Me: If I ever drop dead, you need to know where to find those recipes. There's a Southern Living Breakfast and Brunch cookbook on the bottom shelf of the kitchen bookcase with a bunch of clippings stuck in the front. Two of those clippings are our Christmas recipes.
Emily: Mom, I'll never remember that!
Me: Well I do intend to type them all up and make a family cookbook, including the two small ones I made of your grandmothers' recipes.
Jeremy: Put them online. Make a blog. Monetize the hell out of it. Call it Mrs. E's Recipes only spell it with a z at the end.
So here we are--without the monetizing.
Welcome to Mrs. E's Recipeez. You are invited to enjoy our family's traditions. please note--unlike most food blogs, I may or may not have pictures. I'm posting recipes that I may not have made in years so they will just be without photos. If I do make them, I'll update with pictures. This is our family recipe archive.
I realized how important maintaining family recipes was when cleaning out my mother's house about 14 years ago. She had a huge pantry full of cookbooks which I had to go through. I was able to find many of her favorite recipes easily enough because she also had a file and she had submitted many of them to her church cookbook. There was one, however, that I was desperate to find. Though out my childhood and as I was growing up, Mom made one particular cookie that I dearly loved. It was different than any other I'd ever had--almost like a pastry. It was a yeast dough with butter and sour cream but no sugar. It was rolled flat then sprinkled with a sugar/vanilla mixture, folded, rolled, sprinkled again--with that process being repeated several times. The dough was then cut into 1 inch wide strips that were 4 inches long, each piece was twisted and put on the cookie sheet. When they baked, the cookies fanned out on the ends into the flakiest, yummiest layers. I can't begin to describe how much I loved these.
I remembered them as being a Pillsbury Bake Off winner from around 1958 - 1960 and they were in one of those little books you see at the grocery store checkout. I looked through everything. Books were bagged and donated and I was distraught about not having that recipe.
There were several bags of books on Mom's porch that needed to be put out for donation pick up so I went over there one more time after work on a freezing December afternoon. I decided to go through those bags one more time. Lo and behold--there it was!
Pillsbury Bake Off recipes with the price of 25 cents on the lower right hand corner. This was probably one of the keepsakes from my parent's house that meant the most.
So I've been continuing that tradition. Starlight Sugar Crisps for Christmas. That recipe and many more will be posted here for family and friends to enjoy.
So--since I talked about the Starlight Sugar Crisps, That will be the first recipe!
Enjoy!
Starlight Sugar Crisps
Printable Recipe
Absolutely Vicki’s
most favorite cookie in the world!
From Pillsbury Bake-off late 1950’s or
early 1960’s--out of print
Soften:
1 packet active dry yeast (or 1 cake compressed yeast) in
1/4 cup lukewarm water.
Sift together:
3 3/4 cups sifted all-purpose flour and 1 1/2 teaspoons salt
into mixing bowl.
Cut in:
1 cup butter until particles are the size of small peas.
Blend in:
2 beaten eggs
1/2 cup sour cream (thick or commercial)
1 teaspoon vanilla and the softened yeast.
Mix thoroughly. Cover; chill at
least 2 hours. (Dough may be stored in refrigerator for up to 4 days and baked
as needed.)
Combine:
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla
Roll out:
Half of chilled
dough on floured surface sprinkled with about 1/2 cup of the vanilla sugar. Roll out to a 16 X 8 inch
rectangle. Sprinkle with about 1
Tablespoon of the vanilla sugar.
Fold one end of dough over center. Fold other end over to make three layers. Turn 1/4 way around and repeat rolling
and folding twice, sprinkling board with additional vanilla sugar as needed.
Roll out to a 16 X 8 inch rectangle about 1/4 inch thick.
Cut into 4 X 1 inch strips. Twist each strip 2 or 3 times. Place on ungreased baking sheets. Repeat entire process with remaining dough and vanilla sugar.
Bake in moderate oven (375 degrees) 15 to 20 minutes until
light golden brown .
Note: The
chilled dough is very stiff. I
always divide the dough in half and pat into a fat rectangle, wrap in saran
wrap, then refrigerate until ready to use. It’s a little easier to roll out this way!
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