Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Creamy Tuscan Chickpea Soup

This soup is just what the doctor ordered for a cold night when I am burning the candle at both ends with events and holiday chores! Serve with bread ... or not! The recipe is from Food & Wine and I modified it a bit, making a bit creamier broth.

1T olive oil
1 lb of spicy Italian sausage, out of casings and broken or cut into 1/2 pieces
1 large yellow onion, chopped
1 large stalk of celery, chopped
1/2 cup of finely chopped oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes without oil (but now patted out)
4 large garlic cloves, minced (and more if you prefer)
8 cups chicken stock
2 (15 oz) cans of chickpeas or garbanzo beans, drained and rinsed
4 cups greens (I prefer large spinach leaves)
1/2 cup grated Italian cheeses
1/4 -1/2 cup heavy cream
2 T chopped fresh basil leaves
3/4 c. kosher salt
Freshly ground pepper to taste or garnish.
More cheese to garnish - basil leaves to garnish

Place 1 T olive oil in a Dutch oven or a big pot and heat to just hot. 

Add the sausage and cook, stirring often about 5-8 minutes until the sausage is browned (but it will cook more with the rest of the ingredients.) Add the onion and celery and cook for 4-6 minutes until the vegetables soften. Scrape the bottom of the pot to loosen any browned bits. Stir in the sun-dried tomatoes and the garlic. Cook until fragrant, about one minute. Stir in the stock and the chickpeas and bring to a boil over medium heat. Reduce the heat and simmer uncovered until these flavors meld.

Add 4 cups of spinach - large spinach or baby spinach - or kale, torn without stems. Add 2 T chopped fresh basil and 3/4 tsp. salt. 

In a medium saucepan, make a roux of 4 T butter and 4 T flour or Wondra (cook the butter until just melted and stir in the Wondra to a dough. Cook on low heat until the flour cooks. 

Add one cup of the hot broth from the soup to the roux in the saucepan. Add more broth util you have a  sauce. Add 1/4 to 1/2 cup heavy cream and stir.  Add this to the soup.  Add 1/2 cup of any mixture of Italian cheeses. 

Serve! This soup can be reheated, but do not boil. 

Monday, December 15, 2025

Ginger-Ginger Chewy Cookies and Chewy Chai Gingerbread Cookies

This holiday season I had to make cookies - something I don't seem to ever make consistently well. But I love ginger, so I decided to try the Gingerbread Chewy Cookies from Pinch of Yum for the Wareham Garden Club's Holly Fair on December 5. The cookie recipe included a maple glaze, but if I have a hard time baking cookies, I have a harder time decorating them (e.g. messier.) I tried the glaze and decorative sugar candies and gave up on that.

The cookies are delicious! Nice and chewy with a snap. And a week later they are still good. I made four batches - 3 dozen for the Holly Fair in cellophane bags with 3 each so one dozen bags.  I made them smaller than the recipe called for because the golf ball-sized balls in the recipe spread into 3" to 3-1/2" cookies on the first try.

As far as the Chai Gingerbread below this recipe, the cookies are softer but just as delicious. Not quite the chewy snap as the first recipe. 

Soft Gingerbread Cookies with Glaze (note my modifications*) 

3/4 cups unsalted butter, softened
1 cup granulated sugar
1 large egg
1/3 c. molasses
2-1/4 c. flour
2 tsp. baking soda
3/4 tsp. salt
1-2 tsps. ground ginger *I used the full two tsps.


Because I'm a ginger addict,  I added:

*1 T. Ginger People Ginger Syrup to the batter before the dry ingredients to each batch

* About 1/4 cup chopped candied ginger to each batch

*1/2 tsp. ginger extract to each batch

Granulated sugar for rolling 

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Place parchment on baking sheets. I used 12x9 cookie sheets with 3 to a row for the smaller balls. The smaller balls do not run into each other. 

Cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy and add the egg and molasses and mix.

Stir the flour, baking soda, salt and ginger together. Add the dry to the wet and incorporate into a soft dough. I used a handmixer the first times I made these; I used my Kitchenaid stand mixer the second time. It depends on your energy!

Scoop in small balls about the size of a generous melon ball, roll in the sugar, and bake for 9-11 minutes. If you overbake, the cookie will have more of a snap. If you underbake, they could be too wet and doughy.

Maple glaze: 1 T melted butter, 1 T maple syrup, 1-1/2 cups confectioners sugar, 2 T milk and a pinch of salt.  Whisk together. It will be thick. Dip or spread the cookie adding sugar decorations as you like.

Chewy Chai Gingerbread Cookies (note my modifications) from NY Times

Note: I made this Chai spice mix recommended in the NYT recipe and used the whole mix for a double batch of cookies:

2 tsp. ground ginger; 1 tsp ground cardamom; 1/2 tsp ground cinnamon; 1/8 tsp ground cloves and 1/8 tsp ground black pepper. 

I made the same size balls,12 to a sheet on parchment paper baked in a 350 degree oven for 10 minutes.

Blend 1 c granulated sugar and the whole spice mix above.
Mix this with:
1 cup of neutral-flavored oil such as Canola
Whisk together
Add 2 eggs and whisk. Add 1/2 cup of molasses* and whisk.

Mix 4 cups flour with 2 tsps baking soda and 1 tsp. salt.  Add this to the wet ingredients above - I found I needed a hand mixer to mix this all together but you could do it by hand.

*I added 2 T. ginger syrup when I added the molasses and added 1/2 cup of chopped candied ginger to the batter. 

Roll in sugar. Do not overbake. Bake 10 minutes until the cookie tops are dry, puffed and cracked. Slide the parchment sheets with cookies onto a cooling rack. Decorate if you want!









Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Cranberry-Cherry Holiday Sauce with a Kentucky Bourbon Kick

This holiday season I've been using local cranberries like crazy. Today I canned some Cranberry-Cherry sauce that will be yummy over ice cream. I've called and labeled it "with a Bourbon kick" because I added 1/2 cup of Kentucky Bourbon to the simmering pan.

I made double batches of one I found online and tweaked it so here it is doubled:






  • 24 ounces fresh or frozen cranberries
  • 12 ounces dried tart cherries (I used some from Trader Joe's and others from my pantry)
  • 20 oz. of cranberry juice (not the cocktail version)
  • 1 cup of brown sugar
  • 1/2 tsp. ground anise
  • 2 large cinnamon sticks broken in two pieces
  • 4 large, intact star anise.
Makes Five 8.5 ounce jars

Simmer the cranberry juice with the brown sugar until the sugar is dissolved.  Add the ground anise and blend with the bourbon and the cinnamon stick and star anise. Add the cherries and simmer a few minutes. Add the cranberries and simmer until about half the cranberries have burst. Take off the heat, removing the cinnamon sticks and star anise and immediately spoon into clean jars.* 

Process in a hot water bath, covering the jars with at least 2 inches of water, for about 20 minutes. If the seal does not pop within five - ten minutes, you will need to reprocess them until you see bubbles rising within the jar and you have a good seal pop.  

*I used these: Bormioli Rocco Quattro Stagioni Small Glass Mason Jars 8.5 Ounce Mini Jars with Metal Airtight Lid.