July 11, 2012

Fresh fruit and these cookies make beautiful music

Avail yourself of the bounty at farmers markets and these recipes for two old favorites.

By Russ Parsons / McClatchy Newspapers

Strolling the Santa Monica farmers market, thinking about dinner. Five pounds of that thumb-thick jumbo asparagus from Zuckerman Farms? Of course! I already had carrots and favas from my garden. I'd ordered a leg of lamb. But what's for dessert? Almond torte maybe? Lemon curd tart?

COOKIE RECIPES
click image to enlarge

Snickerdoodles are often described as a sugar cookie, but the addition of cinnamon intensifies the flavor, making it an equally good match for tart citrus or sweet berries.

McClatchy Newspapers

But all that citrus – Oro Blancos, grapefruits, blood oranges, tangerines – I just couldn't resist them. So maybe I'd do a fruit salad with a spiced syrup? Or just tangerine sections sweetened a little with rosemary honey? Then, suddenly, my mind was made up for me: I tasted a wedge of Page mandarin from Armando Garcia's stand. The flavor was almost explosive: sweet, spicy, perfect all by itself. Honey? Syrup? Forget it, the juice was almost syrupy just as it was. There's nothing I could do to make this thing any better.

Still, even I'm not Chez Panisse-y enough to serve just a bowl of fruit and call it dessert. That's where cookies come in.

Here in the heart of the fruit season, a simple cookie can be a cook's best friend. Right now we've got citrus like those mandarins, terrific sweet strawberries, and the first apricots and cherries, then before you know it, peaches and nectarines. There's nothing that complements a great piece of fruit like a cookie.

I've got two old favorites that I fall back on regularly. The first is an almond macaroon. It's about as simple as a cookie can get – just five ingredients: almonds, sugar, salt, egg whites and a whiff of vanilla. Grind the almonds, sugar, salt and vanilla to a fine powder; beat the egg whites to soft peaks and pulse them into the almond mixture. Roll between wet palms (they're sticky as heck) and bake.

The cookies come out of the oven crisp on the outside yet moist and chewy on the inside, with a flavor that is deeply and purely almond. A perfect match for citrus or stone fruit.

My other go-to cookie is an old-fashioned snickerdoodle. Its flavor is a little more complex than the macaroon – a combination of browned wheat, the slight bitterness of cream of tartar and sweet spicy cinnamon sugar.

The recipe is my mom's, and I have a love-hate relationship with it. I can't tell you how many times I've labored all day over a big dinner party menu only to have everyone walk out telling me how great these danged cookies are.

I guess the only thing worse would be if they just talked about the fruit.

 

SNICKERDOODLES

Total time: 40 minutes, plus chilling time

Servings: About 4 dozen cookies

Note: To make cinnamon sugar, mix 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon (or to taste) with a quarter cup of granulated sugar.

1 cup shortening

1½ cups sugar

2 eggs

2¾ cups flour

2 teaspoons cream of tartar

1 teaspoon baking soda

½ teaspoon salt

Cinnamon sugar

1. Heat the oven to 350 degrees. In the bowl of a stand mixer using the paddle attachment, or in a large bowl using an electric mixer, cream together the shortening and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating thoroughly between each addition.

2. In a separate bowl, sift together the flour, cream of tartar, baking soda and salt. Add to the shortening mixture, beating well. Gather the dough in a ball, wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate until firm, about 30 minutes.

3. Tear off walnut-size pieces of dough and roll each into a ball. Dust with cinnamon sugar and place on an ungreased baking sheet, spacing the cookies about 2 inches apart. Bake until the cookies are light brown and firm on top, 10 to 15 minutes; the tops will be deeply cracked, and the centers will still be somewhat soft.

(Continued on page 2)

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