Monday, January 13, 2014

Mixed Peel Cookies

Mixed Peel Cookies
Hot and fresh

Hermit-style cookies have been around 700 or 800 years - but I’ll let the Old Farmer’s Almanac tell the tale!

 

“This soft, spicy cookie was often the last thing the baker made from the leftover trimmings on his table. It was made with chopped fruits, raisins, nuts, and seasoned with cinnamon, cloves and other spices; sweetened with either molasses or brown sugar, and usually cut into squares or bars. Some say the spices become more distinct with age, making the cookies taste better if they have been hidden away like hermits for several days. The name may come from this habit. But they also keep longer than most bar cookies and travel well, so perhaps they were the preferred sweet for solitary wanderers as well as recluses and hermits. “Very likely the old recipe for the hermit cookies goes back to the 12th or 13th Century religious hermitages, where these basic ingredients would have been in common usage at bakers’ tables. The terms for those confines - “hermite” from the Old French or “heremita,” from the medieval Latin — may have been assigned to this treat by the residents.”


I made these Mixed Peel Cookies with candied peel left over from the holidays. They’re typical hermit-style cookies, in that they contain butter, eggs, brown sugar, oatmeal, flour, spiced dried fruit, and nuts - the same ingredients used in this little treat for centuries. Historically, hermit cookies were sometimes carried long distances or kept a long time, so that they often tasted like hard little rocks. Unlike those cookies, these are tender and moist, most likely because I took them from the oven at their minimum baking time. I arrived at this recipe by tweaking a couple of other recipes: I hope you’ll enjoy the result!  


Mixed Peel Cookies:


⅔ c. (160 mL) butter or margarine, softened

⅔ c. (160 mL) light brown sugar

2 eggs, room temperature

1-½ c. (375 mL) flour

1 tsp. (5 mL) baking soda

½ tsp. (2.5 mL) salt

1-½ c. (375 mL) large-flake rolled oats

1-½ c. (375 mL) mixed peel

½ c. (125 mL) currants

¼ tsp. (1.25 mL) cinnamon

⅛ tsp. (0.63 mL) nutmeg

⅛ tsp. (0.63 mL) allspice

⅓ c. (80 mL) chopped, toasted walnuts or pecans


Preheat oven to 350 deg. F. Beat butter and brown sugar until fluffy and no graininess remains when a little of the mixture is rubbed between thumb and index finger, about 5 min. Add eggs one at a time, beating after each addition and scraping bowl down as you work. Combine flour, baking soda, salt, and rolled oats, adding a little at a time until completely mixed in. In a separate bowl, combine peel, currants, cinnamon, nutmeg, and allspice, mixing well. Stir into cookie mixture with nuts. Drop by heaping teaspoons onto parchment-lined cookie sheet. Bake 10 min.

2 comments:

  1. I made these with my 6 yo and they turned out beautifully. Makes quite a large batch. The spice flavour is mild. We made some substitutions with what we had available - I think this would be a great basic recipe to use any dried fruit and seeds/nuts. We only had one cup of leftover peel, used cranberries in place of currants and sunflower seeds instead of toasted walnuts. Delicious - a hit with adults and my son alike. Cooking temp in Australia is 170°C.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks so much for your comment, Amber! I've been updating this blog with metric measure and an improved font, so I hope you'll notice the changes the next time you visit. I really should use dual measure for oven temperatures, but haven't yet got around to it. I've lived in Australia ... Love it, mate! xox Nicole

    ReplyDelete

Want to find a long-lost favorite recipe? Want to submit one of yours, or simply leave a comment? Always happy to hear from you!