Cold Weather is the time for Hot Drinks

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Are you out of ideas for that certain someone on your holiday list ?

Consider the following – a copy of our  Hot Drinks book ( 50 original recipes concocted by Bob and me that feature coffee, tea, cider, cocoa, liqueurs, etc. in  a mouth-watering and delicious array of intriguing flavors and aromas ) along with some key ingredients for stocking a hot-drinks pantry:

  • soft Ceylon cinnamon sticks
  • whole cardamom pods
  • star anise
  • peppermint twizzle sticks
  • rich hot chocolate or hot cocoa mix
  • spices for mulled-cider
  • Chai tea
  • Holiday Blend coffee

We are really proud of this little book and we love the recipes that we created. Our goal was to put a delicious new spin on some classic favorite drinks as well as to come up some wonderful combinations using comtemporary ingredients. We love it when customers tell us how much they love our book, and that are working their way through all of the recipes. Everyone seems to have a different favorite !

Here is a sneak-peek of one of our recipes that is  just perfect for the holiday season ( and you can see two others in my December 16, 2007 and January 1, 208 posts )  -

Hot Speculatius
In Germany and Holland, the Christmas holidays wouldn’t be complete without a selection of traditional spiced cookies. This hot drink was created in honor of lebkuchen, the popular German gingerbread cookie, and speculatius, Hollands thin, crisp windmill-shaped alomnd cookie. This wonderfully rich and creamy drink is  the perfect messenger of holiday cheer.

Serves 2

2 cups whole milk
3 & 1/2 ounces marzipan, chopped
1 tablespoon ( 1/2 ounce) amaretto
4 tablespoons ( 2 ounces) Bailey’s Irish Cream
2 tablespoons ( 1 ounce) ginger brandy
large pinch of ground cinnamon
large pinch of ground cloves
pinch of ground cardamom

Combine the milk, marzipan, amaretto, Bailey’s and ginger brandy in a small saucepan over medium heat and bring to a simmer. Stir occasionally to incorporate the marzipan. Lower the heat and simmer gently until just heated through, about 5 minutes. Stir in the cimmanon, cloves, and cardamom, and simmer for another 2 minutes to release the aromatic oils from the spices.

Strain into two large mugs and enjoy – with or without a namesake cookie.

Northampton Windows for Peace

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This holiday season, Christmas and Hanukkah shoppers will discover that downtown Northampton is even more beautiful than ever. The trees are festooned with an abundance of white lights, and shop windows glitter with lovely gift giving ideas.

Additionally, nearly 40 shopkeepers, in conjuction with the Northampton Chamber of Commerce,  are participating in a downtown-wide holiday window display effort for peace .

Think of it this way – Give Peace a Glance ! Each participating shop has taken the theme of peace  and expressed it in a seasonal motif. A walking map of the windows is available from shops on Main Street, the Chamber of Commerce and of course, our store, Cooks Shop Here.  ( Just a hint…we have based our window theme on the riff in a familiar Cat Stevens song: Ride on the Peace Train.)  Make your holidays a little brighter and do the holiday stroll while shopping in downtown Northampton. For more information, visit www.explorenorthampton.com/holidays

 This year is the 50th anniversary of the familiar peace symbol

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which was originally used by the British nuclear disarmament movement and designed for the Direct Action Committee Against Nuclear War (DAC). The symbol was adopted by the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmamant (CND) in Britain, and was eventually adopted by students and war protesters worldwide during the Vietnam era. The symbol was designed and completed February 21, 1958 by Gerald Holtom.

Merry Christmas

We’ve taken care of the last customer, locked the door, and swept the floor – it’s time to go home, light the candles in our windows and enjoy a quiet few days after the hectic pace of the last month.

We are grateful for the support of our customers and friends and take a special pride in knowing that so many goodies from our store are being shared among family and friends at holiday gatherings, and are also being given as special gifts to cooks and food enthusiasts.

We send our best holiday wishes to all of our customers – those who shop in our store as well as the mail-order customers we have yet to meet in person.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year !!

May you dine well, laugh alot, share willingly and remember to be grateful for the blessings in your life.

 Mary Lou & Bob and everyone at Cooks Shop Here

European Christmas Treats

Much of what we love about Christmastime is the opportunity it brings to surround ourselves with the seasonal foods and sweet treats that are special to this festive time of year. As the specialty foods buyer for our store, I look for the traditional holiday cakes, cookies and sweets from Europe that I personally love and that I know my customers will love also.

Europe is a fascinating composite of many countries and cultures, each of which is blessed with a proud and distinctive cuisine. Accordingly, at Christmastime, Europe contributes many special treats to the global Christmas table. As we import many of these holiday treats every year, we are thrilled to see that Americans have embraced many of these seasonal treats - both savory and sweet – and made them a part of our own family holiday traditions.

In fact, many of our customers begin their holiday shopping season by purchasing their personal favorite Christmas treats. Our savvy shoppers know that these items sell out very quickly, and that we will not be able to receive more of these treats until the following Christmas.

Here is a little primer on what holiday goodies to look for:

England:

Plum Pudding: in merry ole England serving the Christmas goose and all the trimmings is a very old holiday custom. Rich stuffings, sauces and gravies give way to the sweets table, which might be composed of crystallized fruits, nuts, brandy snaps, Christmas trifle and perhaps a mincemeat tart. But the crowning touch of any good Christmas table is the plum pudding- dark, moist and warm, and redolant with chopped fruits, spices, and a good bit of ale or madeira, and decorated with small sprigs of holly. Warmed rum, kirsch or brandy should be poured over the pudding and set slight as the pudding makes a grand arrival at the table. Traditionally plum pudding is served with a good dose of brandy or rum butter.

Germany:

Lebkuchen: has been a hallmark of the German baking tradition for centuries. In the 14th century, bakers began making a simple, dense and heavy honey cake-like cookie. Early German bakers did not yet have spices at their disposal, but as  time passed, ships from Asia brought sweet and exotic spices to Venice, Italy. From there, a spice route was established over the Alps to Nurnberg, Germany. Cinnamon, nutmeg, cardamon, pepper, ginger, aniseseed, coriander, cloves and other spices began to appear in the formerly simple lebkuchen. Over time, Lebkuchen became very popular and lebkuchen bakers turned the cookies into an art. By official decree, lebkuchen bakers became a specialized profession, distinctly apart from that of other bakers. Loosely translated, lebkuchen means ‘gingerbread’, but it really means much more than that. Spices, honey, and finely ground almonds or hazelnuts are blended to produce a wonderfully aromatic flavor and soft, dense and chewy cake-like cookie. Lebkuchen has dozens of variations and in Germany small bakeries keep their sometimes centuries old prized lebkuchen recipes a closely-guarded family secret. Lebkuchen can be round, oblong, with a wafer bottom or not, plain, chocolate covered or sugar glazed. Very strict standards are set for the ingredients used in lebkuchen, and Nurenberg lebkuchen is still considered Germany’s finest.

Stollen: is one of the oldest Christmas cakes. Stollen was originally a simple cake, baked in celebration of the winter solstice. Over time, stollen gained it’s characteristic shape and fold, and it became a Christian symbol of the Christ child in swaddling clothers. The discovery of yeast in the 16th century gave stollen a more pleasing texture, and with this change came an increased use of butter and eggs. Today’s Christmas stollen is very rich and buttery, with a creamy texture gained from generous amounts of butter and eggs. Stollen should also contain chopped almonds, candied lemon and orange peel, raisins and a bit of dark rum. Variations might include pistachios or hazelnuts, marzipan, sultanas, etc., but all stollen are brushed after baking with melted butter, then dusted heavily with powdered sugar. The last bit of Christmas stollen is traditionally saved until Easter to ‘hurry the winter on by.’

Italy:

Panforte: this is the quintessential Christmas cake of Tuscany. It is believed that the Montecelles Nunnery in Siena created the first panforte about 1,000 AD, and today this medieval sweet remains very much the same. Panforte is a dense, rich concentration of candied orange peel, citron, chopped almonds, spices, honey, butter and sugar. Several versions of panforte are made:

  • Margherita is the most traditional panforte, and it is coated with a dense covering of powdered sugar.
  • Nero is essentially the same cake at Margherita but it is dusted with a coating of cocoa power instead of powdered sugar.
  • Fiorito introduces a layer of marzipan on top of the cake and it too is finished with a dense covering of powdered sugar.
  • Dama is the latest panforte creation, and it incorporates chocolate into the cake . Just to gild the lily, the entire cake is covered in a layer of chocolate as well.

Ricciarelli: another specialty of Siena, these soft and indulgent, oval-shaped ( and very rich )  almond paste cookies are lightly dusted with powdered sugar. Riccciarelli are always prominently featured on Italian holiday tables in northern Italy.

Panettone: is the Milanese pride and joy. What can be more Italian than a soft and sweet slice of Panettone served with mascarpone and a cups of steaming hot espresso coffee ? The origins of Panettone are clouded in romantic legends, but a popular version is that a young nam named Toni fell in love with the baker’s daughter, and to win her father’s approval, he created a cake of such rare delicacy that people flocked to the bakery for it. ECCO !! Pani-de Toni !! Panettone is a delicate and tender sweet egg bread ( think challah )  that is traditionally studded with raisins, bits of candied citron and orange peel. It is instantly recognizable by it’s trademark domed shape – whether it is a low cake or a tall cake, panettone is wrapped in colorful paper and tied with a festive ribbon. Today, bakers are using their creative talents and panettone can be found containing all manner of dried fruits, chocolate, nuts and liquor-flavored cream fillings.

Torrone: is an egg-white and honey confection, recognizable by its long, rectangular shape. Torone hails from Verona in northern Italy, and it is also made in Sicily. The style of torrone from each place is similar but slightly different in style and texture. Torrone can be crunchy or soft, and it can contain chopped hazelnuts or almonds or pistachios or a combination of two or more types of nuts. Some torrone is chocolate covered and Sicilian torrone often contains pieces of candied fruits.