Cooking with Mary #15

December 7

As it appeared in the January 1976 Madonna House Restoration newspaper

by Catherine Doherty

We are still so filled with the holy days of December that our minds cannot think of any other cooking but that of the past season.

So, if you are a recipe saver, here are a few for your next December-January file.

Epiphany Fruit Bread

Ingredients for setting yeast batter:
1 ½ cups milk
1 cup sugar
½ teaspoon salt
3/4 teaspoon ground cardamom
2 packages active dry yeast
3 cups all purpose flour
1 cup melted butter

Ingredients for remainder:
1 cup seedless raisins
½ cup currants
1 – 8oz. jar diced candied mixed fruit
4 cups all purpose flour

Scald milk and stir in sugar and slat. When cook, add yeast which has been set and mix. Add all other ingredients in first part of recipe and beat until smooth. Then add the remaining ingredients one at a time and knead the dough lightly on floured surface. Let rise. In about two hours punch dough down, and divide into three parts. Shape each part into a crown – representing the crowns of the Wise Men, and in each part put one penny. (The member of the family who gets the penny must say a prayer for the others for the balance of the week.) After the bread is shaped, let it rise again, and bake in moderate oven (350 degree F) for 30-40minutes. They may be iced with confectioners sugar icing, if desired.

Vanocka – Braided Christmas Bread
From Czechoslavakia

1 ½ cups milk
1 cup sugar
2 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon ground mace
2 packages active dry yeast
3 cups flour
2 eggs slightly beaten

Remaining ingredients:
5 cups all purpose flour
1 cup butter
1 tablespoon grated lemon rind
1 cup seedless raisins
½ cup chopped blanched almonds
1 egg yolk
2 tablespoons water

Set the yeast in warm water and a little sugar. Add the other ingredients listed in the first section. Sift the 5 cups flour in a bowl and cut in butter. Then stir down the yeast mixture and add lemon rind, raisins and almonds. Add yeast mixture to flour-butter mixture and beat well. Knead dough and let rise for about 2 hours. Then, divide the dough in half and divide one half into 3 equal portions.

Roll these into ropes 20 inches long. Let rest 15 minutes. Then braid very loosely. Seal ends; place on greased baking sheet. Next, divide remaining dough into 5 equal portions. Roll each into a slim rope 15 inches long. Loosely braid 3 ropes and place on top of larger braid; fasten with toothpicks.

Twist remaining 2 ropes and place on top of smaller braid; fasten with toothpicks. Cover and let rise for about 20 minutes. Beat egg yolks with tiny bit of water and brush on top. Bake in 350 degree oven for about 40 minutes.

Delicious! Just try it!

Speculatius – St. Nicholas Spice Cookies
From Holland

1 c butter
1c lard
2c brown sugar
½ c sour cream
½ t baking soda
4t cinnamon
½ t nutmeg
½ t cloves
4 ½ c flour
½ c chopped nuts (optional)

Cream butter, lard and sugar – by hand with rubber spatula or with electric mixer. In separate bowl, combine spices, baking soda and flour.

Add sour cream to creamed mixture, alternately with dry mixture. Stir in the nuts. Knead dough into rolls. Wrap in wax paper and chill overnight. Roll dough very thin and cut into shape of good St. Nicholas himself. Bake 375 for 10 minutes, or until not quite golden.

On small slips of paper we write a message from the Bible for every member of the family and insert it in the right arm of St. Nicholas. We cook this slip of paper with the cookie. We decorate the cookie to look like St. Nicholas himself and write each person’s name on the cookie with frosting.

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