Speaking of Christmas Cookie Week - this year Angie from Echoes of Laughter and I have joined up with six other bloggers to bring you a super-sized Cookie Week. Can you believe it - a whole week of cookies, not just from my kitchen, but from seven other bloggers as well.
The shortbread recipe I use is from my father's mother (who you can see in the photo below.) The recipe is a classic - just like my grandmother was. She always wore a dress even when we went camping. And although she lived in small towns in northern British Columbia for much of her life she always set a nice table, used serviettes, served dessert, and remembered the finer things of life.
Lucy and Stanley Jones in 1955 (Maple Ridge, BC). |
In 2009 I travelled with my parents to Smithers in northern British Columbia and was shown all the important sites of my father's childhood. I was especially interested to see the houses they lived in. The one in the photo below was the house they lived in the longest. Isn't it the cutest! The kitchen window is around the left side of the house and looks out across to the mountains that you can see in the second photo below. I love thinking of my grandmother making her shortbread cookies looking out to the snow-covered mountains.
Since I make these shortbread every year - I try and change things up. This year I decorated the shortbread using coloured sugar in my two favourite colours - turquoise and green. I decided to go with a modern Christmas tree theme with the trees coloured in bold stripes or colour-blocked. I used a small piece of cardboard to keep each colour in the right section. Worked like a charm. I bet my Grandma's cookies didn't look like these!
Here is the shortbread recipe:
Ingredients:
1 lb butter (2 cups) at room temperature
1 cup light brown sugar
5 cups flour
pinch salt
1. Mix all ingredients together in a bowl
2. Knead until they form a ball
3. Roll out on a lightly-floured surface to a thickness of between 1/4 and 1/2 inch
4. Cut or stamp cookies with cookie cutters and place on an ungreased cookie sheet
5. Bake at 350F for about 8-10 minutes or until they are lightly brown (do not overbake)
In previous years I have also made cranberry-orange shortbread which is a nice variation.
Is shortbread a Christmas classic for your family?
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