Well, it all changed right before Thanksgiving when my friend Denise found this magical recipe online. It dates back to Sweden in 1877, an oldie but goodie. She got her ingredients in a row and started a bake-a-thon. After one bite, just be polite of course, I was hooked -- as in the whole hook, line, and sinker! In the spirit of Julia Child, I agree there can never be too much butter. (No wonder why everyone thought she was such a great cook!) But now I have learned a corollary to the Butter Doctrine -- you absolutely can't go wrong when butter AND shortening are involved, especially in large quantities.
So I'm off to soften not one but two sticks of butter to make another batch. Soon I may need pants that are a size bigger, but what a way to go down, right?
Bon appetit!
LibbY
PS If you make these delectable cookies, take heed of Denise's brilliant idea. Before flattening the dropped cookie dough, dip the glass in flour so the dough doesn't stick to the glass! It's the simple things that matter in life, and this is one of them!
PPS They also freeze very well!
Sugar Cookies Recipe
Sugar Cookies Recipe87% would make again
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This is truly an "oldie", dating back to a Swedish woman born in 1877! Her daughter, Esther Davis, shared the recipe with me and she came up with all the exact measurements, since the original cookies were mixed by "feel" and taste. These are my favorite cookies and I hope they'll become yours as well.
4http://www.tasteofhome.com/Recipes/Sugar-Cookies
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