d o c t o r a n d m a m a

Linda Shiue

Linda Shiue
Location
San Francisco Bay Area, California, USA
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I am a physician and spend my free time with my husband and kids, reading everything in sight, eating, traveling, and cooking meals inspired by my travels. These days I'm spending more time at my food blog, spiceboxtravels.com. Please visit me there and follow me on Twitter @spiceboxtravels. Disclaimer: Health information presented here is not intended nor recommended as a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your own physician or other qualified health care professional regarding any medical questions or conditions. © 2010-12 Linda Shiue. All Rights Reserved.

Linda Shiue's Links

Follow me on Twitter
My Food Blog
___ and Culture
In My Life
Inspiring
Beautiful, Memorable Food
What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You
True Confessions: Parenting
What I'm Reading
Editor’s Pick
DECEMBER 5, 2010 10:18AM

Holiday Cookie Bling

Rate: 20 Flag
golden sugar 

I don't like to lie to my children, I really don't.   Lying is wrong, plus I have never been able to keep my own stories straight.   So what do I do when my little ones ask me if Santa is real? I say yes.  I know, many of you would say that this response constitutes lying.   But I love seeing my kids' excitement on Christmas Eve when they leave a plate of cookies for Santa, along with a handwritten note and a drawing.  It won't last long, their belief in Santa, and I want to hold onto this innocent part of their childhood for as long as I can.

Santa's cookies usually include a combination of store-bought and homemade.  The holidays bring out everyone's inner baker.  Some families have traditional recipes handed down through the generations.  For others, it may be as simple as slicing and baking pre-made refrigerated cookie dough.  Some communities host elaborate cookie exchanges, and this can lead to the establishment of temporary cookie-baking sweatshops in previously peaceful kitchens.  Baking Christmas cookies is all about sharing and tradition, and a whole lot of butter, sugar and flour.

Instead of baking cookies for Christmas, the Mexican tradition is to make and share tamales.  It's a laborious task best shared by many hands, and what better excuse is there to sit around for hours sharing gossip?  The traditional Christmastime tamale-making party is known as a tamalada navideña.  My fellow SKC enthusiast, Gavin Fritton, shared an excellent depiction of the tamale-making gatherings in his family.  In Mexico and in other parts of Latin America, tamales are eaten throughout the year, but they have a special place during the Christmas season. They are traditionally eaten during the religious rituals known as posadas, the re-enactments of Mary and Joseph's journey to Bethlehem that take place in the nine days leading up to Christmas Eve. They are also eaten on Epiphany, or El Dia de Reyes, which follows Christmas.  

For years, I've been the enthusiastic recipient of a one-way Christmas tamale exchange with my Mexican-America neighbor, Teresa.  You may remember her from when I wrote about her recipe for the best rice pudding on Earth.  In addition to being honorary Abuela to my girls and an ever-ready and experienced source of advice, Teresa is a wonderful cook of homestyle Mexican food.  It's hard to be grumpy when the doorbell rings before 8 o'clock on a Sunday morning when it's Teresa, bearing a piping hot plate of just-cooked chilaquiles.  And that's on an ordinary day.  
 
Every Christmas, she cooks up dozens of tamales, both savory and sweet.  Savory tamales, such as the ones Teresa fills with pork in a red chile sauce, are the kind most available in restaurants.  In Mexico and other parts of Latin America, the variety of fillings is infinite.  They may contain meat, chiles, cheese, vegetables, and any combination thereof.  The sweet ones, called tamales de dulce,  are less common, and can be as simple as an unfilled sweetened corn tamales, or perhaps studded with plump, juicy raisins.  Sweet tamales, the kind we can't buy even at our local tamale specialist, San Francisco's Roosevelt Tamale Parlor, are my favorite.  When we get our bags of tamales from Teresa, we know what we're having for dinner and dessert.

The tradition of making and eating tamales is alive and robust in 2010, but tamales have been around for a long time.  Historians trace their origins to Mesoamerica as early as 8000 to 5000 BCE, popular at the time of the Aztec and Maya civilizations.  The essence of a tamale is its ground corn filling, called masa, milled from limewater-treated corn, or hominy.   The ground, dried corn is combined with lard and broth or water to make a dough, which is then filled and wrapped in a corn husk (or sometimes a banana leaf) before being steamed. This is the basis for both savory and sweet varieties.  Sweet corn tamales, tamales de elote, capture the flavor of a fresh ear of corn without the distraction of other tastes.

For my Christmas cookie this year, I decided to try to encapsulate the essence of a sweet corn tamale into a cookie.  Teresa and my little tasters were ecstatic with the result, which tastes something like a corn muffin but better, because it's a cookie.  These have chewy centers and crisp edges, to satisfy both camps of cookie eaters.  To gild this lily, I've rolled the edges in golden sugar, pretty enough to decorate a Christmas tree, and special enough to leave for Santa.

*     *     *

Sparkly Sweet Corn Cookies
 
Sparkly Sweet Corn Cookies by Linda Shiue 
 

Yield: 2 dozen

Ingredients
 
3/4 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup corn flour-- I used Bob's Red Mill brand, which is found in many supermarkets.  Do not confuse with corn meal, masa, or corn starch.
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt 
1 1/2 sticks unsalted butter, at room temperature
1 cup sugar
2 large eggs
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
Garnish: golden yellow sanding (coarse) sugar

Technique
 
1.  Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
2.  Sift first four dry ingredients together.
3.  In a separate bowl, cream butter until soft, then add sugar and beat until fluffy.  
4.  Add in eggs, one at a time, and then add vanilla.
5.  Combine wet and dry ingredients into a soft dough.  Spread dough onto a sheet of plastic wrap, then roll into a 12-inch log (about 2 inch diameter). Chill wrapped dough log in refrigerator until firm, at least 4 hours.
6.  After dough has been chilled, sprinkle work surface with sanding sugar.
7.  Unwrap chilled dough log and roll several times in sanding sugar to coat.
8.  Slice coated dough log into 1/2 inch slices.
9.  Place dough slices onto ungreased baking sheets, sprinkle with additional sanding sugar if desired, and bake for 12-15 minutes until edges are golden.
10.  Cool completely.

Feliz Navidad!
 
 
sugar heart

 © 2010 Linda Shiue 

Your tags:

TIP:

Enter the amount, and click "Tip" to submit!
Recipient's email address:
Personal message (optional):

Your email address:

Comments

Type your comment below:
Hi Linda,
These look wonderful. I'm going to try them soon. Where do you get sanding sugar? I want to live next door to Teresa, too.
yummy...I might have to add these to my repertoire
Hi Janice, sanding sugar is also known as coarse or decorating sugar. You can get it in any grocery that has a good baking selection-- it's a bit larger grained than sprinkles, but those would work too. Alternatively. you could try a coarse grained sugar like demerara (sugar in the raw).

Thanks, caroline marie!
yummmm, linda. i just wrote "corn flour" on my grocery list. i love tamales, too, and we have them around christmas, too, but when someone you know makes the best you've ever eaten, why make them yourself? pfffft. great piece.
It never would have occurred to me to try to make a cookie version of a sweet tamale, but I think the idea is indicative of an intellect way out of my league. Rated.
Linda, these look so wonderful! I love your story & am completely envious that you have early morning, tamale-bearing neighbors. (for Janice: no sanding sugar at my grocery, but ordered a bag from King Arthur Flour). Bonne chance, Linda! We are so close to the finish line!
With children, sweet bling will always swing. Bless them all in their sugar innocence. Time enough for the gravity of cavity.
Ohhh, these sound so delicious! Thank you for sharing your creativity! :)
Blingy and yummy, now that's an unbeatable combination!
I also love tamales for Christmas. My kids school is selling them to raise money and I'm looking forward to the sweet variety! Your cookies look like a great hybrid- ESP since my family loves cornbread and tamales.
Of course Santa is real ! I never doubted it. :o)
This is a terrific cookie idea--very Christmas-y in a totally unexpected way! Now you have me craving sweet tamales--I worked on a project in Veracruz State where I regularly got pineapple tamales at mealtime. They were amazing. Maybe I'll try your cookies with a bit of dried pineapple mixed in!
Great post, Linda! Christmas wouldn't be Christmas for me without a big pot of tamales on the stove. Though we now live in Mexico for much of the year, our holiday tamale tradition began long ago when I was a child in San Antonio, Texas. This year we will sample your cookie recipe as well!
Cookies with bling! Two thumbs up.
Santa's a precious parental deceit. He personifies generosity and good cheer for their children until they are mature enough to understand that they carry the spirit of Christmas in their own hearts.
I believe that one can keep up the charm of Santa with stories and lore and yet tell the truth. There are several mythical figures in the entire world that humans have no problems in believing knowing fully well that their existence has never been proved.
The cookies look gr8 however and will certainly get eaten ..... there goes the famous weight watching plan!
recipe copied, pasted into word processor, printed and soon to be made. thanks so much for this, they look yummy.
I am trying these for real! Lovely anticipation of the taste of them.
I'm giving this one a try....haven't baked in years.
Yum, my kids would love these. Thanks!
Thanks for all of your nice comments! These are definitely doable for the busy or reluctant baker, and it's a lot of fun to play with all of that sparkly sugar. Enjoy, and happy holidays!
I tutor Hispanic immigrants in my town (we have a large group from Guatemala), and they bring in the most amazing dishes for our special parties, Christmas included. Last year, I joined them for Las Posadas, which is such a beautiful tradition.

I'll try your cookie recipe.
These look great, and I love the way you evoke the wonders of tamales, which I love (although finding veggie versions without the lard involves it's own kind of pilgrimage). Anyway, holiday cookie baking is part of our family's traditions, too, and I'm going to try these this year. Question: Where do you get that golden sugar? Rated.
Martha: I got the sugar at a supermarket with a good baking section, but I have also seen it at party supply stores. Have fun!
Hi Linda,

I loved your sweet corn cookies! I tried to make it and made the mistake of not listening to you- I used cornmeal instead and so now I know why you say NOT to use that. I'm going to try again. Thanks for the recipe!
Hi Mimosa! I am glad you had my version and then tried the cornmeal-- the texture makes a big difference in how it comes together, doesn't it? Hope to see you soon for a cooking adventure.