I assume you’re here for a cookie recipe and we’ll start with that but while I have you, here’s a running list of some things occupying space in my mind on this gray yet bright final morning of 2020—year of quiet desperation, loud desperation, absolute wonder, a lot of humor, much time spend trying to constantly decide whether to laugh or cry or both—you know:
Read moreSOUTHERN KITCHEN CINNAMON ROLLS
On Wednesday the snow started in mid-afternoon, coming down in fat, fluffy white flakes the size of quarters. I stood in the kitchen, looking out at the farm, and watched the world turn whiter and whiter, like standing inside the glass of a snow globe that was being shaken slowly.
Walking outside in the height of the snowstorm was beautiful, to put it lightly. Although the farm is always quiet by most people’s standards, I’m attuned to its noises: the tittering of cardinals and white-breasted nuthatches at the bird feeder, the snuffling of our Yorkshire pig Elliot as he ambles around the edge of the stream, the heavy breathing of the four Jersey cows plodding from the upper pasture, the lonely echoing call of geese high overhead.
Read moreSTICKY ORANGE ROLLS
I have a trick I use when I’m sad or scared or anxious. (Actually, I hesitate to call it a “trick” because it comes to me entirely unbidden—I don’t perform it as an exercise, but I slip into it reflexively and without intention.)
Here’s what I do: I imagine myself inside a children’s book. Not just any book though: the sort that has a little town in it, beautifully rendered in images. There’s a library, full of shelves of books in jewel tones, and a friendly librarian who peeks over her half-moon glasses at you. There’s a candy shop with glass jars of brightly colored gumdrops and jumbo swirled lollipops and baskets of taffy twisted up in waxy pastel paper.
Read moreJAMMY STAR BREAD
Here’s how I used to make scrambled eggs: Crack eggs carefully into a mini blender with a tiny bit of olive oil. Add a pinch of sea salt. Blend on high until frothy. Melt butter in a nonstick skillet before pouring in the eggs. Cook on very low heat, stirring constantly, until creamy and just barely set. Don’t worry about the fact that it takes you 15 minutes to babysit your eggs because girl, you’ve got time! Relax!
Here’s how I make them now: Start to melt butter in pan. Crack egg directly into pan with one hand before butter is even warm while unloading dishwasher with other hand. Stir furiously over high heat. Flip eggs out into a bowl a minute later. (Spoiler alert: They are basically as good this way as the first method.)
Read moreGINGERBREAD MASCARPONE BRIOCHE
Yesterday was the second year in my entire life celebrating Thanksgiving without my family. We’re not the huge, gather-everyone-together, cram-the-tables-in-one-room type of Thanksgiving revelers. I can remember two or three times when we joined with aunts and uncles and grandparents, but most years, it was just the six of us: my parents and my three sisters. As we got older and started branching out to college—and serious significant others—we still kept it to just us. Boyfriend of seven years? No, sorry, not invited to Thanksgiving. Fiance? Nope, not official yet, not invited.
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