Our topic at the SFF Seven this week is "Holiday Potluck Dish: If you had to bring a dish to a winter holiday potluck, what would it be & what's the recipe?"
My holiday must-have are my Sparkly Sugar Cookies. I make a big batch of them and they serve as my standby to take to parties, give as impromptu gifts, and simply nom for pure holiday joy.
Instructions:
1 ½ cups unsalted butter, room temperature
2 cups white sugar
2 eggs, room temperature
2 egg yolks, room temperature
4 teaspoons vanilla extract (use the real stuff, not the imitation flavoring)
2 teaspoons almond extract
4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon salt (if you used salted butter, skip this)
1 teaspoon baking powder
Beat together butter and sugar until fluffy. On this step, it’s hard to go too long. Let that sugar really melt in. Add in the eggs and egg yolks, one by one, mixing until smooth. Add vanilla and almond extracts gradually, mixing until smooth.
In another bowl, combine the flour, salt (if you’re using it) and baking powder. Gradually sift this mixture into the creamed butter mixture, beating constantly.
Cover the bowl with an airtight seal or wrap the ball of dough in plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight.
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Working with a fist-sized ball of dough at a time, on a flour-sprinkled surface, roll out the dough with a floured rolling pin to about ¼” thick. (Keep the rest of the dough in the fridge while you work, so it stays nice and cold.) Use cookie cutters to cut out fun shapes or, if you don’t have them, a drinking water glass will work to make simple circular cookies. There's nothing wrong with a classic!
Bake each batch for 6-8 minutes and let cool on a wire rack. When I get a good rhythm going, I can roll out and cut one batch while the other batch bakes.
Let the cookies cool completely before frosting. To make the (very basic) icing:
1 cup powdered sugar
1 tablespoon milk (I use skim or 2% and it’s fine. Not that it matters with all that butter, but it’s what I usually have on hand.)
1 tablespoon light corn syrup
Mix together in a bowl. You want it to be very thick, so if it turns out runny, just add a little more powdered sugar.
I love the white and gold look for Christmas, because it adds a nice touch of glamour. So I leave the frosting white and use gold, silver and pearl decorative sugars.
Just smear the icing on the cookie—you can see I do spots on some and whole cookies on others, since everyone likes different amounts of frosting—and immediately sprinkle with your sugars.
There are lots of fun color schemes to play with, if you’re feeling frisky, too.
Enjoy!
Sunday, December 15, 2019
Jeffe's Sparkly Sugar Cookies
Jeffe Kennedy is a multi-award-winning and best-selling author of romantic fantasy. She is the current President of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) and is a member of Novelists, Inc. (NINC). She is best known for her RITA® Award-winning novel, The Pages of the Mind, the recent trilogy, The Forgotten Empires, and the wildly popular, Dark Wizard. Jeffe lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She is represented by Sarah Younger of Nancy Yost Literary Agency.
Saturday, December 14, 2019
This Holiday Season Is My Favorite
Our topic at the SFF Seven this week is our #1 Thing to do
to keep our sanity this holiday season.
Personally I LOVE this time of the year and actually don’t
get stressed over anything which happens around these holidays.
I’m pretty organized when it comes to doing cards, buying
gifts and wrapping things. I listen to my favorite Christmas carols constantly
– I enjoy the country-flavored versions on the ‘Smokey Mountain Christmas’
album, I love “Joy to the World” and many of the other songs on the ‘Christmas
with the Gatlin Brothers’ album, I have several Celtic and exclusively bagpipe
Christmas albums of carols, the Straight No Chaser ‘Christmas Can-Can’ song is
hilarious, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir does full throated justice to
traditional carols…well, you get the picture. I have maybe six versions of “We
Three Kings” which is one of my alltime favorite carols, by different singers, on my iPod.
I also have a collection of plates that I use from
Thanksgiving through New Year’s. A lot of them are from Pier One and feature
dogs or cats in holiday hats but also some traditional winter themes. I
thoroughly enjoy bringing those out and taking a break from my year round
‘Butterfly Meadow’ dishes with flowers, birds and butterflies. I have five or
six Christmas tea cups that I use during this same time period.
So I kind of immerse myself in the holiday and enjoy the
heck out of it, watch the Rose Parade on New Year’s Day and pivot back to
normal life thereafter.
It probably started when I was a kid and the entire Christmas
season seemed so magical. I really love Autumn and Winter, as my two favorite
seasons and I feel so much more alive in the colder weather.
Frankly, I loathe summer and hot weather. Just not my thing.
Come talk to me about stress in July! I’m all about the cozy indoors of winter with a blizzard
raging outside, metaphorically speaking.
I used to take my annual vacation at Christmas time because
at the old day job there would be quite a few official days off and so I could
take two weeks without actually using up all my vacation days. I’m sure that helped
with stress levels too.
My daughters have told me they were stressed because I did
all the wrapping of gifts for the family on Christmas Eve and basically
disappeared for the entire day. If I’d know that then, I would have handled it
differently!
There were some years when I remember stressing over whether
I could get them THE toy they most desired in the entire universe. I think I
managed for the most part, although there were a few years we made a quick trip
to Toys R Us after the holiday to sift through the wreckage in the aisles and
see if we could find whatever it was or something to be a ‘consolation’ gift.
I should probably add that our holidays are pretty low key.
We don’t do giant family dinners, I’m not a party person, I do everything I
need to do for myself to minimize stress, which as an introvert primarily means
avoiding those occasions where a ton of people gather. I did the office parties
and the company parties back in the day when I was required to by my job or my
late husband’s job. Being a fulltime author requires no group gathering with
egg nog and white elephants, thankfully.
Give me a good Regency Christmas romance to read, Jake the
cat to purr, my cozy blankets, a cup of tea in that holiday cup and I’m happy!
Wishing you a happy holiday season…
(By the way, I’ve been sharing photos of my extensive
fashion jewelry Christmas earrings and pins collection on my author Facebook page
and my Instagram,
if you enjoy such things…)
All photos are Author's own.
Best Selling Science Fiction & Paranormal Romance author and “SciFi Encounters” columnist for the USA Today Happily Ever After blog, Veronica Scott grew up in a house with a library as its heart. Dad loved science fiction, Mom loved ancient history and Veronica thought there needed to be more romance in everything.
Friday, December 13, 2019
Beware the Ghost of Holiday Stress
Happy Friday the Thirteenth.
It's two weeks before Christmas and I'm on one coast of the state at a specialty hospital being evaluated for handling the migraines. My father is in another hospital on the other side of the state with his heart rate through the roof and yet another heart procedure in his near future. Welcome to holiday stress.
How are you supposed to survive this nonsense anyway? If you have the ability (and this is definitely a skill) release what you cannot control. Ask for help. Accept that help. Connect with other people. Mix enjoyment into some of the moments of madness. Find a little hole in the wall restaurant that makes that thing you love. Seek out stories. Especially those that connect you to something larger than yourself. Case in point: In the parking lot of the hotel, a huge brown tabby and white polydactyl cat greets hotel guests with head bonks and purrs. It seems the hotel helps manage a colony of feral and abandoned cats on property. When the last hurricane blew through, the hotel put the colony cats up in one of the hotel rooms to keep them safe. Did that not restore a little faith and lower your stress a tiny bit? (PS: The cat's name is Nala.)
Most of us think in terms of stress being a bad thing. But in the dark of winter when most of us in the northern hemisphere want to retreat from the cold, the gray skies, and from life itself, stress kicks us back into gear. Our blood moves faster. Stress warms us a touch. Chronic unrelieved stress is bad. That’s not the holidays, that's siege. So if your family situation feels like standing up on the barricades, it needs to be addressed. Preferably with a professional. Your well-being and peace of spirit aren't worth days of torture and anguish.
For run of the mill 'too many things on the list and not enough time' kinds of stress, ask for and accept help. Got to change that light bulb way up in the ceiling? Ask for help bringing in the ladder. Or holding the ladder. Don't let the cat talk you into letting her scale all the way to the top. She'll just show off and then bite you when you try to keep her from falling off. Ask me how I know.
Put a silly holiday show on the TV. Or a decorating show. Or a shoot-em up. Whatever is your holiday jam. Rock through that list of yours in the company of people you actively enjoy. If someone is in the kitchen making treats while you finish up the holiday card list, bonus. And don’t forget the power of exercise to keep you from murdering your nearest and dearest. Channel a little holiday spirit with a bracing walk in whichever winter wonderland you occupy.
Thursday, December 12, 2019
Glog and a Dog
Bring on the glitter, the cookies, the nog! Bring on the snow gear, more goodies, and the dog!
I'm a reader, writer, blogger, musher who pens Sci-Fi as A.C. Anderson and Fantasy as Alexia Chantel. Chronic Disease can't hold me down.
Wednesday, December 11, 2019
Peace in the Silly Season
Earlier this week, Jeffe Kennedy posted a shiny (and glittery) plan for getting through the stress of the holiday season: gathering with people, drinking champagne, embracing joy. I love everything about it.
Erm, except the people.
I'm not a people person. Yesterday my therapist asked if I usually get anxious about holidays, and I had to say, honestly, not really. I mean, most of it is fine. I dig the traditions and the family and snuggling in warm places when the weather outside is cold. I adore warm beverage and selecting gifts and watching on-theme movies and wrapping presents and even decorating the tree. And even though I love my family, even my extended family, and look forward to seeing them... sometimes the constant, inescapable peopling of it all just becomes too much.
Sometimes I need to run away, grab just a few minutes of alone-time. In a sneaky, gift-giving season like this, most folks won't question if I go into a room by myself and lock the door.
So that's my tip for getting through the holidays. Yes, embrace all the parts of tradition you love. But--especially if you're an introvert, like me--remember to build in some solo time when you can recharge.
Warm, cozy wishes for you all during this season. (Or cool thoughts, alternately, if you're on that side of the world.)
Tuesday, December 10, 2019
Keeping Sane During the Winter Holidays
Dear Readers, the thing that keeps me sane during the winter holidays when demands are greater, interactions more brittle, and snow is beautiful everywhere except when it sticks to the pavement?
#1 Guaranteed Sanity Preserver:
All I need to do is look at that face, snuggle that fur, and lean in for teh keess to be reminded that love is what matters. As long as the actions I take and the reactions I offer come from a place of love, then I can be happy with myself regardless of what comes my way.
#1 Guaranteed Sanity Preserver:
All I need to do is look at that face, snuggle that fur, and lean in for teh keess to be reminded that love is what matters. As long as the actions I take and the reactions I offer come from a place of love, then I can be happy with myself regardless of what comes my way.
Fantasy Author.
The Immortal Spy Series & LARCOUT now available in eBook and Paperback.
Subscribe to my newsletter to be notified when I release a new book.
The Immortal Spy Series & LARCOUT now available in eBook and Paperback.
Subscribe to my newsletter to be notified when I release a new book.
Sunday, December 8, 2019
#1 Thing to Assuage Holiday Stress
I posted this pic to Instagram Stories asking people to vote on whether this is a helpful cat or not. Something like 82% voted "yes." (I forgot to look at the final score before the story expired.) This only proves that my tribe of followers are TOTAL CAT PUSHOVERS.
And yes, that's THE FATE OF THE TALA on the monitor. I was amused by how many people messaged asking if that's what they spied. Those who listen to my podcast know that I'm struggling with this book, but I'm also at 88K now - which I originally thought would be my total! - and I'm getting there...
NOT helped by cats who insert themselves between my hand and the mouse.
Anyhooo....
Our topic at the SFF Seven this week is our #1 Thing to do to keep our sanity this holiday season.
My #1 Thing? ENJOY
I'd put sparklies around the word if I could. I've been big on this lately, but I'm going to say that focusing on Delight & Gladness is the key. The holiday celebrations are supposed to be FUN, dammit! The midwinter ones in the northern hemisphere in particular (sorry about all of you roasting down in Australia - I suggest chilled white wine and Tim Minchin) are designed to lift us out of the doldrums of darkness and wintry chill.
So, I make a point to find time to ENJOY things I love about the holiday season. I go look at lights. I watch schmaltzy Christmas shows. I eat treats I don't normally indulge in, and drink champagne (okay, I always do this) out of pretty glasses I keep special for just this time of year. I arrange for outings with friends to indulge in holiday cocktails and beautifully decorated spaces. (Hotel bars are great for this!)
I say, find what really gives you Delight & Gladness in the holiday season and do that as much as you can. I do believe sanity will follow.
Happy Holiday Season, all!
And yes, that's THE FATE OF THE TALA on the monitor. I was amused by how many people messaged asking if that's what they spied. Those who listen to my podcast know that I'm struggling with this book, but I'm also at 88K now - which I originally thought would be my total! - and I'm getting there...
NOT helped by cats who insert themselves between my hand and the mouse.
Anyhooo....
Our topic at the SFF Seven this week is our #1 Thing to do to keep our sanity this holiday season.
My #1 Thing? ENJOY
I'd put sparklies around the word if I could. I've been big on this lately, but I'm going to say that focusing on Delight & Gladness is the key. The holiday celebrations are supposed to be FUN, dammit! The midwinter ones in the northern hemisphere in particular (sorry about all of you roasting down in Australia - I suggest chilled white wine and Tim Minchin) are designed to lift us out of the doldrums of darkness and wintry chill.
So, I make a point to find time to ENJOY things I love about the holiday season. I go look at lights. I watch schmaltzy Christmas shows. I eat treats I don't normally indulge in, and drink champagne (okay, I always do this) out of pretty glasses I keep special for just this time of year. I arrange for outings with friends to indulge in holiday cocktails and beautifully decorated spaces. (Hotel bars are great for this!)
I say, find what really gives you Delight & Gladness in the holiday season and do that as much as you can. I do believe sanity will follow.
Happy Holiday Season, all!
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The Fate of the Tala
Jeffe Kennedy is a multi-award-winning and best-selling author of romantic fantasy. She is the current President of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) and is a member of Novelists, Inc. (NINC). She is best known for her RITA® Award-winning novel, The Pages of the Mind, the recent trilogy, The Forgotten Empires, and the wildly popular, Dark Wizard. Jeffe lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico. She is represented by Sarah Younger of Nancy Yost Literary Agency.
Saturday, December 7, 2019
A Fantasy Winter Holiday and Cinderella Fairy Tale Theme All in One!
Our topic this week is whether we’ve ever created a holiday
for one of our books.
Yes!
There were quite a few factors that went into ny fairly new
release Winter Solstice Dream, one
being I’ve always wanted to write a holiday romance (Regency romances set at
Christmas are catnip to me) but since I write scifi romance for the most part,
and ancient Egyptian paranormal romances, I didn’t see how I was going to
manage that. (Although I did once write a short story about Thanksgiving being
celebrated on my luxury interstellar cruise liner, which can be found in this
collection of my shorter works. That was a fun challenge!)
A few years ago I published my first book in a projected
fantasy romance world I developed, The
Captive Shifter and it recently occurred to me I could tell a perfectly
good holiday story set in this time and place. I’ve always been planning to
write sequels and connected stories for that world, known as Claddare. So I
needed to adjust my thinking from a holiday we celebrate to creating a holiday
the people in Claddare might enjoy in midwinter.
In creating this alternate world originally, I was partially
inspired by Andre Norton’s Witch World series, loving the way she mixed magic
and mysteries. My all-time favorite of hers in this vein was Year of the Unicorn and not that I’ll ever write at her level,
but I was going for something of the feel of those stories (not the almost
science fiction territory the first few in the Witch World series had).
I was also inspired by the classic movie “Ladyhawke” (who isn’t,
if you love fantasy?), although my world is entirely fictional, not tied to
anything in the actual Earthly Middle Ages. Halvor’s horse in this novella owes
a lot to the wonderful steed in Ladyhawke.
And of course “Lord of the Rings”, the movie trilogy more
than the actual novels, influenced me.
I always enjoy having magic as a plot element and there’s
quite a bit here, one way and another. We don’t see too much from the Witches of
Azrimar themselves this time but Nadelma, my heroine, has her own powers of a
completely different sort. I’ve also always been intrigued by desserts
containing charms or favors and found a
good way to work the concept into this story on a grand scale. But after all,
Nadelma is baking a cake for the hundreds who’ll attend the Solstice Night
Ball.
Nadelma, appeared briefly in The Captive Shifter, but both books stand alone. I felt that she,
as the Head Cook in the Witch Queen’s palace, would be an interesting character
to learn more about. I loved the idea of making this a Cinderella type tale,
complete with those sparkly shoes, although they aren’t key to the Happy Ever
After ending. I had to have them in the story though! Readers have asked me for
more about Nadelma so it felt good to finally oblige.
The blurb: Torn from her home in the Dales as a child,
Nadelma has made a place for herself as the head cook in the Witch Queen of
Azrimar’s castle. She stays in the background of the busy court and uses her
gentle magic gifts sparingly to help others. More or less content, she’s made
peace with the hard facts of her life. Romance, marriage, a family – all beyond
her dreams any longer.
Then Halvor, an ambitious Dales lord rides into the city,
bringing his mercenaries to serve the king, with the promise of a rich reward,
including a title and an estate. The only catch? He has to marry a highborn
Azrimaran noblewoman to seal the treaty.
Fate conspires to throw Nadelma and Halvor into each other’s
company and the connection is instant and deep but both resist the attraction.
She knows she can never have him for herself. He must fulfill the treaty to
secure a safe place for his people to live, since their holding in the Dales
was destroyed by the black magic of the Shadow. Marriage to a noble damsel of
the king’s choice is his fate.
Until he met Nadelma he thought his heart was frozen by the
loss of all he cared for, back in the Dales. Now he knows better but his people
must come first.
The situation is hopeless…or is it? For the king declares
the city will celebrate Winter Solstice and hold a ball, where wishes and
dreams just might come true.
The excerpt: Nadelma receives this year’s charms for the
cake from the Queen Mother:
Felka was seated alone in her favorite plush chair in the
sitting room, with several of her small dogs napping close by when Nadelma was
announced. “Oh don’t be formal today,” she said, indicating the chair next to
her. “Sit and be comfortable. You must be walking miles in the kitchens daily
right now, preparing all the food and treats for the festivals.”
Nadelma curtseyed and then sat on the edge of the chair. “I
do like to be busy, your majesty.”
“You never complain.” Felka’s tone held approval as she
picked up a large, flat wooden box and passed it to Nadelma. “The royal
silversmith delivered the charms for the cake today. I’m sorry we’re leaving
this till the last minute because I know you have work to do inserting them all
into the cake. Go ahead, take a look and let me know if the designs meet with
your approval.” She sipped tea from a fragile cup painted with flowers while
Nadelma opened the case.
DepositPhoto |
There were one hundred and one charms, not that they were
necessarily meant to go to the extra invited guests. The number ‘101’ was
sacred to one of the goddesses honored at solstice and the reasons for this
were lost in time. The silver charms served several purposes—primarily as a
keepsake for those lucky enough to be served a piece of cake containing
one. The queen and her witches would
have put white magic into a few, which if the recipient made a harmless wish,
like finding a lost item or not being rained on at a wedding would grant the
request. Thirty were matched tokens, meant to unite couples for the main
festival dance. The magic made sure the numbers came out even, pairing up each
person with someone compatible for a few hours, even if only as casual friends,
although legend stated many marriages had come from the matching of the charms
on Solstice Night.
Two were to designate the king and queen of the dance,
allowing the two selected guests to ‘rule’ over the special musical celebration
and to open the dancing.
Nadelma ran her hand over the rows of charms, each securely
slotted into its own place in the blue velvet lining. She let her own magic
interpret for her which charm was for what purpose. On occasion she’d added one
of her own spells to the Azrimar spell, to help someone meet the person they
wished to dance with, or for a man or woman she knew to be in need to receive
the benevolent wish. Of course she didn’t tell the queen about the extra power
she could give the charms. She’d have to try to ferret out what Helemma cared
most about and see if she could influence events to go in the girl’s favor when
it came to snagging a charm.
Her hand trembled a little as she paused at the silver
crowns denoting the king and queen of the dance. What she’d give to be the girl
who received the regal token, if Halvor was the holder of the other. To dance with him openly…
DepositPhoto |
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Veronica Scott
Best Selling Science Fiction & Paranormal Romance author and “SciFi Encounters” columnist for the USA Today Happily Ever After blog, Veronica Scott grew up in a house with a library as its heart. Dad loved science fiction, Mom loved ancient history and Veronica thought there needed to be more romance in everything.
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