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| Baking (rec.food.baking) For bakers, would-be bakers, and fans and consumers of breads, pastries, cakes, pies, cookies, crackers, bagels, and other items commonly found in a bakery. Includes all methods of preparation, both conventional and not. |
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JOAN MC NAMARA wrote:
Looking for a recipe. Love these cookies but coming from Irish household - have no idea how to make. Never heard of Italian anise cookies per se, but it sounds like you're talking about biscotti. -- Reg |
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Reg wrote: JOAN MC NAMARA wrote: Looking for a recipe. Love these cookies but coming from Irish household - have no idea how to make. Never heard of Italian anise cookies per se, but it sounds like you're talking about biscotti. -- Reg Biscotti are slices of a half-oval shape of a "toasted" sweet bread. Another Italian cookie is "pizelles." They are flat, round, thin wafer-like cookies, 3 or 5 inch diameter, made in appliances like a waffle press. They can include anise extract instead of vanilla extract. When warm, they are sometimes shaped around a wooden dowel to make a tube for a filling of cheese and sugar to make "cannoli." Or curved around a cone shaped dowel to make the sugar cookie cones at your local ice cream parlor. Both biscotti and pizzelles have a variety of recipes, with different flavors, including cocoa. Most differences in flavors depends upon the extract used. A search on www.allrecipes.com will result in a variety of recipes for both. |
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On Mon, 09 Oct 2006 21:02:45 GMT, "JOAN MC NAMARA"
wrote: Looking for a recipe. Love these cookies but coming from Irish household - have no idea how to make. Are they white? Maybe on the thick side? 3/8-1/2 in. And by any chance have you ever seen them with a design imprinted? If so they may be German Anise Christmas Cookies (Springerle) My best friends grandmother (Italian-Armanian) use to make them every year. I LOVE these cookies and I make them every year. So, if you think these are those you seek. Then google German Anise Christmas Cookies (Springerle) David |
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Reg wrote: wrote: Reg wrote: JOAN MC NAMARA wrote: Looking for a recipe. Love these cookies but coming from Irish household - have no idea how to make. Never heard of Italian anise cookies per se, but it sounds like you're talking about biscotti. Biscotti are slices of a half-oval shape of a "toasted" sweet bread. Sorry, but they are in no way a bread. They're a type of cookie. -- Reg Could be ylour second language interference |
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