Janelle Maiocco

Hi.

Welcome to my blog. I live in the Wallingford neighborhood of Seattle on an Urban Farm (w/ five laying hens and a huge garden). I am a trained chef (w/ a certificate in food preservation), taught at a cooking school & like to share 'kitchen hacks' - culinary tips that save time, money & maximize flavor. If that isn't enough, I also run a food+tech startup called Barn2Door.com - a platform to help everyone easily find & buy food directly from farmers, fishers & ranchers (from CSA's to urban farm eggs to 1/2 a grass-fed cow).

3 christmas cookie recipes - a trio of Christmas confections

3 christmas cookie recipes - a trio of Christmas confections

christmas cookies | talkoftomatoes.com
christmas cookies | talkoftomatoes.com

I have my favorites. I decided not to make a dozen different kinds of cookies this year, but rather to hand-select a few of my favorite Christmas Cookie Recipes to bake for my best of friends and countless under-appreciated teachers. In fact, I narrowed it down a small selection of yumminess. The chosen few---I knew---were sure to please. I would be giddy happy if someone handed me a tiny little, twine-wrapped box of any/all of these:

1. Peppermint Bark.My peppermint bark is one of the most sought-after, 'googled' recipes on my blog (especially during the holidays). It is brilliantly easy to make... in fact I was asked to attend a cookie exchange recently, and knew I would be too busy to bake elaborate cookies beforehand. So I planned to make my peppermint bark in the few minutes I had between work and carpool. Sure enough: 6 minutes and they were in my fridge getting firm. Peppermint Bark is easy-to-make, budget friendly and widely adored:

Candy Canes in Box | talkoftomatoes.com
Candy Canes in Box | talkoftomatoes.com

Peppermint Bark 1 package white chocolate chips (I buy them from Trader Joes where they only cost $2.29); 2 tsp peppermint extract, and 20 mini candy canes (about half a package; I buy the mini kind---see picture---because you can crush them, snip them open with a scissors and pour. The large candy canes are a pain to unwrap!).

Put white chocolate chips in heat-proof bowl. Microwave for 40 seconds. Remove and stir. Repeat (microwave another 40 seconds and stir to blend). At this point you may be able to stir the chocolate to a smooth consistency. If not, microwave another 30 seconds and stir to blend (be careful not to burn the chocolate!). Stir in extract, then crushed candy canes. Spread on tray about 1/4 inch thick---I always give the tray a good 'wham, wham' on the counter to smooth out the surface of the bark. Pop in the fridge for 20 minutes to help firm; doesn't need to stay in fridge. For giving: break into pieces, pile in little cellophane bags, wrap with curly ribbon and attach a nice note!

2. Chipolte Candied Pecans. I recently fell in love with these pecans. I made a batch of them, and tucked most of them in parchment lined tins. Though some I kept to chop and top my holiday baked brie [appetizer]! Eat them as-is or add them to salads, sprinkle on ice cream or top your sweet potatoes!

candied pecans recipe | talkoftomatoes.com
candied pecans recipe | talkoftomatoes.com

3. Snowball Cookies. Its THE perfect time of year to pull out the powdered sugar and roll your cookie balls in confectionery 'snow'. Snowball Cookies are a far cry from healthy---so consider them the appropriate holiday treat and indulge!

What do you bake to delight your friends---and thank people---during the holidays? Do you have a favorite Christmas Cookie Recipe?

snowball cookies | talkoftomatoes.com
snowball cookies | talkoftomatoes.com
12 drinks of Christmas

12 drinks of Christmas

spicy, salty cashews

spicy, salty cashews