Mexican Wedding Cookies and a Cookie Exchange

Yesterday was my daughters Holiday Cookie exchange.
Even though most of her guests didn’t make it we had a really nice assortment of goodies.
I made my Cherry Chocolate Kisses cookies, Sugar Cookies for the kids to decorate, Mexican Wedding Cookies and Chocolate dipped Marshmallows.
Mexican Wedding Cookies are really easy to make, only include 5 ingredients and taste wonderful. They are my husbands favorite and since he has been feeling under the weather lately at the last minute I decided to make them also.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees
 Mexican Wedding Cookie Recipe
1 cup butter, softened
1 cup powdered sugar, divided
1 tsp Vanilla
2 cups of all-purpose unbleached flour
1 cup finely chopped pecans

Beat the butter and 1/2 cup of the powdered sugar in your kitchen-aid mixer until light and fluffy about 5 minutes. If you don’t have a stand mixer use a hand held mixer.

Add vanilla and beat until vanilla is completely incorporated.
Slowly begin to add the flour 1 cup at a time.
Mix with your mixer until the dough becomes too much for your mixer. 
I mixed about 1 1/2 cup of flour and then added the last of the flour and the finely chopped pecans, mixing by hand with a wooden spoon.
Mix until the pecans are evenly distributed through out the dough. 


Shape the dough into one inch balls and leave about 2 inches between cookies.

Bake for 12 to 14 minutes until slightly browned.
Cool for 5 minutes and roll the warm cookies in a bowl of the remaining 1/2 cup of powdered sugar.

Move cookies to a rack and cool completely. Store in single layers in an air tight container.
Makes about 48 cookies

Enjoy!


Holiday Cookie Exchange Recipe

 Cherry Chocolate Kisses

Are you hosting or going to a holiday cookie exchange this year? This year my daughter is hosting one over the upcoming weekend and I am thinking about which cookies I am going to bake this year.
I have a couple of cookies that are my favorites that I bake each Christmas but I like to try out a couple of new ones each year. This year for some reason I haven’t come across any recipes that I want to try. I have been looking online and checking out all the foodie magazines but nothing has caught my eye.
Each year I make a sugar cookie so the kids can decorate them with icing and sprinkles. My all time favorite cookies is these Cherry Chocolate Kisses cookies. I have been making them every year since I found the recipe in 2001. They are very easy to make, taste delish and are really pretty.

Cherry Chocolate Kisses
Found in Better Homes & Gardens Special Interest Publication
“Christmas Cookies”
2001
The pretty pink color of these cookies comes from the cherries and cherry liquid; no food coloring necessary
Prep: 20 minutes Bake: 14 Minutes
1 Cup butter (no substitutes) softened
1 Cup sifted powdered sugar
1/8 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons maraschino cherry liquid
¼ teaspoon almond extract
2 ¼ cups all- purpose flour
½ Cup chopped maraschino cherries
Granulated sugar
48 Hershey’s milk chocolate kisses
Heat oven to 350’. Beat butter in a mixing bowl on medium high speed for 30 seconds. Add powdered sugar and salt; beat until combined. Beat in cherry liquid and almond extract until combined. Beat in as much flour as you can with the mixer. Stir in remaining flour and the cherries with a wooden spoon.
Shape dough into 1 inch balls. Place balls 2 inched apart on an un-greased cookie sheet. Flatten with bottom of a glass dipped in granulated sugar. Bake about 14 minutes or until bottoms are lightly browned. Remove from oven; press unwrapped candy kiss into the center of each cookie. Transfer to wire racks and cool. Makes 48 cookies.
To store; Place layers separated by wax paper in an airtight container; cover. Store at room temperature up to one week or freeze up to 3 months.
Tip; Unwrap all of the Heresy Kisses as your first batch of cookies are baking. Keep them ready nearby in a bowl.
If the cookies c
ool before pushing the kiss into the cookie the kiss will not melt and will fall off of the cookies!
Also it takes a long time for the Hersey Kiss to harden. You can speed things up by putting the cookies in the freezer for about fifteen minutes

How to make Ham and Bean Soup

It is that time of year again. You know the one where it is so cold outside all you can think about is digging into a bowl of piping hot soup. Actually for me it doesn’t matter what the weather is like. I make soup all year long.
You might remember my Chicken Soup post from a few months ago. Making homemade soup is not as complicated as some people might think. You don’t need to have a bunch of complicated ingredients and spices on hand. There are just a few basic ingredients you need and then the world is your oyster as they say. You can add as much or as little ingredients as you’d like.
All of the soups that I make are pretty simple to make. And once you know the technique you can make any kind of soup you like.
I may be one of the only people in the world that bakes a ham just so she can make a pot of beans. But that is exactly what I start thinking about when I buy a ham. What kind of bean soup am I going to make with the left overs?
When I was a child my mother would make split pea soup. It has been years since I made split pea soup because my family will not eat it and making a huge pot and having it go to waste is too much for me to bare.
Now I usually use  great northern  beans or navy beans when I make my ham and beans. But if you like another kind of beans that is fine. You can use any type of bean you like. Or you can use a mixture of different dry beans.
Just keep in mind that the smaller the bean the faster it will cook. So add your larger beans first and add the smaller beans after the bigger beans have been cooking for a hour or so.
1 left over Ham bone
1 onion
a handful of baby carrots or cut a couple of carrots into large pieces
Bay Leaves
Salt and pepper
1 to 1 1/2 pounds of dry great northern beans

Put your left over ham bone and any scraps of meat and fat that you have into a pot. Use a pot that will allow your ham bone to be covered with water. Sorry I don’t actually measure the water. I just fill the pot until the bone is covered.

Add the onion, carrots, bay leaves and about a teaspoon of pepper. At this point I don’t usually add salt because some hams are very salty. I wait until the very end of the cooking time to add salt if it is needed.

With the bay leaves I usually add about five small or two large. It’s really up to you if you like the flavor bay leaves brings to the party then add a couple extra. 

If your jar of dried bay leaves haven’t seen the light of day in a while you will need the extras. As with all spices they lose some of their flavor the older they are. Now if you are lucky enough to have a bay tree growing in your back yard you would only need one large bay leaf. Fresh bay leaves are much stronger then the dried ones. I did have a bay tree years ago and can tell the difference between fresh and dry.

Turn the stove up to medium high and put you pot on the burner..

Preparing your beans:

Pour your dried beans into a fine mesh strainer and rinse. Remove any stones and any beans that are discolored. Once your beans are nice and clean dump them into the pot, turn the heat up to high and get it to boiling.

Dry beans vs canned beans. I use canned beans all the time when I make my chicken soup or my veggie soup. This is not the time for canned beans. I have never made ham and beans with canned beans. Since the beans are cooked already by the time your ham and spices had flavored your soup the canned beans would be mush.

Your probably also wondering why I didn’t soak my beans over night. Well some people do that. I don’t.

You can skip the soaking part. You might have to cook your beans a lot longer this way but again you would lose out on tons of flavor from the ham because the beans are soft after they have soaked over night and they would be done cooking in less then half the time.

This way it takes about 3 hours from start to finish. What I do is start my beans in the morning about 10 and they are done by 1 or 1:30.

Bring the pot of beans and ham up to a full boil and let them boil for about thirty minutes. Turn the heat down just enough to keep a good boil going but not so much of a boil that the liquid is sputtering out of the pot all over your stove. You can put a lid on but leave a gap so some of the steam can escape. You want some of the water to evaporate as it cooks. Stir occasionally and cook it like this for about an hour. Stir and turn the heat down so your ham and beans are at a simmer. Continue to cook it like this until your beans are tender. You can add more pepper at this point and taste it to see if it needs any salt. By now the water has probably turned a nice creamy color from some of the beans cooking down.

As your beans are cooking the ham and bone are flavoring the liquid. The meat is getting tender and falling from the bone in chunks. When your beans are tender you can pull the bone from the pot. Use a big spoon to scrap the tender meat from the bone into the pot.

That’s all there is to it. You can make any type of bean you like this way. If you like split pea soup use dried peas. They will cook much faster then the great northern beans.

Bake up a loaf of Italian Bread.to go with it.

Nothing tastes better with a pot of bean soup then fresh bread. If you want to serve the beans over rice. Cook it down longer so it isn’t so soupy and ladle the beans and ham chunks over a bowl of hot rice.

My Review of Hamilton Beach 10-CupFood Processor in White

Originally submitted at CSN Stores

Features:

  • 2 Speeds with pulse
  • Oversized feed chute
  • Chopping blade
  • Reversable slice disc
  • Reversable shred disc
  • Bowl, lid, and blades are dishwasher-safe
  • Capacity: 10 Cups
  • Power Consumption: 500 Watt…

I Love this Food Processor

By A.Mobley from Florida on 12/2/2010
5out of 5

Pros: Dishwasher Safe, Easy To Use, Durable, Powerful Motor
Best Uses: Chopping, Cookie baking
Describe Yourself: Avid Cook

I used this food processor when I was preparing my Thanksgiving dinner. The first time I used it I used it to crush ginger cookies to make a crust for a cheesecake. It chopped through the hard cookies in just a few seconds.

Next I used it to make my deviled eggs. If you want a lump free and smooth filling for your deviled eggs using a food processor is the way to go. Again just a couple of pulses and the eggs yolk was chopped. I love it.