Almond cookies bring joy to holiday table

Family favourite based on recipe with origins in 16th-century China

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When family rivalries take over the kitchen, sometimes a different recipe can help keep the peace.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 19/12/2020 (1759 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

When family rivalries take over the kitchen, sometimes a different recipe can help keep the peace.

For Sandra Hirschfeldt, the recipe that sets her apart is for Chinese Almond Cookies, which help provide a bit of variety on the dessert platter at family Christmas gatherings.

“My family does a lot of shortbread and I thought, ‘This is something different,’” says Hirschfeldt, who lives in Fort Richmond with Bob, her husband of 35 years. “I just like trying different things and it looked easy.”

Supplied
The almond in the centre of these cookies is said to signify good luck.
Supplied The almond in the centre of these cookies is said to signify good luck.

The recipe Hirschfeldt shares for Day 9 of the Free Press’s 12 Days of Christmas Cookies comes from her well-thumbed copy of Company’s Coming Cookies, which was published in 1988.

Company’s Coming’s founder Jean Paré began the popular series back in 1981 by self-publishing her recipes and selling the plastic-coil-bound cookbooks in grocery stores, gas stations and country fairs near her home in Edmonton.

The business has since published more than 200 titles and has sold more than 30 million cookbooks, making Paré’s original venture one of Canada’s greatest entrepreneurial stories.

The cookbook offers no details as to what’s Chinese about the cookies and Hirschfeldt isn’t sure either, except that the almond flavouring and the almond in the centre sets the cookie apart from others.

According to the website Biscuit People, Chinese Almond Cookies go back to 16th-century China, when they were first created in the emperor’s palace as a gift. Commoners also loved them, and the recipe came to North America along with Chinese immigrants in the 1800s.

The almond in the centre represents good luck, the website says.

Bakers can add to their luck by taking some advice from Hirschfeldt, who has made the cookies countless times.

Supplied
Sandra Hirschfeldt discovered the recipe for Chinese Almond Cookies in Company's Coming Cookies.
Supplied Sandra Hirschfeldt discovered the recipe for Chinese Almond Cookies in Company's Coming Cookies.

“When you make it up, make sure your dough is not too dry, because you have to form them into balls. If (the dough) gets crumbly, it’s hard to work with. Sometimes you have to add some moisture,” she says. “Sometimes it depends on the size of the egg or if you overmeasured the amount of flour.”

alan.small@freepress.mb.ca

Twitter:@AlanDSmall

Alan Small

Alan Small
Reporter

Alan Small was a journalist at the Free Press for more than 22 years in a variety of roles, the last being a reporter in the Arts and Life section.

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