I always look forward to this time of year sharing a post from my dearest friend and co-author of four of my cookbooks. I've enjoyed many days with laughter with Marie and her husband Frank's great espresso. A tradition in my book for the Christmas season, I hope you make Marie's Hootycreeks a holiday tradition too.
Guest holiday post + recipe today by Marie Bianco, my dear friend, food writer, and author.
Edible holiday gifts always make a hit and this one is about as easy as it can get. Even school age children can get into the act.
The cookie ingredients are layered in a wide-mouth canning jar which you can buy for about a buck each. Make sure you get the wide-mouth ones because it’s easier to get the ingredients into those jars rather than the narrow neck ones. If you’re planning on making a large quantity of mix for all those people on your list who you want to give “a little something” invest in a wide mouth funnel.
Tap each layer down in the order given. Once the lid is in place, cut a circle of gingham or holiday fabric and fasten it with a rubber band. Then tie a ribbon around the jar and include the recipe directions printed out on the computer or written in your best hand.
Cranberry Hootycreeks
1 jar Cranberry Hootycreek Mix
½ cup (1 stick) butter or margarine, softened
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. In a large bowl, cream butter, egg and vanilla. Add the Cranberry Hootycreek Mix by hand until the mixture is well blended. Drop by tablespoons onto a greased cookie sheet. Bake 8 to 10 minutes, or until edges just begin to brown. Transfer to wire rack and cook. Makes 18 to 24 cookies.
Cranberry Hootycreeks Mix
½ cup plus 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour
½ cup old-fashioned oats
½ cup all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
1/3 cup brown sugar
1/3 cup granulated sugar
½ cup dried cranberries
½ cup white chocolate chips
½ cup chopped pecans
Layer the ingredients in the order given into a 1-quart, wide mouth, canning jar. Pack each layer into place before adding the next ingredient.
Attach a gift tag with the mixing and baking directions.
A Cookie Legend
A long time friend who assisted me during a TV marathon passed along his connection to Hooty Creeks. Now, David related to me the name of these cookies originated In the mountains of North Carolina. An uncle of his named Bubba “Hooty” Gibson operated a still way back up in the hollows near a creek where they got water for the still. To pass the time in the fall, they would pick wild blueberries and black walnuts to make cookies. These cookies became well known in the area as “Hooty’s creek” cookies. Well, as fate would have it, some Yankee Revenues’ found the still and the recipe for the cookies. They took it back up north, where they changed the recipe to cranberry “Hootycreek” cookies, and they have been famous ever since.
Thank you, David, for passing along the legend of Hootycreeks.