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Buttery Sugar Cookies

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From Carolyn’s Cake, Candy and Cookie Supplies. Owner Michele Clemons substitutes butter-flavored extract for the almond in this cookie, but just about any extract will work. She also recommends lemon or coconut for springtime cookies.

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Whether you’re serving an elegant evening meal for the Easter holiday or a more casual brunch, the arrival of spring begs for desserts with a seasonal flair.

“I love that Easter and spring arrive together because it means that I can start baking with fresh fruit,” says Gina Garcia, of Cake.

Garcia’s new bakery, an expansion to Chaps in the Latah Creek Shopping Center on South Cheney Spokane Road, is scheduled to open soon.

She shared a trifle recipe that comes together quickly with layers of lemon pound cake and lemon custard with fresh berries.

“My family is Italian and we typically celebrate Easter with a fruit trifle made with zabaglione, a frothy custard flavored with marsala,” Garcia says. “I have adapted this dessert for folks who may not like the sharp flavor of Marsala.

“In the recipe, I have made a lemon custard which is just tart enough to contrast nicely with the sweet berries.”

For those who are up for more of a challenge, Europa pastry chef Christie Sutton shared a recipe for a classic French dessert called pithiviers (pronounced pee-tee-vyay).

“I was just trying to come up with something a little different,” she says. “The light and flaky pastry just makes me think of Easter.”

The layers of puff pastry surround a rich almond filling and raspberry preserves. Sutton tops the dessert with fresh fruit and powdered sugar and serves it slightly warm or at room temperature.

Davenport Hotel executive chef Bryan Franz shared a recipe for individual mascarpone cheesecakes topped with huckleberry compote. (Substitute blueberries if your freezer stash of the wild berries is gone.)

He tops the cheesecakes with the compote and mint leaves for garnish, along with a pistachio tuile – a crunchy French cookie.

Decorated sugar cookies are a popular item for Easter at Carolyn’s Cake, Candy and Cookie Supplies, says new owner Michele Clemons.

Clemons purchased the store, 1705 N. Hamilton St., from original owner Carolyn Largent last April. She shared the recipe instructors give to students in classes.

She recommends decorating the cookies with candy melts rather than royal icing. The candy comes in an array of colors that can be melted and poured into squeeze bottles for easy decorating.

The store offers decorating classes for cookie bouquets, as well as cake decorating instruction. A new series of classes will be announced soon.

I couldn’t resist throwing in a few more recipes for good measure. White chocolate dipped strawberries with citrus sugar are finished quickly and have a nice seasonal flavor.

Coconut cupcakes drew raves all around when a friend made them recently. (They’re the grown-up version of the coconut-topped bunny cake my grandmother sometimes made for the holiday.)

And I’m using up the end of last year’s rhubarb in the Rhubarb Custard Bars from Cooking Light’s newest cookbook, to make room in the freezer for this year’s crop.

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Buttery Sugar Cookies 0 Picture

Ingredients

  • 1 cup butter
  • 3 ounces cream cheese
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • 1/4 teaspoon almond extract
  • 3 cups sifted flour
  • 1 teaspoon salt

Details

Servings 4

Preparation

Step 1

Mix butter, cream cheese, sugar, egg and extracts thoroughly. Sift together flour and salt, and stir into butter mixture. Cover dough and chill overnight for best results.

Roll out dough 1/4- to 1/8-inch thick (for best results, roll out on a silpat, parchment paper or foil; this keeps the cookies from getting misshapen when transferring them to a baking sheet). Cut into desired shapes and remove excess dough.

Transfer to baking sheet. Bake cookies in a 375 F oven for 8 to 12 minutes.

Decorate cooled cookies with candy melts. Carolyn’s Cake, Candy and Cookie Supplies (Spokane, WA) carries an array of colored candy discs that can be melted and placed in a squeeze bottle with a narrow tip for easy decorating.


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