Like most of the northeast we had our first blizzard of the year today. Here in the White Mountains of New Hampshire we got about a foot of beautiful snow. Which made it a perfect day for Dan to make his favorite holiday cookie from his childhood, Snowball Cookies. These wonderful delights are also known as Cannonball Cookies (actually what Dan’s family called them). I’ve also seen them called Mexican Wedding Cookies and Russian Tea Cookies.
I searched high and low for a history of these little cookies, but couldn’t find anything. Dan grew up in the 1950s and that’s about the era they begin to appear in cookbooks. We got our recipe from an undated cookbook called Tasty Treats for the Holidays published by the Home Service Department of the Rochester (NY) Gas & Electric. Judging from the graphic design I’d say it dates from the 1960s.
Dan was just dying to make these cookies which were his all time Christmas favorites. Here’s the recipe:
- 1/2 cup shortening (he used softened butter)
- 1/4 cup evaporated milk
- 1/2 tsp. vanilla
- 1 and 3/4 cup flour
- 1/2 tsp. salt
- 6 tsp. confectioner’s sugar
- 1 c. chopped nuts (he used walnuts, but many people use almonds)
Take the butter out of the refrigerator and let it soften
Pre-heat oven to 375 degrees
Dan making the cookies
Once butter is softened, cream “until very plastic and smooth”
Beat in evaporated milk a little at a time until it is all taken up by the shortening (you need a hand mixer to do this)
Add vanilla
Sift together the flour, salt and confectioners’ sugar
Add the dry ingredients a little at a time to shortening mixture (it got very dry and Dan ended up using his hands to blend this)
Add nuts which have been chopped (Dan cheated and used the food processor)
Roll the cookies into tiny balls (about 1 tablespoon of dough per cookie)
Place cookies on a greased and floured baking sheet
The cookies took much longer to bake than what the recipe said. Dan ended up baking them for 30 minutes.
While still warm, roll them in more confectioners’ sugar
Finish by rolling in confectioners' sugar
The result? Another winner in the homemade dessert department. It was interesting to compare them to some similar snowball cookies that were store bought and brought to our Open House party as a present. While these were good too, they were sweeter and not as fresh tasting.
Hope you enjoy this arctic blast from the past.
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