‘Tis
the season to celebrate! Five of Forever’s authors with brand new Christmas romances
are sharing their favorite holiday recipes and memories.
CAROLYN BROWN’S
PUMPKIN BREAD
Kids,
grand children, great-grands, all coming home for the holidays—the aroma of
pumpkin bread baking in the oven—everyone waiting for it to get done so they
can slice it up while it’s still hot, slather butter or whipped cream cheese on
it, and tell the age old stories about the holidays we’ve had in the house.
That’s the stuff memories are made off and every time I smell pumpkin bread it
puts a smile on my face for the whole day.
PUMPKIN BREAD
This makes 2 loaves and 8 muffins;
Or it makes one Bundt cake
½
cup butter
½
cup shortening
2
2/3 cups of sugar
4
eggs
2
cups canned pumpkin (one 15-16 ounce can)
3
½ cups flour
1½
teaspoons cinnamon
1
teaspoon salt
2
teaspoons soda
1
cup pecans (optional)
2/3
cup of cold strong black coffee
(NOTE:
I use all butter if I’m out of shortening or even oil)
1. Cream
first four ingredients.
2. Add
canned pumpkin.
3. Add
dry ingredients alternately with coffee
4. Bake
at 375 degrees for 1 hour for loaves or bundt cake, 25 minutes for muffins, or
until they test done in the center.
5. Cool
10 minutes before removing from pan.
6. Cool
completely before frosting with Harvest Moon Frosting (below).
HARVEST MOON FROSTING
3
egg whites
1½
cups brown sugar
6
tablespoons water
Pinch
salt
1
teaspoon vanilla extract
Combine
all ingredients except vanilla in a double boiler. Cook 7 minutes, beating the
whole time with an electric mixer, over the boiling water. The frosting will stand in peaks when done. Add
vanilla. Beat until thick enough to
spread.

My dad used to live across the street from us. Every year, when my kids were little, he would dress up like Santa, climb out his window on the second floor, and hang Christmas lights on his fire escape. My kids would watch from our window with wonder in their eyes, unaware that it was grandpa. He would turn and wave to them, sending them into little fits of breathlessness. Later, we would visit grandma and grandpa’s for homemade cookies (left there for them by Santa). The house was always fully decked out with every Christmas decoration imaginable with Alvin and the Chipmunks on repeat while the kids hunted down little “pre-Christmas” gifts he’d hide for them. I loved witnessing the magic of Christmas and love through their eyes. Now grown, my kids will sometimes still look out the window at his fire escape and smile, remembering a grandpa who loved them beyond measure.
GRANDPA’S CHRISTMAS COOKIES
(A favored Italian recipe)
4 eggs
1 cup sugar
½ cup butter
2 teaspoons vanilla
3½ cups flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
1. Sift dry ingredients.
2. Cream butter and sugar, beat in eggs; add vanilla and dry ingredients.
3. Knead and add flour as needed to keep dough from sticking to hands.
4. Pinch off dough, roll in your hands to form a log and then twirl into shape.
5. Place on greased cookie sheets. Bake at 375 for 10 minutes.
ICING
2
cups sifted confectioner’s sugar
2
teaspoons vanilla extract
6
teaspoons water
Combine
all ingredients in a medium sized bowl.
Stir until creamy. Dip cookies into icing and sprinkle with trim. Place
on wire rack with wax paper on counter to collect the dripping icing and
sprinkles.

DEBBIE MASON TREE TRIMMING PARTY
One
of my family’s favorite holiday traditions is our tree trimming party. We’ve
held one every year for the past thirty years. Though I don’t know if it
qualifies as a party seeing as it’s
just the immediate family. But we do make a thing of it with our favorite
carols playing in the background, fire on (mostly for ambiance), hot chocolate
served in festive mugs, lots of holiday treats, and a special ornament for each
of the kids and grandkids to open before the tree decorating gets under way.
But
I think the most fun for all of us isn’t decorating the tree, it’s unpacking
the ornaments. I’ve always tried to buy an ornament that’s uniquely suited to
each of the kids, whether it was a sport they were into that year or a movie,
book, or hobby they loved, so unwrapping each one brings back a lot of special
memories. Here’s a peek at just some of the collection. I don’t think it will
be long before we have to break from tradition and let the kids take some of
the ornaments home to decorate their own trees. Either that or we’ll have to
put up another tree.
And
this one in my office doesn’t countJ Every year, my family
gifts me with an ornament too. This year they gave me these three adorable
oranaments to celebrate the release of the first book in the new Harmony Harbor
series, MISTLETOE COTTAGE, and the short story, CHRISTMAS WITH AN ANGEL.
HOPE RAMSAY’S
GINGERBREAD COOKIES
Every
year for the last quarter-century, or possibly longer, I have set aside the
Saturday closest to Christmas to bake gingerbread cookies with my children, and
now, with my grandchildren. These are
the only cookies I make at Christmas time, and the activity is more about
family fun than turning out a perfect cookie.
Usually I do most of the rolling, cutting, and baking. And the rest of the family does the
decorating.
The
magic is in the royal icing. The white
icing is a snap to make, and it can be divided up into small bowls and colored
with food dye, creating pots of colored cookie paint. I give each child (or adult) a watercolor
paint brush and let them paint the icing onto the cookies. The kids have a blast, and the cookies always
come out looking wonderfully homemade.
To
me, cookie baking embodies everything I love about Christmas: kids, family,
baking, and yummy desserts.
GINGERBREAD COOKIE DOUGH
Makes about 6 Dozen
4 cups all-purpose flour
1 tablespoon Dutch cocoa powder
1 tablespoon ground ginger
2 teaspoons ground cloves
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
¾ teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
2 sticks (1/2 pound) unsalted butter
1 cup superfine sugar
1 egg at room temperature
½ cup unsulphured molasses
1. Whisk
together the dry ingredients – flour cocoa, ginger, cloves, cinnamon, backing
soda, and salt.
2. Using
an electric mixer, cream the butter and sugar together until light and
fluffy. Add the egg and molasses and
beat thoroughly.
3. On
low speed, add the dry ingredients until thoroughly combined.
4. Cut
the dough into thirds, pat into disks, wrap in plastic and chill until firm – 2
hours or overnight.
5. Preheat
the oven to 350 degrees. On a lightly
floured surface, roll out the dough about 1/16 inch thick and cut cookies with
cookie cutters. Transfer the cookies to
an ungreased cookie sheet. Bake for
about 10 minutes, until the edges of the cookie turn brown.
6. Let
cool on sheets and then transfer to a wire rack. Decorate with royal icing.
ROYAL ICING
2
egg whites, at room temperature
1 pound confectioners sugar, sifted
1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
½ cup water
Using
a mixer, place all ingredients in a mixing bowl and beat at high speed until
fluffy, thick & shiny (about 10 minutes.)
Divide the icing into smaller bowls and color it using food
coloring.
OLIVIA MILES
SNOWFLAKE COOKIES
In my newest release, CHRISTMAS COMES TO MAIN STREET, my
heroine owns a cookie bakery. As this story takes place over the holidays, I
thought hard about a signature cookie she might make, and eventually I settled
on charming snowflake cookies. Of course these are not just any old cut out
cookie, though. No, Kara makes them by the dozen, sure to keep each one in the
batch distinct in shape and decoration, because no two snowflakes are ever the
same, after all! And it’s these snowflake cookies that she delivers every day
to the inn in Briar Creek…where a Christmas visitor falls in love with more
than just her cookies.
I hope you all enjoy these snowflake cookies as much as
Nate does! J
KARA’S SNOWFLAKE
COOKIES (sugar cookie cut-out and royal icing
recipes courtesy of Martha Stewart)
4 cups sifted
all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter,
room temperature
2 cups granulated
sugar
2 large eggs
2 teaspoons pure
vanilla extract
1.
Sift flour, baking powder, and
salt into a bowl.
2.
Put butter and sugar in the
bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Mix on medium
speed until pale and fluffy. Mix in eggs and vanilla. Reduce speed to low.
Gradually mix in flour mixture. Divide dough in half; flatten each half into a
disk. Wrap each in plastic. Refrigerate until firm, at least 1 hour or
overnight.
3.
Preheat oven to 325 degrees
with racks in upper and lower thirds. Let one disk of dough stand at room
temperature just until soft enough to roll, about 10 minutes. Roll out dough
between two pieces of plastic wrap to 1/4 inch thick. Remove top layer of
plastic wrap. Cut out cookies. Transfer cookie dough on plastic wrap to a
baking sheet. Transfer baking sheet to freezer, freeze until very firm, about
15 minutes. Remove baking sheet from freezer and transfer shapes to baking
sheets lined with nonstick baking mats. Roll out scraps, and repeat. Repeat
with remaining disk of dough.
4.
Bake, switching positions of
sheets and rotating halfway through, until edges turn golden, 15 to 18 minutes.
Let cool on sheets on wire racks.
ROYAL ICING
2 large egg whites, or more to thin
icing
4 cups sifted confectioners' sugar,
or more to thicken icing
Juice of 1 lemon
3 drops glycerin
Beat the whites until stiff but not dry. Add sugar, lemon juice and
glycerin (if using); beat for 1 minute more. If icing is too thick, add more
egg whites; if it is too thin, add more sugar. The icing may be stored in an
airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 3 days. Decorate each as you
wish!
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