Christmas Cookies: a Delicious Christmas Tradition

Holiday Fun

Baking cookies at Christmas has been a holiday tradition in my house since I was tall enough to stand on a chair to reach the counter. I have many memories of a delicious-smelling kitchen filled with laughter as I baked with different members of my family -
 my mother, my sister, my grandmother, my cousins - over the years.

We always baked the favorites - chocolate chip, snickerdoodles (a type of sugar cookie rolled in cinnamon sugar), oatmeal raisin, sugar cookies and peanut butter. But because I cherish making Christmas cookies, I'm always on the look out for new recipes to try and have been know to make up to 10 varieties a season.

Maybe baking Christmas cookies holds another special meaning for me. It's no secret that I'm domestically challenged. I've never been very good at those things associated with maintaining a household - I've set fire in the kitchen when attempting to cook on more than one occasion, I've turn the laundry pink and shrunk sweaters, I've jammed the vacuum and bleached the carpet when trying to clean a stain. But baking is different. Baking I can do. So Christmas is my time to shine.

For these two reasons, it's been very important for me to pass on the tradition of baking Christmas cookies to my twins. Their first Christmas, they weren't even old enough to eat cookies (and honestly I was still struggling with the new duties of motherhood), but by the time their second Christmas rolled around I had a planned.

Last year, I bought them their own apron and hat and set them up on bar stools at the breakfast bar. I bought the already cut, pre-made cookies - the kind that are little round circles of dough. I put a cookie sheet in front of them and let them take the pieces of dough from the wrapper and put on the cookie sheet.

I personally would never think of making cookies that weren't for scratch, but knew that we had to start somewhere small so the twins could participate. I figured we'd grow a little each year until one day they are making cookies from scratch.

 
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J.E. Fun is the important thing. Glad you were able to share a tradition with your granddaughter.

Posted on 01/02/2008 at 4:01:34 PM

My five-year-old granddaughter helped me make cut-out sugar cookies this year. Once she got them on the pan they were a little out of shape, but we had fun! Our favorites are chocolate chip and oatmeal molasses. And I love peanut butter cookies warm from the oven!

Posted on 12/21/2007 at 7:12:50 PM

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