Use your heart-shaped cookie cutter to make Shamrock Cookies
for St. Patrick's Day.
Here's how:
Time needed from start to finish, including time to put icing on
the cookies, 2 to 2.5 hours.
Yield: 2 dozen large shamrock cookies
Pictures of Shamrock Cookies available at —
http://www.ruralroute2.com/cookie_pictures.html
Shamrock Cookie Recipe
1/2 cup shortening
1/2 cup butter or margarine
2 cups sugar
3 eggs
1/4 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1/2 teaspoon salt
5 cups flour
Cream shortening and sugar together. Beat in eggs. Stir in
milk, vanilla and salt. Mix in flour. Work the dough with your
hands for a minute before rolling out.
Roll out the dough to 1/8 inch thick. Use flour as needed to
roll out the cookies.
For each shamrock, you will need 3 heart-shaped cookies.
Place one heart on an ungreased cookie sheet, then put one heart
on each side at a 90-degree angle so the tips at the bottom are
overlapping. Gently press the cookies together where they
overlap. Take a lump of dough the size of a small walnut. Roll
into a rope. Press one inch of the rope onto the bottom of the
shamrock. Shape the remaining rope into a stem and flatten
gently. (Four or five shamrocks will fit on each cookie sheet.)
Bake in a 350 degree oven for 12 minutes, or until golden
brown. Immediately remove the cookies from the cookie sheet and
allow to cool.
When the cookies are cooled thoroughly, frost with shamrock
icing. For added decoration, use cookie sprinkles, if desired.
Shamrock Icing (makes enough to frost 2 dozen shamrock
cookies)
3 cups of powdered sugar
1/4 cup soft butter or margarine
5 or 6 tablespoons milk
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon vanilla
10 drops green food coloring
Measure the powdered sugar into a mixing bowl. Work the
butter/margarine into the dry powdered sugar with a mixing
spoon. Add salt and vanilla. Add the milk 1 tablespoon at a time
and mix thoroughly after each addition. When the icing is
finished, add the food coloring and mix thoroughly.
LeAnn Ralph may be contacted at
http://ruralroute2.com
bigpines@ruralroute2.com.
LeAnn R. Ralph is the editor of the Wisconsin Regional Writer
(the quarterly publication of the Wisconsin Regional Writers'
Assoc.) and is the author of the book: Christmas in Dairyland
(True Stories from a Wisconsin Farm) (trade paperback; August
2003). She is working on her next book, Give Me a Home Where the
Dairy Cows Roam. See what readers are saying about Christmas in
Dairyland —
http://ruralroute2.com
by Lee Jackson
On March 17, St. Patrick’s Day, everybody claims to be a wee
bit Irish. Along with the wearing of the green, there are many
traditions and activities that help celebrate the life of St.
Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland. You can help your child
enter into the spirit of Irish lore by preparing foods
associated with this feast day.
In her award winning cookbook, Cooking Around the Calendar
With Kids — Holiday and Seasonal Food and Fun, Amy Houts
includes many foods you can make with your child to commemorate
this special day. Irish Soda Bread is an easy bread recipe from
this children/adult cookbook that uses baking soda instead of
yeast to make the bread rise. Knowing a little about Ireland
geography, growing conditions, and types of grains made into
flour helps to see why this was a popular early choice.
Most grains such as wheat, corn, rye, barley, millet and
others can be made into flour. Some grow better under certain
climactic conditions than others. Because of its location and
temperature, most of the grain grown in early Ireland was of the
soft wheat variety.
Soft wheat flours make tender cakes, pie crusts, muffins,
pancakes, dumplings, and other food products which are leavened,
or made light, by using baking soda and baking powder. Yeast
needs a hard wheat flour to make food products rise and give
them strength and structure. The two proteins in wheat flour,
glutenin and gliadin, when combined with water, form sheets of
gluten. These elastic sheets trap and hold the air bubbles as
the dough is mixed and kneaded. Yeast produces millions of
bubbles of gas which inflate the trapped air bubbles. The dough
then becomes lighter and begins to rise.
The right flour makes an incredible difference in the quality
of food products. Now we can buy cake flour, instant flours,
bleached and unbleached all-purpose flours, bread flour and
others that are proportioned for different products by millers.
But before this flour technology came about, consumers needed to
adapt different leavening agents to the type of flour being
used.
Baking soda, baking powder, yeast, and steam or air are the
chief leavening agents that make foods light. Baking soda and
baking powder are known as chemical leaveners. They both produce
carbon dioxide gas that helps leaven muffins, cakes, quick
breads, and so on. Baking soda is most often combined with a
mild acid such as buttermilk, sour cream, citrus juice, and
others. The addition of a mild acid such as this makes the
baking soda work faster and a better flavored product develops.
Some food products such as cream puffs, popovers, and other
cakes and pastries use steam to rise. Water in the dough or
batter turns to steam in the hot oven and makes the food light.
Air beaten into egg whites is the principle leaven of omelets,
souffles, and sponge cakes.
It is not known when leaven was first used to help make baked
goods rise, but the Egyptians are given credit for the first
accounts of it. The Greeks and Romans made bread with leaven but
used a fermenting process. The origin of baking powders is not
known, although the first one was patented in 1837. They were
not as convenient to use as those we know today as they came in
two parts – hydrochloric acid and soda – and the two needed to
be measured out separately and added. Not until almost the
beginning of the twentieth century were the materials mixed
together with cornstarch, packed in a tin can, and labeled
baking powder.
Baking soda is four times stronger than baking powder – a
little baking soda goes a long ways. Generally, for each cup of
flour, use ¼ teaspoon of baking soda. You would use about 1 to 1
¼ teaspoon of baking powder per cup of flour. Using too much
baking powder actually makes baked goods fall, which sounds
strange. But the bubbles get big, float to the top, and pop.
Then the product falls and is heavy. Now, you can toss in a
little science discussion as well as history as you work with
your child in making this delicious Irish bread. You can talk
about the reason for using buttermilk as well as the baking soda
in this recipe. If you don’t have buttermilk on hand, for each
one cup measurement, you can add 1 tablespoon of lemon juice or
vinegar and enough milk to make one cup, or in this recipe use
1-1/2 tablespoon lemon juice or vinegar and enough milk to equal
1-1/2 cups.
Irish Soda Bread
4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
1-1/2 cups buttermilk
Preheat oven to 400 degrees F. Grease a cookie sheet.
Children can measure and stir together flour, baking soda,
and salt in a large bowl. Make a well in the center and stir in
buttermilk. Dough should form a ball.
On a floured board or cloth, children can knead and shape
dough into a round loaf, about 8 inches across. Place dough in
the center of the cookie sheet. Score bread dough with a sharp
knife; make an X about 1/2-inch deep. (The X is supposed to ward
off the devil). Bake for about 40 minutes, until brown. Serve
hot.
Yield: 1 loaf
And, in true Irish fashion, as you work you can discuss the
significance of the shamrock* in Irish culture and the meaning
behind this well-known Irish phrase, “may the wind always be at
your back”*.
This recipe and other food and fun suggestions can be found
in Cooking Around the Calendar With Kids — Holiday and Seasonal
Food and Fun. This is a fun book you can read and use with your
child all year long.
*Shamrock — three leaf clover used to illustrate the
Christian trinity of God the Father, the Son, and Holy Spirit
but one God.
* “May the wind always be at your back” — indicates you wish
the very best to another. You wish no harm to come to them and
to stay steady on their right path.
This cookbook/activity book is available directly from the
publisher, Images Unlimited Publishing, P.O. Box 305, Maryville,
MO 64468 or through their website
http://imagesunlimitedpub.com Cost $12.95 (softcover) and
$24.95 (hardcover) each plus shipping. (Mo residents add 7.475%
tax). imagesun@asde.net -end-
Lee Jackson may be contacted at
http://www.imagesunlimitedpub.com
imagesun@asde.net. Over
20 years in the publishing business. Publisher of books for
cooks, apple lovers, parents and children