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Thursday, December 12, 2024

Do you have a favorite Christmas cookie?

Do you share Christmas cookies with friends and neighbors? This year I'm adding a couple of neighbors and my daughter's boyfriend's family to my cookie list. I also gift a bunch of each type I bake to my son and daughter-in-law.

I bake mostly the same cookies every year. These are cookies that seem 'special" to us because I only make them during the holiday season. But I do prefer cookies that are on the easy side.

This is one such recipe. I modified one of my mother's recipes for chocolate-vanilla swirl cookies, making them peppermint and vanilla just for the holidays. They're so popular with my family that this year I'll be doubling the recipe. Here's the single recipe, in case you're interested.


Peppermint-Vanilla Swirl Cookies

These are a refrigerator cookie. You form the dough into logs or blocks, store the dough in the fridge for a days or two, then slice and bake when convenient to you. 


Ingredients:

1/2 cup shortening or butter
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1 egg yolk
2 teaspoons vanilla extract (I use imitation vanilla)
1 tablespoon milk
1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
red gel food coloring
peppermint extract, to taste, about 1/2 teaspoon
an extra teaspoon or two of flour for the red dough to stiffen

Thoroughly cream the butter and sugar.  beat in the egg yolk. Mix in vanilla and milk. Stir in the salt and baking powder, then stir in the flour a cup at a time. The dough should be fairly stiff.

Divide the dough into two portions. 

White dough: Wrap one portion in plastic wrap or waxed paper and refrigerate for 2 hours. 

Red dough: with the other portion of dough, mix in enough red gel coloring until you're satisfied with the red. Mix in peppermint extract to taste. Stir in the extra flour until the dough is as stiff as the white dough. Wrap in plastic wrap or waxed paper and refrigerate for 2 hours.

Roll each half into a large rectangle about 1/8 to  1/4-inch thick on waxed paper. Square up the edges and make sure both portions of dough are about the same size.

Turn the white half onto the red half (removing the paper) with the red extending about 1/2 inch beyond the white dough at the far end from you. Roll the dough up tightly, jelly roll-style, away from you. Gently seal the edge of dough to the roll. Roll this log in a fresh sheet of waxed paper, twist the ends of paper. Chill thoroughly, overnight is preferable.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Lightly grease a baking sheet. Slice the dough into 1/4 inch thickness and place on prepared baking sheet, leaving an inch or two between cookies. Bake for about 12 minutes, until set. Cool for 2 minutes on baking sheet then remove to cooling racks. Yield about 3 to 4 dozen.

You'll notice that this recipe uses a yolk only. I save the white to make a small batch of chocolate- chocolate chip meringue cookies later in the week, using this recipe here.


Yesterday I baked the gingerbread dough (using this recipe) that I mixed and refrigerated on Tuesday. I know some people like to do a huge baking day and get all of the holiday cookies baked at once. I prefer to break the work up into manageable chunks and do a little each day.


Will you be baking any cookies this holiday season? What kinds? Do you have a favorite easy to make Christmas cookie? Do you have a favorite Christmas cookie to eat? Are you a bake-them-all-up-in-one -day or do-a-little-each-day sort of baker?

Wednesday, December 11, 2024

What it looks like to get beef in bulk directly from a rancher

Our Most Recent Beef Delivery



I know that many here read my posts not necessarily out of desire to do what I do, but instead out of curiosity of what something looks like in someone else's life. Since I know many have not bought meat regularly from a rancher, I thought I'd show you what it looks like for us. 

What this post is not:
This is not an endorsement or sales pitch for the rancher that I contract with, nor is it a pitch to get you to buy your meat from a rancher or small farmer. 

What this post is: 
Showing you what we receive in each order, and how the arrangement works for our family


I was sick last week. Right in the middle of my sneezing fits, sore throat and fatigue, my beef delivery arrived. Like a big girl, I put on some real shoes (but still in my pjs and robe) and dragged the box from the kitchen door to the garage. I then sorted, listed, and marked each individual packet of beef before freezing.

Some points about how this works for us
  • I signed up for the least often delivery but with still the lowest price per pound, which is once every 3 months. The rancher appreciates that I'm a regular customer, and he can count on me to purchase a set dollar amount/weight amount on a regular basis.
  • The rancher decides what goes into each delivery. There's a good balance of cuts each time. And it's a set amount of weight for every delivery, 30 pounds.
  • Our arrangement can be flexible. I can temporarily suspend deliveries, if our family becomes deluged with beef and needs to catch up. I can also request specific cuts or grind. For example, if our family really enjoyed a lot of ground beef, I could specify X-pounds of ground every delivery. Or, if I wanted additional roasts, steaks, or briskets for specific times, I can put in a request for that. Otherwise, I leave it up to the rancher to choose what I will receive. Within that framework, I know that I will never receive any organ meats or too many bony cuts.
  • The meat is packed directly out of their freezer and arrives at my house still frozen solid. It's packed in a styrofoam cooler with dry ice. 
  • The box is shipped to me. I don't pick it up.
  • Each cut of meat is wrapped in butcher's paper, with no plastic, and is clearly marked with what type of cut it is.
  • The cuts vary a little each delivery. Sometimes I receive more steaks, other times more roasts.
What we got this past week (totaling about 30 pounds)
  • 1 large heal roast
  • 1 arm roast
  • 1 large rump roast
  • 4 sirloin tip steaks
  • 2 sirloin steaks
  • 2 rib steaks
  • 1 porterhouse steak
  • 1 New York steak
  • 1 large skirt steak
  • 1 package fajita meat (about 1 pound)
  • 2 packages stew meat (about 1 pound each)
  • 9 packages ground beef (about 1 pound each)
In previous deliveries we've received briskets, filets, short ribs,English roasts, and kabob meat in place of some of what we received this time. 

Thirty pounds may sound like a lot of beef. We're a household of 4 adults. As we receive 30 pounds every 3 months, that works out to 10 pounds per month, or 2.5 pounds per adult per month, which is about 2/3 pound per adult per week. But that would only be if we ate all of the beef. We don't. We also share some of the beef with our son and daughter-in-law and other guests. So I guess we each consume closer to about 1/2 pound of beef (meat, bones, and fat) per week. 

How I handle and manage each delivery of beef
  • I itemize our delivery on a pad of paper as I unpack the cooler. I consult this list regularly as I plan meals.
  • I mark each packet with an initial for the month (in this case a "D" for December) and the year. This way I can ensure I'm using up the oldest packages first.
  • Although I have four different freezer spaces, I store all of the meat in just one of those spaces. So after itemizing and marking the packets, I put them all away, still frozen, into the 0 degree F stand alone freezer. By keeping it all together, I can quickly see how we're doing on meat throughout the period, and we don't "lose" any meat in one of the other freezers.
Leftover styrofoam coolers

I'm not thrilled to be amassing styrofoam coolers. But I have been putting them to good use. When we cleaned out the deep freeze this summer, I packed all of the freezer's contents into these coolers to keep it all cold/frozen. I also used one cooler to make my fall floral displays for the wall pockets by the front door, cutting down one cooler to fit the planters, then poking floral picks into the styrofoam slabs. This coming spring, I'll put some of them out on a free pile. I'm sure someone can find good use for clean, good condition coolers. I will hold onto a couple of coolers for my own use, though.

My thoughts on our choice

I'm pleased to be doing a part in keeping a small independent rancher in business as he works to support his family. The quality of the meat is higher than what I was buying in the grocery store. It simply smells better when cooking, and the taste is better. It's more expensive, but that is the tradeoff for making this sort of choice.

So, that's what buying beef in bulk looks like for my family.
Have you ever bought beef directly from a rancher? What was your experience?

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