Showing posts with label christmas baking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label christmas baking. Show all posts

Save on Cooking Time During The Christmas Season



Spend time to note the baking and food items that you intend to make for your family's use and as gifts this year.  Use a planning sheet with separate columns for amount, food item, purpose, recipe reference, preparation time, and when this will be given.

Note every food item and the amount you intend to make on this planning sheet. Also list the purpose. Is it for your family's consumption or to be given as gifts? Note where the recipe file is found or the specific page number in a cook­book. These recipe references will really come in handy later on when it's time bake and cook. Note down a time period for the completion of every item. Some treats need to be served freshly cooked; others can be made ahead of schedule and frozen until needed. Fruitcake, for instance, needs to be baked about six to eight weeks ahead because the flavor gets better as it ages. Include on this planning sheet the items for your Christmas dinner or for any entertaining that can be cooked ahead. The "Time Period" column in the planning sheet indicates the day or days at which you have scheduled the item into your calendar. At this point you'll be able to see whether this part of Christmas preparation is viable in relation to your available time. You might need to remove some items if time gets too short.

Review your recipes and make a shopping list of ingredients as you plan your Christmas baking and entertain­ing activities. Buy the ingredients early while supplies are still ample or on sale, perhaps a few items with each shopping trip to avoid too much strain on your December finances. If possible, shop during the times when the stores are less crowded. If only weekends are your available times, shop as soon as the stores open so you have more fresh produce to choose from and you don't have to endure the crowds that come out later in the day. Do an inventory of the contents of your freezer, refrigerator, and pantry just to know what you have available and save money by avoiding duplicate buys. You may want to have enough quick-meal food stuff on hand for at least two meals. Unanticipated guests may come by or you may even find your own family caught short one day when you are held up. Canned ham, canned chicken, canned vegetables, biscuit mix, and a frozen dessert make good emergency supplies.

It would be good, if possible, to set aside the month of November as make-ahead month. As you cook your usual meals during November, make double batches of main dishes and freeze a portion to be used in December when the stress starts building up. Good make-ahead dishes in­clude soups, meatballs, casseroles, cakes, pies, etc. You could try making at least one double batch of something weekly so that for every week in December you can have one instant-preparation meal? Also take a few minutes to plan daily family meals during the month of December. It will be worth your time and effort once you experience the comfort of having something prepared ahead. Next year you could use the same menu, making a few modifications if needed.

Planning Tips for Cooking Christmas Goodies


© Athena Goodlight

Planning Tips for Cooking Christmas Goodies



If your Christmas holiday goals include making your own food, you will have to carefully plan and organize this activity. In your mind, reassess the success of last Christmas's baking. Did you make too much, too little, or just enough? If you baked cookies that didn't get consumed until March, then, don't bake as many this year. On the other hand, did you run short of homemade goodies last year? Did you gain 10 pounds due to oversupply that you were forced to finish the rest of them? 

A good way to measure the success of your homemade Christmas goodies is to ask your family what food items they really enjoyed most during the past Christmases. From the answers you get, you have a guide on planning this year's baking, doing away with the items that were not favorites unless they are something that you truly like. Sometimes we are accustomed to think that it is a necessity to make certain traditional foods, no matter what. Evaluate. Perhaps your family did not ever enjoy these as much as you thought they did. Some people like dark fruitcake and others favor light fruitcake, while some don't like fruitcakes at all. If your family likes a bit of both, then have a friend bake the dark and you bake the light, and do an exchange-cakes activity. You may find that your Christmas baking can be much simpler this year with your family members truly enjoying the food that they like.


Recipes to try:




Traditional Raisin Fruitcake for Christmas



© Athena Goodlight