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Lucy Mercer

Lucy Mercer
Location
Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Birthday
December 31
Bio
I cook, I write, I carpool. You may also find my words at A Cook and Her Books. Email acookandherbooks@gmail.com. Thanks for visiting!

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DECEMBER 5, 2010 8:11PM

A suitable use for candied cherries

Rate: 10 Flag

 

“Oh Buddy, I think it’s fruitcake weather,” goes the opening line to one of the best short stories ever written (and certainly a sentimental Southern favorite), “A Christmas Memory” by Truman Capote. Capote based the story on his own memories with his elderly cousin Sook, his eccentric best friend, who baked fruitcakes each Christmas and sent them to acquaintances and people they admired, including Mr. and Mrs. Roosevelt at the White House.

These days, the idea of fruitcake is as stale a joke as some of the cakes that remain on the bottom shelf of the Frigidaire from last Christmas. The main appeal of fruitcake for me is the candied cherries, the red and green chewy bits of sugary former fruit. Although a candied cherry is as similar to a real cherry as plastic-encased American cheese is to aged Manchego, they still hold a visual and sentimental appeal.

Fruitcake is not a tradition in my home, although my mom makes stellar "fruitcake cookies." (That recipe is hers and I hope to share it soon). I do buy candied cherries, to top Mom’s sandy, crispy, buttery shortbread. Shortbread is the easiest, most elemental cookie – butter, confectioner’s sugar, flour, salt and vanilla. When I wake up in early December and say “it’s cookie baking time,” I always put a tray of shortbread in the oven first.  Like Sook and Buddy's fruitcake, it’s a tradition, and it’s simple – I already have butter, sugar and flour out and the oven’s pre-heating.

 

Scottish Shortbread

1 cup unsalted butter, slightly softened

½ cup powder sugar (10X)

2 cups unbleached all-purpose flour

¼ teaspoon salt

1 teaspoon vanilla

Candied cherries or pecan halves for garnish, if desired

1. Preheat oven to 325°. In a mixer, cream butter and sugar, then gradually add flour. Add salt and vanilla.

2. Line a rimmed baking sheet with a Silpat or parchment paper. Using a rolling pin, gently roll out the dough to 1/4 –inch thick, in a rough rectangle. Using a sharp knife, cut into 1-inch square pieces. Press cherry or pecan halves onto each square.

3. Bake at 325° for 20 minutes or until golden brown. Remove from oven and let cool. The cuts will have melded back together, but quick work with a sharp knife will take care of that. Store in an airtight container at room temperature.


 

There are traditions to keep and traditions to make your own, like pecan tassies. This is a Southern sweet - tassie is a Scots variation of “cup” and a pecan tassie is a small cup of pecan pie filling, a tasty two-biter, rich and sweet. I make tassies each December with Georgia pecans, and they occupy a coveted corner on my cookie plates, but this year, I decided to part with tradition and use macadamias. You know the part of “Christmas Memory” where the fruitcakes are done and Sook gives Buddy and Queenie (the dog) some of Mr. Haha Jones’ whiskey and they dance in the kitchen and feel the Christmas spirit? Well, if I’ve learned anything this year, it’s to take the recipe as a suggestion, drink the whiskey and dance in the kitchen.

 

Macadamia-Rum Tassies

If you can’t get past the idea of messing with traditional Pecan Tassies, just sub pecans for the macadamias and vanilla for the rum (and tell your friends the recipe came from your cousin Sook.)

Pastry

1 3-oz package cream cheese

½ cup unsalted butter

1 cup unbleached all-purpose flour

Filling

1 egg

¾ cup packed dark brown sugar

1 tablespoon unsalted butter, melted

1 teaspoon rum

2/3 cup chopped macadamia nuts

1. Combine cream cheese, butter and flour in mixing bowl. Form into a ball, wrap in plastic wrap and chill in refrigerator for one hour. After one hour, remove from refrigerator and shape into 22 balls. As much as I want this recipe to make 24, I’ve never managed to get the dough to stretch that far. Press each ball into a cup of a mini-muffin pan.

2. Preheat oven to 325°. For filling, beat egg with brown sugar, add melted butter, rum and macadamias. Pour into shells, just a spoonful in each because they puff when they bake. Bake at 325° for 25 minutes. Remove from oven and let cool. Store in a covered container at room temperature.

Text & images © 2010, Lucy Mercer.

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Comments

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Delish sounding recipes Lucy. A Manhattan is another use for candied cherries.
Yum.. I make a siminel cake which is similar to fruitcake.
It was started on Mothering Sunday in the ul.. but lighter.
rated with yummy hugs
didn't those cherries make the bees in Brooklyn turn red?
Shortbread says Christmas all year round for me - the red and green cherries definitely make them befit the season. I wish I lived closer to you Lucy.
~r
Mmmmm, I could make a dent in those tassies, Lucy. :) Rated
I'm one of those rare birds who loves fruitcake, panetone and stollen, but your recipes look great too. -R-
Oh, Lucy. Those are so beautiful and I have to try them. Also the tassies look wonderful and I never knew what that meant. So thank you for the recipes and gorgeous pictures. Capote was one of my favorites, but I never read that one. I'll put it on hold at the library.
These look so festive! My mom's mother always made fruitcake. During a recent visit, my mom made an offhand comment something like "no more fruitcake." None of us really ate it, but the tradition of making it was nice, so I may have to make a visit up there and do that with her. If not, we'll definitely decorate some cookies with the candied cherries. :)
Shortbread is wonderful--though I think I'd take mine straight.
Lucy, your shortbreads look adorable! I've always wished candied cherries weren't so boring and cloying to eat; they're so cute--but you've found a worthy use for them! And I love the idea of the macadamia-rum tassies.
Lucy, I love A Christmas Memory! Last year we sat around the kitchen table listening to a recording of Truman Capote reading it aloud in his squeaky inimitable voice. I am also old enough to remember the sweet movie version with Geraldine Page. Thanks for reigniting that memory--and for the delicious cookie recipe!
I hear I was looking at the title thinking the dissertation would be sexual in nature ...
Yum, Lucy! Striking photos and delicious sounding treats. Bonne chance!
I hate to admit... But I actually kinda like fruitcake. Your shortbreads look much more widely appealing and the tassies,too!
That's my very favorite short story! And I actually do like fruitcake when the candied fruits are finely diced and heavily spiced and heavily dowsed with booze. I hope you do get your mom to share her cookie recipes too.
I love how you tied this in with a Christmas story you love. Also, beautiful photos - it's very easy to see the appeal of candied cherries..I've never liked how they taste, though....

It was very interesting to read that "tassie" is from Scottish for cup - the French say "tasse". Thanks for an intriguing bit of etymology.

I'll pass on the tassie recipe to my mom, a transplanted Northerner who loves Southern cooking and baking.

Thanks for another great post!
Being 3/4 Gaelic myself (just got my Irish passport!) and having many friends from Scotland (my father knew Sean Connery and they spoke in Gaelic to each other) I know that the term Scotch when not referring to Uisge Beatha (Gaelic for whiskey--meaning "water of life") is considered offensive to the Scots. The people prefer to be referred to as Scots or Scottish, but never Scotch. No offense intended, just saying, though I cringed when I saw the term on the front page.

The recipe looks wonderful.
bbd: Thanks for correction. I did not know the distinction and would never wish to offend. Changing title within my post now.