Food for SoulIssue: Sagittarius 08 & Honest Self Expression

Paint the Cookies, Sculpt the Cookies, and Make them New

holidaycookies_200Watercolor by Philip GaligaSugar cookies emerge every year for the church bazaar, the annual neighborhood cookie swap, the office cookie tray, and the ever-full Christmas cookie jar. What began in Medieval Arab regions of the world as sugary white cakes, often with ground nuts, has transformed over time into tender cookies with crisp edges created from dough that can be rolled and cut. The act of decorating sugar cookies began in the 14th century with imprinted Biblical scenes made with carved wooden rolling pins or wooden molds. The act of adorning the cookie with colored frosting was developed by early German gingerbread bakers who made elaborate houses and fancy Christmas tree decorations. With this in mind, settlers in North America employed tinsmiths to design cookie cutters and by the late 1800’s, cookie cutters were a phenomenon with a firm hold on the holiday baking scene.

The best sugar cookie recipe, however, is subjective and will likely remain your family recipe. If you want to change the cookie itself, make the change small and unobtrusive. The easiest and least fussy options are to add a touch of extract, the flavor of your choosing, to your batter. You could also add a touch of zest; orange, lime, or lemon. These alterations will change the flavor slightly while leaving the texture of the cookie intact.

Big change and big creativity should remain in the decorating. Red, white, and green will always show up on a cookie tray. To express your own style, try bold colors of purple or turquoise. Or, be trendy with shades of browns and greens naming them things like spring seedling or desert. It will, of course, will take lots of experimenting to get the color you want and the four color pack in the spice aisle at the grocery store will not get you far in creating your own palette. Baking and pastry supply websites offer superior food coloring, often in gel format. Gels from these purveyors are often found in a variety of colors, all with greater intensity than those found at the local food mart.

Of course, there are also plenty of food sources to make your own all-natural colors. Colors derived from natural sources tend to be less intense so you will likely need to practice extracting and dying before decorating day.

And maybe expressing your own style comes not in the color you choose but in the way in which you put it on the cookie. Perhaps piping is your calling. This would mean that a whole new set of kitchens gadgets could be at your beckoning. Or, maybe you are super industrious and can create your own design with an original stencil.

Food for Soul Archives (total entries: 36)

Cancer 10

Taurus 10

The Season for Lettuce

Lettuce is easy to grow and quick to harvest, providing extremely fresh and tasty salads early in the growing season. Planting a variety of lettuces with successive plantings every 1 to 3 weeks will keep you stocked in greens for months.

Aries 09 - Spring Break

Holy Mole!

Mole is often the word used for a dish, commonly chicken, in a special sauce. This sauce has as much stature in Mexico as marinara in Italy or béarnaise in France. Mole, pronounced Mo-lay, comes from the indigenous word “molli,” meaning mixture or concoction.

Aquarius 09 - The Change Issue

Yes Seitan!

This time of year, our menus lean toward the comfort food zone. Unless you live in sunny California, the typical American family is currently dining on meat, potatoes, and a perfunctory vegetable. If you feel stuck in this rut, why not give wheat gluten (seitan) a try?