The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

An inherited love of cookies, pies and cakes

Generation­s of recipes passed on to A Little Baked Bakery owner.

- By C.W. Cameron

There are many things we can inherit from our mothers. The color of our eyes, a love of silly riddles, a passion for needlepoin­t.

Among the many things Jen Leifheit-little of A Little Baked Bakery in Ellijay inherited from her mother, Mary Leifheit Colson, is the belief that the gift of a batch of cookies is the best possible random act of kindness.

Until she was 7, Leifheit-little lived in Yorkville, Illinois, where her parents met and her mom had grown up on a farm outside the town. “They had pigs and chickens and we always had fresh eggs. Fresh eggs are so important to me that I still get my eggs from Gary Johnson, a local farmer, rather than the grocery store.”

Both Elymas Olson, who raised Leifheit-little’s mother and was called “Gramma,” and Elizabeth Leifheit, her paternal grandmothe­r, lived in Yorkville and both were bakers. “Gramma Olson made cakes, cookies, jams and jellies. Gramma Leifheit was a pie baker. Cookies were my mom’s thing.”

Each year, the middle of October launched what the family called “cookie season.”

“This was back in the day when you could give out homemade treats for Halloween. We gave out popcorn balls and cookies we made at home. My earliest memory is of helping Gramma and mom make those popcorn balls. Eventually I graduated to helping with the cookies. Every fall, mom would make a batch of sugar cookie dough, roll it out, cut out leaf-shaped cookies, bake and then paint them. I was given the task of ‘sugar sprinkler.’ At Christmas, she would make more sugar cookies and I decorated some with my brothers, Jonathan and Jeremy. Those were the ones we got to eat. She’d decorate the rest and those were the ones pretty enough to give out as gifts.”

As she grew older, Leifheit-little grew to be more skilled, learning the importance of having ingredient­s at room temperatur­e and the best way to roll out cookie

dough. She uses her mother’s rolling pin to this day.

The family left Illinois for Iowa and then ultimately arrived in Cedartown, Georgia, in 1979.

“When we moved to Georgia, making cookies became a kind of therapy for our family. If you feel badly, do something good for someone else. Make them some cookies. If you’re having a bad day, make some cookies. After all, how can you feel bad when you’re eating a warm chocolate chip cookie?”

Her mother’s belief that cookies could help when someone was having a hard time, needed encouragem­ent or some kind of love is so ingrained in Leifheit-little that even now, if someone is facing a difficulty or tragedy, she makes sure she gets fresh-baked cookies to them as quickly as possible.

Her mother’s death in 2016 was a test of the power of baking. “I couldn’t snap out of my sadness until finally I knew I had to get out of bed. I started baking cookies again and giving them away, mostly to colleagues at Kennesaw State University. Then people started asking for them and I thought maybe it would be a good idea to charge for the cookies. Then people wanted to know if I could make them a pie. I got out Gramma Leifheit’s pie crust recipe and started making pies. Then cakes.”

By 2018 she had licensed A Little Baked Bakery and opened an online store. The response was overwhelmi­ng, and Leifheit-little, who was associate director of video production at KSU, found herself working there all day, then coming home to bake until 1 or 2 in the morning.

The next year, she, husband Tres Little and daughter Gigi moved to Ellijay. She began selling her baked treats at pop-ups and the Ellijay Farmers Market as well as online. Soon she’ll be opening a bakery in downtown Ellijay in space being developed in a building at 29 North Ave.

The love of baking is still being passed down from mother to daughter. Gigi satisfies her artistic side by helping decorate her mother’s cookies, and when she wants a batch of cookies for a band event, she’s the one making the cookies. “I am there to help but she feels really good about taking her cookies to band and saying, ‘I made these.’”

 ?? LAUREN LIZ PHOTO COURTESY OF ?? Baker Jen Leifheit-little of A Little Baked Bakery in Ellijay learned to bake by watching her grandmothe­rs and mom.
LAUREN LIZ PHOTO COURTESY OF Baker Jen Leifheit-little of A Little Baked Bakery in Ellijay learned to bake by watching her grandmothe­rs and mom.
 ?? COURTESY OF LAUREN LIZ PHOTO ?? Jen Leifheit-little has collected three generation­s of recipe boxes. These boxes belonged to her great-grandmothe­r Gustie Olson, her grandmothe­r Elizabeth Leifheit and her mother, Mary Leifheit Colson.
COURTESY OF LAUREN LIZ PHOTO Jen Leifheit-little has collected three generation­s of recipe boxes. These boxes belonged to her great-grandmothe­r Gustie Olson, her grandmothe­r Elizabeth Leifheit and her mother, Mary Leifheit Colson.
 ?? COURTESY OF LAUREN LIZ PHOTO ?? Jen Leifheit-little has collected three generation­s of recipe boxes. These boxes belonged to her great-grandmothe­r Gustie Olson, her grandmothe­r Elizabeth Leifheit and her mother, Mary Leifheit Colson.
COURTESY OF LAUREN LIZ PHOTO Jen Leifheit-little has collected three generation­s of recipe boxes. These boxes belonged to her great-grandmothe­r Gustie Olson, her grandmothe­r Elizabeth Leifheit and her mother, Mary Leifheit Colson.
 ?? COURTESY OF LAUREN LIZ PHOTO ?? Baker Jen Leifheit-little of A Little Baked Bakery in Ellijay learned to bake by watching her grandmothe­rs and mom.
COURTESY OF LAUREN LIZ PHOTO Baker Jen Leifheit-little of A Little Baked Bakery in Ellijay learned to bake by watching her grandmothe­rs and mom.
 ?? COURTESY OF JEN LEITHEIT-LITTLE ?? Mary Leifheit Colson taught her daughter Jen Leifheit-little of A Little Baked Bakery in Ellijay the idea of sharing baked goods as a random act of kindness.
COURTESY OF JEN LEITHEIT-LITTLE Mary Leifheit Colson taught her daughter Jen Leifheit-little of A Little Baked Bakery in Ellijay the idea of sharing baked goods as a random act of kindness.

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