Jerri’s Holiday Cookies

Christmas was cookie time when I was growing up. Actually, there were always cookies in the Rang household, but Mom made extra batches of cookies for the holidays, so I think of that season as cookie time.

Starting in early December, she made oatmeal raisin cookies, peanut butter cookies, Grandma Rang’s date cookies, Grandma Hopp’s gingerbread cookies , sugar cookies, and spritz cookies. There were others I’m sure, but mostly I just remember that there was never a shortage of cookies in the house, and there were more choices around Christmas than at any other time in the year.

Today Jerri and I bake most of our cookies around the holidays. One of our favorites is made with a recipe using yeast dough that Jerri found a long time ago. We like these cookies because they are not overly sweet and have a wonderful yeasty flavor.

Jerri has made them many times for the Christmas holidays. This recipe is great for introducing young children to the joy of cooking and turning them into creative bakers. They can help by shaping the dough into candy canes, snakes, snowmen, cats, Christmas trees and lots of other things you may have never heard of.

Usually I think of cookies as a dessert for lunch or dinner, but these holiday cookies are great for topping off a breakfast too.

INGREDIENTS:

For the dough:

4 tsp. active dry yeast
1/2 cup warm water
1/3 cup sugar
1 tsp. salt
3 cups sifted all-purpose flour
2 eggs at room temperature
1/3 cup softened shortening or butter

For the fruit and nut mixture:

1/4 cup chopped walnuts
1/2 cup chopped mixed fruitcake fruit
1/2 cup sugar.

Put a pinch of sugar into the warm water in a cup. Stir in the yeast and let stand a
few minutes until it begins to foam.

Measure the sugar and salt into a mixing bowl, and add the yeast mixture. Mix in half of the flour and beat until smooth. Beat the eggs in a small bowl until they are lemon colored. Stir the shortening and eggs into the batter.

Mix in the rest of the flour one or two tablespoonfuls at a time until it is well blended. Scrape down the dough from the sides of bowl, cover the bowl with a damp towel and let the dough rise in a warm place until it has doubled in size. This can take anywhere from thirty minutes to over an hour, depending on the temperature.

While the dough is rising, chop the nuts and fruit very fine, ideally into a 1/8 inch dice. Mix the fruit and nuts with the sugar in a shallow pan and set it aside. Preheat the oven to 375º.

If you have some young helpers, this is a good time for a lesson in handwashing.

After the dough has risen, drop it by heaping teaspoonfuls into the fruit mixture. You can drop in 3 or 4 spoonfuls at a time. Take each piece in your hands and work in some of the fruits and nuts, then stretch the dough into pencil-like strips. Shape it into snails, twists, candy canes, knots, or figure 8’s.

Place the shapes on lightly greased baking sheets and let them stand ten to twelve minutes. Set the pans on the middle rack in the oven and bake 10 to 15 minutes, or until golden brown. Remove the cookies from the oven and cool them on a rack. You will have two dozen large or four dozen small cookies.

Dave’s Venison Steak Simmered in Relish

It was a beautiful day on Chequamegon Bay, but my mother was seasick. I had arranged a half-day fishing charter with Captain Dave Sorenson from Ashland, Wisconsin. Dave Sorenson docked his boat across the bay at the marina in Washburn and had everything ready when we showed up a half hour before our scheduled start.

I had had a little trouble organizing the trip. My father was afraid that he would have difficulty getting in and out of the boat. I explained that Dave had a big boat over 30 feet long with a cabin and comfortable benches in case he got tired, but Dad still balked at the idea. When he said that he didn’t know if he could step into or out of the boat, I saw my opening: “I’ll rent a wheelchair for you. We can just wheel you on board.”

“I don’t need a wheelchair,” he snarled, and agreed to the trip.

My mother’s objection was that she was afraid of getting seasick on a big boat. She loved to fish and had spent many hours in canoes and fishing boats on lakes near Hayward. Persuading her meant changing tactics and emphasizing that Dave’s boat was not like a ship. It was just a bit bigger than the boats she was used to. She didn’t get seasick in a rowboat, so she wouldn’t get seasick on Dave’s boat.

But she did. About two minutes after we cast off the lines and moved away from the dock, she went into the cabin and proceeded to turn green. Once we had gotten past Madeline Island, the fish finder began showing schools of fish. Dave throttled down the boat and explained that we should decide who would catch the first fish. There were six of us. I’m not sure of the exact order, but I know Dad was number one and I took the number six position. Mom said that she didn’t think she should have a number, but I think that we gave her number three.

So down went the outriggers and we began trolling. The weather was beautiful with a nice breeze. The fish were not too cooperative, but Dad hauled in a lake trout after half an hour or so, then Jerri reeled in a nice fish. The sun came out, the wind freshened and the boat rolled a little more. When I told Mom that when I was seasick on my trip to Germany I felt a lot better when I got on deck, she just groaned. At least she didn’t tell me that she had told me she would get seasick.

All of a sudden, there was a fish on rod number three. I opened the door to the cabin and told her there was a fish on her rod. She said, “Have someone else take it,” but I persisted.

“Come on, Mom, I’ll help you. Just crank the reel. If you can’t do it, we’ll take over.”

As luck would have it, a nice coho salmon was on the rod. As she began cranking the reel, the fish jumped out of the water sixty or seventy feet from the boat, and Mom began trembling with the excitement every fisherman or fisherwoman knows. My recollection is that the whole boat began shaking, but she kept right on cranking.

After Dave netted her fish and handed it to her, she held it in front of her in the way that every experienced angler knows will make it look bigger than it is while we took a photo.

Only then did she realize that she was no longer seasick. A salmon on the line works better than dramamine!

Captain Dave took a photo of all of us with our catch when we got back to the marina. There are Dad and Mom complete with lake trout, salmon and smiles. Jerri, my sister Barb and my brother-in-law Patrick are standing next to them with big grins and their trophies. At the end of the line is one person with a brave smile but no fish. Guess who.

Dave published The Outdoor Gourmet Cookbook filled with some tasty recipes for wild game and fish. Besides recipes for everything from crow to muskrat, the book includes useful fishing and hunting tips. If you have a hunter or fisher in your family, you should try to get a copy of Dave’s cookbook.

Jerri adjusted Dave’s recipe slightly to make it one of our two favorite ways of cooking venison steak.

INGREDIENTS:

1 1/2 – 2 lbs. venison round steak
1/4 cup all-purpose flour
2 or 3 T bacon drippings
1/4 cup green olives, sliced
1 cup chopped onion
1 tsp. salt
1/4 cup sweet pickle relish
1/2 can or a small jar of finely chopped pimiento
1 four ounce can mushrooms, drained
1/4 tsp. black pepper
4 sweet pickles, chopped medium (about 1/4 cup)
1/2 cup diced celery
1/2 cup water
1 T sugar

PROCEDURE:

Start with venison round steak about 1/2 to 3/4 inch thick. Cut the steak into serving size pieces and coat them with flour.

Clean and chop the celery and onion medium fine. Slice the olives and chop the pickles medium. Drain the mushrooms and stir the salt and sugar into a half cup of water.

Heat the bacon drippings in a skillet over moderately high heat and brown the meat on both sides. Turn the heat to low, stir in the vegetables and water mixture and grind the pepper over everything. Cover the skillet and simmer the meat for about an hour and a half. Turn the meat to mix it with the vegetables occasionally. Add water if necessary.

Serve with rice, a green salad and bread. Jerri uses brown rice or a blend of brown and wild rice.

NOTES: You can substitute lard or shortening for the bacon grease, but the smoky flavor of bacon grease adds to the flavor. Incidentally, venison has virtually no cholesterol, so this dish is both tasty and good for you.