Christmas

1676 recipes found

Kelly Fields’s Haystack Cookies
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Kelly Fields’s Haystack Cookies

I toasted the rolled oats called for in Ms. Fields's recipe, just to get a little more texture out of them. Make sure the mixture is hot when you drop the cookies or the texture will be too crumbly.

50m2 1/2 to 3 dozen cookies
The Fluffiest Royal Icing
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

The Fluffiest Royal Icing

Royal icing is the classic sweet glue that holds together gingerbread houses and provides a glossy medium for elaborate cookie decorations. Many recipes call for egg whites or cream of tartar or both, but meringue powder (available online or at specialty food stores) offers gloss, stability and creaminess without the use of raw eggs or other ingredients. This recipe was developed by Georganne Bell, a professional cookie-decorating teacher in Salt Lake City who doesn’t like traditional vanilla sugar cookies. The icing takes coloring easily, and pipes nicely from an icing bag or even a plastic bag with a corner snipped off.

10mAbout 5 cups, enough for about 5 dozen small cookies
Dirty Chai Earthquake Cookies
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Dirty Chai Earthquake Cookies

In case you’re wondering about the name of this cakey, chewy-edged cookie, which nearly explodes through its sugary crust, it’s a nod to a coffee bar creation in which a shot of espresso tops off a cup of masala chai, the Indian spiced tea. It’s right at home on a traditional holiday cookie plate, thanks to its festive cinnamon, cardamom, ginger and cloves. Feel free to add a little freshly grated nutmeg, if you’re so inclined. A strong coffee flavor adds nuance; black pepper lends a spicy kick; and malted milk powder, browned butter and brown sugar all contribute toasty warm notes to this craveable treat.

45m2 dozen cookies
Peppermint Stripe Cookies
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Peppermint Stripe Cookies

Inspired by a series of brushstroke paintings by Ellsworth Kelly, these sugar cookies are meant to be lined up in a tight grid, painted with bold red stripes and arranged randomly. To paint on cookies, they must be first coated with royal icing and allowed to dry, preferably overnight. Luster dust and petal dust, colored powders used in cake decorating, are mixed with peppermint extract (or lemon extract, if you prefer) as a medium. (The dusts are available from cake-decorating stores, craft stores or online.) Make sure the peppermint extract you use is primarily alcohol, which evaporates immediately, leaving the pigment behind, and not primarily peppermint oil, which might stain the cookies. Flat, soft art brushes work best to apply the color, and a plastic paint tray with wells is best for mixing them.

1hAbout 2 dozen cookies
Best Sugar Cookies
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Best Sugar Cookies

This easy sugar cookie dough is perfect for rolling and cutting and bakes into cookies ideal for frosting. It holds its shape well during baking, tastes great, and the flavor can be changed according to whim: Swap out the vanilla and try adding orange zest, lemon zest, finely chopped rosemary or almond extract. You can also give these cookies a radical makeover by decorating them with icing. A few drops of gel food coloring turn them into Color-Field Cookies; red stripes transform them into Peppermint Stripe Cookies; or a sprinkle of pomegranate seeds and pistachios create Abstract Art Cookies. Rubber spacers on your rolling pin are especially helpful here: They’ll help you roll the dough to an even thickness, resulting in beautiful, uniform cookies.

1h2 dozen cookies
Pumpkin Ravioli with Sage Walnut Pumpkin Butter
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Pumpkin Ravioli with Sage Walnut Pumpkin Butter

These homemade ravioli are simple to make but add a wow factor to the holiday table. And they can be made ahead and frozen, and cooked up in minutes on the day. Two (15-ounce) cans of pure pumpkin purée may be substituted for the fresh pumpkin if desired.

2h48 2 ½-inch ravioli (about 8 servings)
Brown Sugar-Anise Cookies
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Brown Sugar-Anise Cookies

This big, irresistible cookie takes almost no time to make, and is great for those occasions when you want a delicious treat, fast. If you think you don’t like anise seeds, you might enjoy their fragrant notes in this recipe, but you can always use sesame seeds instead. Or leave them out altogether — these cookies are still good with just sugar (use turbinado if you don’t have sanding or sparkling sugar). You can keep the rolled-out dough in the freezer, and throw it in the oven for a dinner party. With a little sorbet or ice cream, you have a dessert ready for company.

40mAbout 30 cookies
Tiny, Salty, Chocolaty Cookies
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Tiny, Salty, Chocolaty Cookies

You do not have to be a chocolate person to love this perfect, unfussy, snacky dessert, which is like the edge of a chewy brownie but in cookie form. Adapted from "Nothing Fancy" by Alison Roman (Clarkson Potter, 2019), these cookies require no special equipment, fancy techniques or chilling time, which means that even if you bake only once a year, you can still make these. Lightly sweet and definitely salty, it's ideal for the end of a meal.

20m24 cookies
Biscotti
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Biscotti

These classic Italian cookies get their signature crispness from being twice-baked: First, the dough is cooked in logs, cut into slices, then baked again. Because they travel and keep well, a pile of them makes an excellent gift wrapped in a cellophane bag and tied with a ribbon. Feel free to experiment with add-ins: Sub in hazelnuts or pistachios for the almonds. Add mini chocolate chips or dried cranberries, or a teaspoon of citrus zest. Or take the cookies over the top by drizzling with melted chocolate, glazing with icing or dusting with sprinkles. You do you.

1hAbout 24 cookies
Black and Brown Rice Stuffing With Walnuts and Pears
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Black and Brown Rice Stuffing With Walnuts and Pears

Pears and walnuts complement dark black and pale brown rice in this sweet and savory mixture. Make sure you don’t overcook the pears; they need only a quick sear in the pan. The cooked grains will keep for 3 days in the refrigerator and can be frozen. The stuffing benefits from being made a day ahead. The optional red lentils or cranberries add some color to the mix.

1h 30m12 to 14 servings
Cutout Sugar Cookies
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Cutout Sugar Cookies

This recipe is adapted from a 1981 Mimi Sheraton recipe for Murbeteig, a pie and sugar-cookie dough from Germany. This buttery cookie isn’t too sweet, which makes it an excellent canvas for sugary holiday adornments, like Royal Icing. The dough warms quickly because of the high butter content, so work fast to roll, cut out and transfer the dough to the baking sheets to get the best results.

1h 30m2 1/2 dozen 3-inch cutout cookies
Vermouth Royale
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Vermouth Royale

Bubbly, citrus-forward and refreshing, the Vermouth Royale is just as lovely served in the dead of winter as it is poolside during the summer. If you don’t have a muddler, the business end of a wooden spoon or tapered rolling pin work just as well. Since crème de cassis can quickly skew a cocktail saccharine, the Vermouth Royale starts with a half-ounce. That said, if your preference for sweetness skews a touch higher, feel free to use up to three-quarters of an ounce of crème de cassis.

5m1 cocktail
Bakewell Tart With Cranberry Sauce
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Bakewell Tart With Cranberry Sauce

A layer of cranberry sauce below orange-scented almond frangipane is the perfect balance of tart and sweet. It’s a holiday play on Britain’s beloved Cherry Bakewell tart that gives you a reason to make extra sauce — or a good excuse to use up leftovers. Temperatures are key to the result: The cranberry sauce needs to be slightly warm to spread over the prebaked pie crust, and the frangipane must be fridge-cold to prevent it from splitting in the oven.

2h 30mOne 11-inch tart (about 10 servings)
Roasted Carrots With Cilantro Yogurt and Peanuts
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Roasted Carrots With Cilantro Yogurt and Peanuts

Carrot takes center stage in this easy-to-assemble side dish. Tangy Greek yogurt is combined with cilantro, coriander and lime juice to create a creamy bed for carrots that have been roasted until just caramelized. Salted peanuts finish the dish with a nice little crunch. If you can find rainbow carrots, this dish becomes even more vivid, but straightforward orange ones work just as nicely.

35m4 to 6 servings
Chocolate Kolbasa (Russian No-Bake Fudge Cookies)
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chocolate Kolbasa (Russian No-Bake Fudge Cookies)

The chef Bonnie Morales Frumkin upgraded this recipe from a treat her Russian family often made during the Soviet era as a way to stretch precious supplies like cookies and cocoa powder. By adding bittersweet chocolate and toasted hazelnuts, she has made it positively luxurious. The treat gets its name from its resemblance to a salami, with bits of nuts and cookies studding each slice.

3h 30mAbout 3 dozen cookies
Hazelnut, Pear and Cardamom Tart
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Hazelnut, Pear and Cardamom Tart

This is an elegant alternative to the holiday parade of sugary pies. Cardamom adds a grown-up twist to the classic combination of hazelnut and pear. (Don’t overdo the spice, however, or your dessert will taste more like a cold remedy than a treat.) Cut corners by pressing out the crust, but don’t skip making your own roasted hazelnut meal: The deep, caramel flavor of toasted nuts is worth the labor. Use ripe pears, or poach harder fruit until tender before adding to the tart.

4hOne 11-inch tart (about 10 servings)
Porchetta Pork Roast
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Porchetta Pork Roast

This rich, crackling-coated pork roast has all the intense garlic, lemon and herb flavors of a classic Italian porchetta, but is much simpler to make (case in point: you don’t need to de-bone a whole pig). The only potentially tricky part is scoring the skin. If you are buying the meat from your butcher you can have them do it for you. Or, use your sharpest knife or a razor blade. It’s worth the effort for the amber-colored cracklings it produces. The recipe feeds a crowd, so make it for a large gathering. Or plan on leftovers, which make excellent sandwiches for lunch the next day.

12h8 to 12 servings
White Chocolate Glaze
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

White Chocolate Glaze

10m2 1/4 cups
Chocolate Glaze
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chocolate Glaze

15m2 ounces
Chocolate Truffles
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Chocolate Truffles

If the word “ganache” intimidates you, you are not alone. Maybe if the stuff were called “basic, simple and entirely superior chocolate sauce,” more people would make it. Ganache is not just chocolate sauce, though; it is also the basis for the easiest chocolate truffles.

1h 30mAbout 1 1/2 cups ganache, or 24 truffles
Vanilla Sugar
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Vanilla Sugar

3m3 cups
Good Housekeeping's Popovers
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Good Housekeeping's Popovers

1h 15m6 large popovers
Peanut Butter Cookies
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Peanut Butter Cookies

No mixer is required to make these craggy rounds that deliver all the comfort of eating a spoonful of peanut butter straight out of the jar — but with the creamy-candy richness of peanut butter chips in each bite. (If you’re a crunchy peanut butter person, you can throw in whole salted nuts, too.) Because of their low proportion of flour, these little disks develop fudgy centers inside lightly crisp edges. There are countless varieties of peanut butter in markets and all yield different cookie results. These use natural peanut butter, which is just peanuts blended with salt, so they taste especially peanutty.

45mAbout 50 cookies
Whipped Cream
cooking.nytimes.com faviconNYT Cooking

Whipped Cream

Desserts are good. Desserts topped with a flourish of whipped cream are better. For the best results, start with cold heavy cream as well as a chilled bowl and whisk (or attachment if you're using an electric mixer). Play around with one or two of the optional flavorings, but don't go overboard: Whipped cream should enhance a dessert, not upstage it.

5m2 cups