Showing posts with label cookies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cookies. Show all posts

January 2, 2018

Out with the Old

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Not too long ago, a friend sent me a link with the most searched foods in every state.  As I read the list, I realized I'd shared recipes for 10 of these foods.  While I ring in 2018 by preparing new blog posts, I thought I'd share these oldies but goodies from previous years.  Did your state make my list?


Alabama:  My grandmother's made from scratch pound cake has been one of my top 10 posts since I shared the recipe in 2013.


Margaret's Morsels | Loaf Cake

Arizona:  You don't need a lot of chilies to add heat to this crock-pot chili.

Margaret's Morsels | Crock-Pot Chili


Illinois:  This chicken and wild rice soup is similar to one served at a popular restaurant chain.


Margaret's Morsels | Chicken and Wild Rice Soup


Indiana:  Hoosiers hankering for noodle casseroles might want to try this oodles of noodles lasagna recipe.



Margaret's Morsels | Oodles of Noodles Lasagna


Kentucky:  This peanut butter fudge requires no cooking, unless you consider softening ingredients in the microwave as cooking!



Margaret's Morsels | Peanut Butter Fudge


Maine:  You don't have to roll, cut out or fry these doughnuts.




Margaret's Morsels | Baked Mini Doughnuts


Michigan:  I don't make dessert very often, but when I do chances are I'm making these no bake cookies.



Margaret's Morsels | Chocolate Oatmeal Cookies

Ohio:  The Buckeye State loves the combination of chocolate and peanut butter, especially in the form of peanut butter brownies.

Margaret's Morsels | Blue Ribbon Peanut Butter Brownies

Vermont:  One of the few states whose most searched food is a vegetable. These pickled beets taste just like what my mom used to make.

Margaret's Morsels | Pickled Beets

West Virginia:  West Virginians love pumpkin desserts.  I hope they would agree pumpkin pie goes from ho hum to wow with this tasty pecan streusel topping.

Margaret's Morsels | Pecan Streusel Pumpkin Pie

If your state isn't listed, you can view the complete list here.


© Margaret's Morsels

October 18, 2016

A Be"witching" Halloween

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Margaret's Morsels | Witches Broomstick Cookies

It's been a couple of years since I posted anything for Halloween.  I thought I'd rectify that and share two witch themed cookie recipes this year.

Store bought fudge stripes cookies turn into witches hats with the addition of two ingredients.


Margaret's Morsels | Witches Hat Cookies

Turn the cookies so the chocolate side is on top.



Margaret's Morsels | Witches Hat Cookies


Put a dollop of orange frosting -- I use Wilton decorating icing -- in the center 

Margaret's Morsels | Witches Hat Cookies




Margaret's Morsels | Witches Hat Cookies


and add a Hershey's kiss.  



Margaret's Morsels | Witches Hat Cookies

Let the cookies dry and then store them in an airtight container.


Margaret's Morsels | Witches Hat Cookies



If you don't mind doing a little additional work, a pretzel rod and peanut butter cookie are easily transformed into a witches broomstick.  I like the look and texture of these braided pretzels, but you can use a regular pretzel rod.


Margaret's Morsels | Witches Broomstick Cookies


Put the pretzels on a cookie sheet.


Margaret's Morsels | Witches Broomstick Cookies


Mix up a batch of peanut butter cookies and roll the dough into balls. Place one ball on each pretzel, pressing down so the cookie will adhere to the pretzel when baked.


 Margaret's Morsels | Witches Broomstick Cookies

Use a fork to make vertical lines on the cookie to resemble the bristles of the broomstick.  



Margaret's Morsels | Witches Broomstick Cookies


Bake the cookies as directed and let them cool on a wire rack.  Store the cookies in an airtight container.


Margaret's Morsels | Witches Broomstick Cookies


The cookies don't have to look perfect because, at Halloween, the uglier, grosser and more disgusting, the better!


© Margaret's Morsels

December 3, 2015

12 Days of Christmas Gifts from the Kitchen: Day 3

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If you love cinnamon, you'll love today's gift from the kitchen. These Cinnamon Cookies have cinnamon in the batter and on top of the cookie.  They're also easy to make when you're pressed for time.

Margaret's Morsels | Cinnamon Cookies



© Margaret's Morsels

December 1, 2015

12 Days of Christmas Gifts from the Kitchen: Day 1

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This time of the year, I start getting emails with 12 days of Christmas cookie recipes.  Since I love giving gifts from the kitchen, I thought I'd share 12 recipes -- not all of them cookies -- that would make wonderful Christmas gifts.  I hope to share one or two new recipes, but I can't make any promises. As John Lennon said, "Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans."

What better way to start this series than with the recipe I shared five years ago in a post titled, "Gifts from the Kitchen."  I've been making these three (four if you use sprinkles) ingredient cookies at Christmas for years.  I prefer chocolate almond bark, but you can use vanilla if you want a white cookie.  Seasonal sprinkles add a festive touch to the cookies.

Margaret's Morsels | Chocolate Covered Ritz Cracker Cookies

July 18, 2013

Spotlight on Summer: Picnic Fare and Quick Cooking

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Last week, I posted links to previous blogs that contained recipes for cool and creamy foods.  Today, in part two of the series, I'm doing the same thing, but with foods that are good to take on a picnic or can be prepared on busy summer days with very little effort.  Click the words in bold to go to the page with the recipe.


Picnic Fare:

What better way to celebrate summer than with a picnic?  Picnics are fun, but be sure to keep food safety in mind:  keep hot foods hot and cold foods cold!

Margaret's Morsels | Chicken Salad

Chicken Salad:  This has been my favorite chicken salad recipe for over 20 years!  When I take it on picnics, I serve it just like I do at home:  on a plate with croissants on the side.  If you want to use it for sandwiches, keep the chicken salad in the cooler and assemble the sandwiches when you're ready to eat.  This will keep the sandwiches from getting soggy.


Margaret's Morsels | Deviled Eggs

Deviled Eggs:  I like to take chicken salad on a picnic, but my mother liked to take fried chicken.  To accompany the chicken, she always took a batch of deviled eggs.  They're better made the day before so you can pack and go the day of the picnic.  Make sure to leave them in the cooler until you're ready to eat.


Margaret's Morsels | Lillie's Fruit Salad


Fruit Salad:  My grandmother made this simple salad -- apples, bananas, crushed pineapple and orange juice -- for my mom and her siblings; my mom made it for her kids and now I make it for my family.  It's ideal for a picnic because it doesn't contain mayonnaise, sour cream or Cool Whip. Serve it straight from the cooler as a refreshing fruit salad or as dessert.


Margaret's Morsels | Award Winning Peanut Butter Cookies


Peanut Butter Cookies:  No one will ever guess these cookies only use three ingredients.  They bake in just minutes so you can whip up a batch at the spur of the moment.  They're also easy to pack and mess free since they're not frosted.


Margaret's Morsels | Mini Mason Jar Cakes

Mini Mason Jar Cakes:  Mason jars aren't just for canning anymore.  You can use the four ounce jars to make cute desserts -- cakes, cobblers, pies and crisps -- that are wonderful for a picnic or casual get together.  Don't forget to pack spoons!


Margaret's Morsels | Fruit Tea


Fruit Tea:  Soft drinks and Kool-Aid might be easy to pack for a picnic, but they're not as refreshing as an ice cold glass of fruit tea.  This dressed up sweet tea uses lemon juice, pineapple juice and, the secret ingredient, ginger ale!


Quick Cooking:

Life tends to move a little slower in the summer.  The weather is warmer, days are longer and there's more to do outside.  Who wants to be stuck inside cooking?  These recipes let you put dinner on the table without having to do a lot of work or get the kitchen too hot.

Margaret's Morsels | Sauteed Pork Chops


Sauteed Pork Chops:  You won't heat up the kitchen when you cook these pork chops.  They cook in just 11 minutes!  The only thing you need other than the ingredients is a skillet with a lid.


Margaret's Morsels | Easy Pork Chops and Apples

Easy Pork Chops and Apples:  This dish is as easy as they come.  You don't even have to brown the pork chops or cut and peel the apples.  Cook a vegetable separately and you've got a meal that's very easy to prepare.  


Margaret's Morsels | Hamburger Macaroni Casserole


Hamburger Macaroni Casserole:  A reader once described this dish as homemade Hamburger Helper, but better.  The macaroni doesn't even have to be cooked separately.  Everything is cooked in the same pan and, from start to finish, takes less than 45 minutes to cook.


Margaret's Morsels | Marinated Baked Chicken


Marinated Baked Chicken:  This dish takes very little work, but you do need to plan ahead since the chicken has to be marinated overnight.  The marinade is super easy to mix up:  you use equal parts of Italian salad dressing and soy sauce.  The recipe can easily be doubled or, if necessary, halved.


Margaret's Morsels | Broccoli with Lemon


Broccoli with Lemon:  This recipe starts with fresh steamed broccoli.  If you don't have time to steam the broccoli, microwave a package of fresh broccoli florets that's sold in a microwave-safe bag.  You can mix up the rest of the ingredients while the broccoli is in the microwave.


Margaret's Morsels | Potato Salad


Potato Salad:  You might not think of this dish as quick, but it can be when you don't have to peel, cut and boil potatoes.  Ore-Ida Steam 'n Mash cut Russet potatoes -- which cook in only 10 minutes in the microwave -- can be substituted for fresh potatoes.  No one will ever taste the difference.

Check back next week for this series finale:  foods that won't heat up the kitchen.





© Margaret's Morsels

December 24, 2012

Pressed for Time

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Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

For the first time in almost 20 years, I won't be making German Christmas Cookies this year.  My mother made these delectable, melt in your mouth cookies flavored with nutmeg and frosted in icing tinted red, green and yellow every year at Christmas.  They were a holiday tradition just like her cheeseball and Kool-Aid Punch.  Although they epitomize Christmas to me, they have to be rolled, cut out and frosted, something I don't have time to do this year.  I'll still make cookies -- they'll even be shaped like trees and wreaths -- but the designs will come not from a cookie cutter but from a cookie press.

I remember the first time I ever saw a cookie press.  I was a teenager visiting my next door neighbor.  She was using a cookie press to make spritz cookies.  I remember thinking how much faster it was to use a cookie press to shape cookies rather than rolling them out and cutting them with cookie cutters.  It made an indelible impression on me and, when I was living on my own in my first apartment, I bought my very own cookie press. Although a cookie press makes things faster, you don't have to use one to make the recipe I'm sharing today.

Cookie presses come in two sizes:  regular and bite size.  I have one of each, but prefer the bite size cookie press.  I like serving miniature desserts, especially at the holidays when there's a wide variety of food -- including desserts -- available.

A cookie press consists of two parts:  a hollow tube and templates with various designs.

Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies


The tube is filled with cookie dough

Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

and the template is screwed on the bottom of the tube.


Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

The cookie dough is pressed through the template by pressing a trigger mechanism on the cookie press.  As the trigger is pressed, a plunger pushes the dough through the template.  Changing the template is as easy as unscrewing the template and screwing on a different one.  I don't recommend using a cookie press with nonstick cookie sheets.  Nonstick pans keep things from sticking which also includes the cookie dough from the cookie press!

The cinnamon cookie recipe is fairly straightforward.  The butter -- I use unsalted -- and sugar are creamed until light and fluffy.

Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

Add the egg yolks and vanilla

Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

and beat well.

Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

Stir the dry ingredients together and add to the creamed mixture in three additions.

Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

Fill the cookie press with dough and make the desired shapes directly on the cookie sheet.  You'll need to press the mechanism a couple of times before the dough starts coming out of the template.

Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

Brush the cookies with the reserved egg whites; this helps the cinnamon sugar mixture adhere to the cookies.

Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

Sprinkle the tops with the cinnamon sugar mixture.

Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

Bake the cookies for 8 to 10 minutes and immediately remove them to a cooling rack.

Margaret's Morsels  | Cinnamon Cookies

You'll need to wash the cookie sheet between batches to remove the egg white residue and leftover cinnamon sugar.

If you don't have a cookie press, make the cookies as directed, but refrigerate the dough until it's firm enough to roll into balls.  Omit the egg whites and roll the cookies in the cinnamon sugar mixture like you would for Snickerdoodles.  Proceed as directed.  You may need to increase the baking time for regular size cookies.

These cookies will never replace the Christmas cookies from my childhood, but they're a nice alternative this year since I'm pressed for time.


Cinnamon Cookies
150 Bite Size

1 cup butter (no substitutes), softened
1 cup sugar
2 eggs, separated
1 tsp. vanilla
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
2 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. salt
2 egg whites
1/4 cup sugar
1 tsp. cinnamon

Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy.  Add egg yolks and vanilla; beat well.  Stir the flour, 2 teaspoons cinnamon and salt together; add to creamed mixture in three additions.  Place cookie dough in cookie press; make desired shapes on ungreased cookie sheet.  Brush cookies with the reserved egg whites.  Combine 1/4 cup sugar and 1 teaspoon cinnamon; sprinkle over cookies.  Bake at 400° for 8 to 10 minutes.

© Margaret's Morsels

July 12, 2012

The Top Ten Countdown: Number 2

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Margaret's Morsels | Quick and Easy Lemon Bars

The second most popular recipe on Margaret's Morsels is Quick and Easy Lemon Bars.  This recipe only uses five ingredients and one of them is a cake mix!  It was the number one recipe on my blog until two months ago.



July 10, 2012