Friday, November 1, 2013

martha's sugar cookies





I will never forget the first time I saw Martha Stewart's first book, Entertaining.  It was published in 1982, but I cannot remember the year my older sister showed it to me, could it have been that long ago?  I don't even remember if she bought it for me, or if I got it for myself, but it was like a bolt of lightning.  Beautiful photographs, perfect recipes - that worked!    I was blindsided and in love.  

I've made these cookies over and over - I make pale pink ruffled hearts for Valentine's Day.  Christmas reindeer and stars .  Teddy bears and one year, a group of cactus.  It is an easy dough to work with, and very forgiving - you can roll out the dough two more times using the scraps, without much difference in a splendid butter cookie, as long as you chill the dough in between.

I find her icing also easy - here I used one drop of blue to make this pretty Tiffany blue, then rolled the edges in sparkling sugar, which I found at Your Kitchen Store in Keene, NH.

Today I made these classic rounds for a friend who called at the last minute, in need of a few little treats for a book talk.


Martha's Iced Sugar Cookies

2 cups King Arthur all purpose flour
1/4 t. kosher salt
1/2 t. baking powder
1/2 cup ( 1 stick) room temperature unsalted butter
1 cup sugar
1 egg
2 T. brandy ( I used Courvoisier)
1/2 teaspoon vanilla

For the icing:

1 cup confectioners' sugar
1 egg white
few drops of lemon juice
1 drop blue liquid food coloring

Sift together the flour, salt, and baking powder.
Cream butter and sugar, then add the egg, brandy and vanilla and mix well.
Add dry ingredients a bit at a time and mix well.
Wrap dough in plastic wrap and chill in fridge 30 minutes.

Preheat oven to 350F. ( PS:  She specifies 400F, but I use 350F)

Slice the dough in half, and roll out each half to about 1/8 inch thick.
Use cookie cutters of your choosing and place on a baking sheet lined with clean foil.
Bake for 10 minutes - do not allow to brown!  Remove cookies to cooling rack until completely cool. If you are making several batches, turn down the heat by 5 degrees after the first two batches.

Mix icing ingredients well in a mixer bowl,  brush cookies once or twice (letting the cookies dry in between), then roll edges in sparkling sugar.

This recipe makes about 2 1/2 dozen cookies, depending on how thinly you roll the dough.

What I'm doing:

Lots of lazy walks under a bower of still-brilliant yellow leaves,  bouncing on spongy beds of bright green mosses, watching the water in the pond, which will be all-too-soon frozen, and loving those little children in my life.


7 comments:

  1. Sparkly cookies, irresistible! This brings back memories of freelancing at Clarkson Potter, and working on one of her cookbooks... it was like dropping into Martha-land, this little spot of beauty in the middle of gritty NY.

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  2. Wow - that I didn't know about you, Diary! You described it perfectly, or at least how I saw Martha-land in those days - what a wonderful experience!

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  3. Hi Katrina. Do you always use foil for baking these or is parchment just as good?

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  4. Elizabeth - Parchment is fine. When I started baking cookies a LONG time ago, I was told to use a clean sheet of foil for every batch of cookies, so I do. Never liked Silpat sheets, which always looked unwashed to me.

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  5. I bought a huge box of parchment sheets from a restaurant supply a couple years ago. I try to re-use them if I can, especially for things like sourdough dog biskets, which aren't greasy.
    I agree silpat sheets are strange, I had one once and it always felt greasy to me, then I accidently cut holes in it and never bought another.

    I'll try one sheet of cookies with foil and one with parchment and see if there is any difference. Thank you

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  6. My first batch @350 for 10mn was too soft, they should turn out crisp, right? I turned up the heat for the second batch and I think they turned out right, taste is great

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  7. Elizabeth - it could be your oven - they get crisper as they cool. Sounds like you've worked out what the problem was - and solved it! Glad you liked them!

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