyl, not to sound crazy but I am so thankful that you sent these links. I had read a couple years ago that they just discontinued it and I thought it was forever. This is awesome! I wondered why they would stop making such a popular product. We only saw it in stores during the Thanksgiving to Christmas Holiday season, but it sold out fast. (I usually bought at least 5 boxes.)
Those cookies have lots of memories attached and my kids love them too. Not to mention easy to make. Thanks. You just made my Christmas a lot brighter! Treepers – such a great group of information sharing.
Hmmm… Maybe those emails I sent them to complain actually made a difference.
Am guessing Cross and Blackwell mincemeat is too rich for you? If so, of course just ignore the suggestion.
My farm Grandmother always used Nonesuch Mincemeat for her wonderful brown sugar cookies and they were just perfect, and she never ran out. My Grandfather had an extraordinary sweet tooth–the only human being I have ever met who put jelly on top of his copiously sugared breakfast cereal–and on his way out the door to finish the milking, he’d open the cupboard, reach into the granite roaster where she kept them, and take a handful for his jacket pocket.
Best part of the lay out in the pic is no cooking, just prepping & presentation. I love it.
Love the white owl watching over what looks like little pecan pies.
Wonderful recipes all 🙂
When making croquembouche, don’t do them on a humid day, the spun sugar just melts
Yes, helped a baker friend put one of these together for a wedding cake and the spun sugar was disaster – she barely got something presentable off to the waiting wedding reception. Seemed like a novel idea, but tricky. So thanks for your critical warning.
World’s Best French Toast
Ingredients:
Egg Nog
French or Italian bread
Butter
Syrup
This is tricky so pay attention…
Slice bread into 2″ pieces then soak in egg nog. In non-stick pan melt ample amount of butter and add slices of soaked bread until the side is seared then flip. You will probably need to add butter to the pan to help from sticking. After about 4-5 minutes on each side you’re ready for the best French Toast you’ve ever had!
Saving the recipe for one of the 18 grands!
All 18 will be very happy!
Sounds like this would work without the syrup.
I microwave some blackberry preserves into a syrup and use that instead of pancake syrup but either one works!
Will it work with stale Italian bread? Asking for a friend.
When we were kids, that’s where French toast came from–i.e., it went straightaway to French toast.😋
Personally this calls for a whole lotta work. No thank You.
This? You mean taking some time to relax and make some treats to share with family and friends? It is not “work” it is meditation good for the soul, and tasty for the belly.
Also known as a labor of love.
WOW!
Clarion mentioned brownies. I will never make any other recipe than the Squidgy Gooey Avocado Brownie one. Seriously – so-o-o good. Just check out the photo. No oil or butter necessary. Doubles easily and freezes well. You can play around with using different sweeteners, but I have found that, for a double recipe at least 1 & 1/3 c sweetener is necessary. If you use all honey it will be extra moist. Avocados are high in fiber, so they are actually good for you. I mix up the dry ingredients ahead of time so assembly is faster. https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/274269/rich-and-gooey-avocado-brownies/ Squidgy is not in the title, but I love that word… ;-D
Love reading all the recipes – lactose intolerant, so eggnog is out.
Did you know Lactaid makes an egg nog? Also, Almond Breeze.
STRUFALLI – AMARETTO BALLS
I cup crushed dry amaretto cookies, macaroons or biscotti to get one cup cookie crumbs
I cup almond flour or finely chopped nuts – walnuts, hazelnuts, pecans – your choice
1 cup sifted powder sugar
2 tablespoon dry cocoa powder (Hersheys)
1/4 sweet Marsala wine
1 tablespoon honey
Mix, roll into small balls (use small scoop) roll in powder sugar and CHILL – place tiny paper liners if you have them.
Best when made several days ahead.
Not a recipe, but an old method that my grandmother and mother used to cook up city hams from a post-holiday store sale (now I do it too). Preheat the oven to 250. Remove the wrapping from the ham and rinse it off well. Don’t season or trim it, just put it cut side down in a deep roasting pan as is. Stick a meat thermometer in it so it’s deep, but not touching the bone. Bake until it hits 190. You should be able to stick a meat fork in and twist it without too much resistance. The cooking time is about an hour per pound. Let the ham cool for an hour, then pull/shred it. Bag up in suitable portions and freeze for any future recipe that calls for ham or bacon.
And of course save the bone for beans and the grease for your cast iron cooking.
PANFORTE AMERICANA
Mix dry ingredients in heat proof bowl
1/2 cup flour
3 T dry cocoa (Hersheys)
2 teasp cinnamon
1 teaspoon cloves
1/2 team nutmeg
1 T – grated orange peel
1 T – grated lemon peel
1 cup whole nuts – I like to use just almonds, but any combination will do
1 cup – slightly chopped dried cranberries (Craisins) and slightly chopped soft dried figs
BOIL TO SOFT BALL – 230 DEGREES
1/2 cup honey
1/2 cup sugar
Pour hot mixture over dry ingredient stir to mix with a sturdy wooden spoon – move fast, this is the tricky part and then pour in to prepared 8″ spring form pan
BAKE – 275 for about 45 minutes until center top looks firm
Sprinkle top with powdered sugar .- Keeps forever, serve in small triangle slices, great camping or hiking snack too, another one that gets better over time.
EASY CHOCOLATE BUTTERSCOTCH COOKIES
____One chocolate cake mix dry ingredients (18.25 ounces)
____1/2 cup vegetable oil
____2 eggs
____2 cups Butterscotch Chips
____1/2 cup chopped nuts
Mix and drop by spoonfuls on baking pans
350 degrees – 8-12 minutes
Let stand on baking pans 2 minutes before removing
Easy Fresh Cranberry Sauce
1 bag (12 oz) cranberries (wash, pick out squishy ones)
1/2 c sugar
2 oz OJ
1/4 t cinnamon
pinch of salt/pepper (optional)
Add cranberries, sugar and OJ to pot. Stir over heat (low simmer) until all pop & sauce thickens (15-20min)
Squish any that didn’t pop.
Turn off heat. Add cinnamon, s/p.
Cool, enjoy!
Merry Christmas! 🙂
Kolachki
4c flour
1# butter
1c heavy cream
2 egg yolks (save whites)
1/4c scalded milk
1/2 yeast cake
Pinch of sugar
Cut butter into flour. Make a well. Combine milk, yeast & sugar. Add to flour well. Combine heavy cream & egg yolks. Add to flour well. Mix gently to bring together into a soft ball. Chill 1/2 hr.
Filling:
Apricot Lekvar
Prune Lekvar
Walnut Filling: finely chopped walnuts, sugar, bourbon vanilla,egg whites, mix together to make a thick paste.
Roll out chilled dough like pie crust. Cut into strips 2.5″ w. Spread with filling of choice. Roll like a jelly roll across length and cut into logs about 2.5″ long.
Bake on cookie sheet in 400 deg. oven til puffed & golden, about 12 min.
Sprinkle w/powdered sugar.
“Preacher Cookies” aka boiled or stove top cookies mixture of peanut butter, chocolate and oats
Fudge – all types
Sugar Cookies
Applesauce cake – must use black walnuts and blackberry jam
these are the holiday desserts in my clan.
In Michigan, we call those preacher cookies “No Bakes.” They are popular any time of year, and super easy.
Wonderful recipes.
Bacon wrapped dates
½ slice bacon
1 date
½ tsp goat cheese
Slice a slot in one side of the date. Stuff the goat cheese in there. Wrap the bacon around it and place on a foil covered baking sheet. Bake at 375 for 25 minutes…you’ll be real glad you did
Sounds delicious – like I’ll have to make a large batch… thanks Mike.
Merry Christmas!
Everything goes better with bacon
Well,I’m not the cook,my husband is.My work just doesn’t allow it.
But I love to imagine when Menagerie shares these wonderful posts,how fun ot would be to make these delicious offerings.
Brings the season alive!
every year we love our Christmas crack. dylan hollis does the recipe better than i can describe it, we don’t use nuts
https://youtube.com/shorts/BRQ7vVSw06o?feature=shared
it is like crack
Hollis is over the top but great fun
Cranberry Scones for Christmas morning coffee; also good any time-easy to make.
3 c. all purpose flour
1/3 c plus 2 tbsp sugar, divided
2 1/2 tsp baking powder
3/4 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda
3/4 c cold butter
1 c buttermilk
1 c dried cranberries
1 tsp grated orange peel
1 tbsp milk
1/4 tsp cinnamon
In a large bowl, sift flour, 1/3 c sugar, baking powder, baking soda, salt. Cut in butter. Stir in the buttermilk just until well combined. Fold in cranberries and orange peel. Turn onto floured suface and divide dough in half. Shape each half into a ball and flatten into about 6 inch circle. It looks crumbly but just make it work.
Cut each circle into 6 wedges. Place wedges on a lightly greased baking sheet.
Brush with milk.
Combine 2 tbsp sugar with the cinnamon and sprinkle over the scone wedges.
Bake at 400 for 15-20 mins depending on oven or until golden brown.
I too enjoy baking but made panettone-might just sign up for the adventure this year.
Also, I keep the tradition of baking cookies of many sorts and distributing them to my neighbors. About 20 years of doing it and hope to continue.
Merry Christmas to you all!
Here is something easy and delicious, hot or cold.
Almond stuffed date wrapped in bacon. Use a tooth pick if needed.
Bake at 350 until bacon looks good.
Spinach brownies cook up like a quiche, but cut into nice bites or brownie squares. Variety of recipes out there, most are similar, but I like using both the feta and mozzarella cheeses. If you use the frozen spinach it must be squeezed thoroughly dry. They make for a nice savory snack on the table. They are great for breakfast on the go.
https://www.allrecipes.com/recipe/8521492/spinach-feta-brownies/
Think I’m going to have to try that one!
Hope you like them. Essentially like spinach balls, but flat, saves time instead of rolling the balls.
My parents’ homemade Waldorf Astoria cake. Use the original whipped butter frosting. Amazing.
It’s not Christmas w/out Sausage Balls!
Sausage Ball Recipe (Make about 35 sausage balls)
1 pound pork sausage, room temperature
2 cups Bisquick baking mix
1 pound shredded cheddar cheese
Preheat over to 350*
Line a large rimmed baking sheet with parchment paper
Add the room-temperature sausage and Bisquick to a large bowl. Use your hands to mix until mostly combined. Add half the cheese and knead it in, followed by the rest of the cheese, until a cohesive mixture forms. If the mix is too dry add a splash of milk.
Form the mixture into walnut-sized balls, placing them about an inch apart on the sheet. Bake until browned on the bottom and cooked through, 20 to 25 minutes.
Serve warm, or room temperature. Reheat in oven or slightly in microwave for a great next day breakfast snack.
TIPS:
Temperature is key. Your sausage needs to be room temperature and your cheese has to be cold. Otherwise, it’s too hard to mix and all of the cheese will melt out as soon as it hits the oven. For extra tidy balls, stick them in the fridge for 30 minutes after forming them and before baking.
I like Tillamook shredded cheese, but any store-bought shredded cheese works great. The anti-caking agents coating it help keep all of the cheese from immediately melting out of the sausage balls. Use spicy sausage for a kick of extra flavor or add a few drops of hot sauce to regular sausage. You can also swap out the cheese—use sharp cheddar for more punch, or even pepper Jack. Just make sure the cheese is a melty variety.
Thank you, Menagerie!!
👍
we love our Christmas crack. Dylan Hollis does it better than me, we don’t use nuts https://youtube.com/shorts/BRQ7vVSw06o?feature=shared
I used to make that, but I prefer using bretzels instead of crackers.
These recipes have put me into the mood for Christmas! Yum yum.
I unintentionally “wrecked” a party last year with a plate of Dad’s Ultimate Nachos.
It’s a 7-layer nacho on a large family-style Italian pasta serving platter. About 20” diameter.
Simple, yet sublime, guests flocked to the nachos eschewing the host’s various foods. By the time it was over, a couple chips and some stray olives remained…and nobody was hungry for an hour. I did not intend for this, and probably should have made the 10” D.U.N. Jr.
The key to success, beyond the sheer spectacle of an 6” tall nacho on a plate bigger than a tire on a small import car?
Distribution!
As you layer, arrange the chips like a puzzle that is only one layer. Make sure every chip gets a dollop of salsa, steak or chicken (grilled) bits, Mexican shredded cheese and black olives. No layer should have completely barren chips. And stop being cheap with the cheese. Repeat until you run out of ingredients. The big bag of Sams Club On The Border chips is just enough for my 20” plate. Figure a 6-8 oz sirloin steak (grilled/marinated) and a similar amount of grilled chicken breast. 12oz can of olives, smaller can of jalapeños. Get the big a$$ bag of cheese. Otherwise you’ll regret it. We use a local salsa called 5280 (medium) because it’s puréed down a bit, not that chunky tomatoey stuff.
Assemble it unheated. Nuke it for 2-3 min on high when you are ready to serve.
As you put it together, think of all the nachos you’ve had over the years where they only put cheese and a few juicy bites on top and a big pile of dry chips underneath. Let that rage motivate you to correct all those years of nacho errors and regret in one plate of the greatest nachos you’ve ever had.
We do one half with sliced jalapeños since not everyone likes the heat.
Sour cream and guacamole on the side.
I have never come home from a party with leftover D.U.N.’s.
❤👌
I love this post. Sundance knows the ebbs and flows of life. We are in a good place in our country. Let us have more of this warm posting when we can – living our best life!
Once Upon A Chef, Candied Pecans. These are delicious. They make for a nice gift, find a small gift tin from the Dollar Tree and fill it w/these.
https://www.onceuponachef.com/recipes/sweet-spicy-candied-pecans.html
Hey y’all — If you’re looking for something tasty with a bit of chocolate, especially if time is running short, I recommend these Dark Chocolate Cashew Clusters. Only three ingredients, no cooking (only melting the chocolate). Make great gifts or great to take to a party.
https://www.eatingwell.com/dark-chocolate-cashew-clusters-8411318?utm_source=pinterest&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=shareurlbuttons
There are a few hundred wonderful appetizers at my blog, http://www.butfirst.wordpress.com which I have maintained for some ten years…hope you enjoy some of them!
Thank you!
Clicked on Blue Cheese Dip first, now I have to have some. I can eat that stuff w/a spoon. It will be a while getting thru your blog!
Good Stuff. Merry Christmas everyone. Here is some great music to enjoy with your treats.
https://ugetube.com/watch/awesome-christmas-music-mix-over-three-and-a-half-hours-55-masterful-songs_twLs7QPoqoq9fOV.html
I just made a small batch of Miss Annie White’s Cheese Biscuits and experimented with a few…. instead of a pecan, I put a half teaspoon of some hot pepper jelly that I had left over from my last canning batch… AND OMG!!! They were so good!
Thanks again, Menagerie.
I have never made this flourless chocolate cake but I have a little time on my hands this year and I think I will try it. This is a popular dessert from a San Francisco restaurant.
“This moist, finely textured gluten-free chocolate cake, inspired by a Julia Child recipe, has been served daily at San Francisco’s Zuni Café since it was introduced, in 1982. Dubbed the gâteau victoire, it’s the celebrated restaurant’s most beloved dessert.”
https://getpocket.com/explore/item/the-best-flourless-chocolate-cake?utm_source=firefox-newtab-en-us
Merry Christmas, Menagerie. Thank you for your wonderful goodie thread. I look forward to it every year.
My offering I learned from my grandmother when I was small. I’ve tweaked it just a hair.
Ham Salad: (keto with a hint of sweet)
About a 1-2 pound boneless piece of ham.
1 jar sweet gherkin pickles
Mayonnaise
Grind the ham and pickles together. Stir in enough mayonnaise to make the mixture spreadable. Put into a refrigerator container until chilled.
My tweak is using turkey ham. It’s less salty and my non pork eating co- workers could enjoy it too.
This is great on crackers, celery sticks, filling cherry tomatoes, etc. Me, I make a thick sandwich. Grama would make tea sandwiches.
As a kid I got to turn the crank on the grinder for Grama when we made this and the cranberry orange relish for Thanksgiving.
This year I’m going to make some cream cheese mint patties to send my kids. Their Grama made huge batches of every color for all the holidays. I hope mine taste as good as hers. I’m also trying my hand at pfeffernuse and Russian tea cookies as a nod to our family’s heritage.