The Columbus Dispatch

Special TREATS

Need new holiday dessert recipes? These local bakers have you covered

- Allison Ward Columbus Dispatch | USA TODAY NETWORK

The month and a half between the beginning of Thanksgivi­ng week and New Year’s Day represents the busiest time of year for

Columbus-area bakeries. h Debbie Smith and her two daughters make more than 2,000 of their beloved springerle cookies at the Original Goodie Shop in Upper Arlington, not to mention many other sweet treats. h Because of her busy hours at her bakery, Sweet Tooth Cottage in Powell, Sue Bissonnett­e never gets to properly celebrate her husband’s birthday on Dec. 12. h “That’s the busiest week of the year,” Bissonnett­e said. “It gears up around Halloween and doesn’t stop.”

Still, these bakers delight in their work that brings so many people joy during the holiday season, whether it’s customers or family and friends. Yes, these busy bakers still find time and energy to make the favorite recipes of their spouses and children.

“Baking — I really think, it’s about togetherne­ss, no matter who you’re baking with, whether that’s girlfriend­s or family,” Bissonnett­e said. “You create this love in the air with fun and laughs and drinks.”

This year, The Dispatch asked four local bakers to share their favorite holiday dessert recipes, no matter if it’s baked in the shop or at home.

Husband’s love of pecan pie leads to quest for perfect recipe

Pecan pie always seemed like a rudimentar­y dessert to Juana Williams, one she didn’t feel the need to make often.

That was, until she got tired of her husband Vance “ranting and raving” about the ones he got at another bakery during the holidays. (Pecan pie is his favorite sweet.)

As a lifelong baker, Williams knew she could do better.

Admittedly, she started too fancy with her efforts and failed epically, she said.

“But that only fueled me to make the perfect

Classic Pecan Pie Makes 8 servings

1 cup Karo Light Syrup 3 eggs, room temperatur­e 1 cup granulated sugar 2 tablespoon­s butter, melted 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

11⁄2 cups (6 ounces) coarsely chopped pecans

1 (9-inch) unbaked OR frozen deep-dish pie crust

Heat oven to 350.

Mix the syrup and eggs together. Pour in sugar and once that is mixed well, add melted butter and drop in vanilla. Stir really well with a rubber spatula or whisk. Stir pecans in lightly so they do not break.

Bake for one hour, but do not open the oven while it is baking to prevent cracking. Must cool to room temperatur­e (at least two hours) before it is cut. Chill in refrigerat­or, if needed.

pecan pie,” said Williams, who opened J’s Sweet Treats and Wedding Cakes in 2016, first as a pop-up shop and then leaving a corporate job to run two brickand-mortar bakeries (one on the South Side and one on Polaris Parkway). “I wasn’t going to be defeated and watch him go to another business to get one.”

It only took her a few more tries to get her recipe just right.

In her trials and errors, she learned that even though the ingredient list is short and they simply need to be added in the correct order, there are a few tips to follow.

“The key is it make it with high-quality pecans,” Williams said. “Sometimes I’d run to the store and get some noname pecans, but the taste of the pie — the nuttiness — is not as good if you aren’t getting quality pecans.”

Williams, who runs the two bakeries with her two adult daughters, said she’s partial to the pecans from www.nuts.com and Sam’s Club’s variety that comes in a green bag.

She also said she prefers to use light corn syrup, and adds that ingredient­s should be room temperatur­e when mixing, and the oven should never be opened while the treat is baking.

Now, the pie is a mainstay in her bakery during the holidays — and because it’s much easier to make than other pies on the menu, such as the labor-intensive sweet potato pie, she wonders why she hasn’t been making it all these years.

“Ironically, people drive from all over for it,” Williams said. “I had a guy come in here from Georgia and he’d never had a pecan pie from me before. He said it was the best one he’s ever had.”

And now her husband agrees.

Powell baker’s children still ask for chocolate chip scones every Christmas

If all of Sue Bissonnett­e’s adult children are in the same house, she knows she’s baking chocolate chip scones.

And typically, that happens frequently during the holidays.

She’s not sure really when or why she started making them, and the recipe, she said, is cobbled from a few she’s read over the years.

“I probably made them one time and they kept asking for them,” Bissonnett­e said of her three children ages 20 to 24. “When they were young, they liked to cut them. I used a pizza slicer to cut them into the pie shape. Then, they brushed the egg wash or milk over the top. They were great at those tasks.”

Never mind that this time of year, she’s also making hundreds of dozens of iced sugar cookies, plus cakes, cheesecake bars and other desserts at her Powell bakery Sweet Tooth Cottage, Bissonnett­e still relishes in making these annually for her family. (She already made a big batch for Thanksgivi­ng morning.)

Plus, the scones are easy, with a pretty cut-and-dry recipe, she said.“you want your butter to be really cold when you blend it in — that’s where the flakiness comes in,” she said. “And it doesn’t have to be chocolate chips. You can use nuts, cranberrie­s or whatever you like.”

Her children, however, were always partial to the chocolate chip versions.

Another nice feature of this recipe is the dough can be made ahead of time and refrigerat­ed so it’s a great breakfast item to take on vacation or while traveling this busy season.

Bissonnett­e doesn’t sell the scones — nor coffee cake or other yeasty favorites — in her bakery; those are reserved for family and friends.

“The scones are really only kind of good out of the oven,” she added.

The time in her own kitchen away from the bakery gives her extra quality time with her children, too.

“I’ll still spend the holidays baking at home, making anything and everything,” Bissonnett­e said. “It just reminds me of when my kids were little and I’d have them at the counter with mixers dumping everything in. Even though my kids are older, we’ll still do that.”

New recipe for honey pudding delights Thanksgivi­ng guests

Even with all the baking she does at the bakery and her home during the holidays, Jenny Voll can’t help but try new recipes this time of year, especially when they come so highly recommende­d by one of her employees.

“One of our newer employees — we had a potluck and she brought this in,” said Voll, manager of the Golden Delight bakery in Gahanna. “She’d been talking about it for months. We all went crazy for it. I’ve already made it two times and my sister has made it, too.

The honey pudding definitely lived up to the hype.

All 10 people Voll hosted for Thanksgivi­ng loved the dish and it’s already on the menu for Christmas festivitie­s, but she said she’ll most likely double the recipe then.

“One time around for everybody is just not enough,” she said with a laugh.

The recipe is pretty simple, especially for a homemade pudding, as it just requires constant stirring and making sure the consistenc­y is right. Voll recommends making sure the mixture thickens on the stove and if it’s still a little watery, bakers can add a little more cornstarch.

Plus, she said the sweet honey flavoring is a great addition to the holidays.

“It goes well with Christmas,” she said. “I feel like the honey pudding is very comforting.”

She added that it could be used as a topping on cake or ice cream, but her family prefers it by itself.

“We really like honey in our family — it’s a natural sweetener,” she said. “When we travel, we like to try to pick up different honeys.”

The cookbook the recipe comes from — “The Elder Scrolls: The Official Cookbook” by Chelsea Monroe-casse — says the taste can vary slightly depending on what kind of honey is used.

Voll said she enjoys the creaminess and although the pudding needs to be refrigerat­ed to harden, she definitely sneaks a few bites while it’s still warm.

“Pudding is a nice change of pace this time of year,” Voll said. “You can only eat so much pie.”

Customers wait all year for beautiful, puffy springerle

The requests for the Original Goodie Shop’s springerle start coming long before Thanksgivi­ng, even though Debbie Smith and her two daughters make them only during the holiday season.

However, people are more than willing to wait for them.

“They’re something people seek out,” said Smith, whose father bought the Upper Arlington bakery in 1967. “People come in asking for them because they can’t find them anywhere else.”

She’s not sure where the recipe came from — whether her father got it from the man he bought the shop from, his mother or somewhere else — for the anise-flavored German cookies.

All Smith knows is they are a favorite of her family and customers, alike.

She suspects it’s because they have an embossed design on them created by a resin press (usually featuring depictions of olden days, such as gristmills or flowers), making them unique.

But it also could be their fluffiness as

they “poof up like a pillow” in the oven. In fact, they are called springerle after the German word for “jump.”

“Some people like to dry them out and dunk them in coffee, others eat them right out of the oven,” Smith said. “My mother always sat them out for a week before she ate them.”

She said that although the recipe is fairly simple, the cookies can be timeconsum­ing because bakers have to let

them sit for 24 hours for the imprint to set and then, they’re baked in a low temperatur­e.

As far as the press goes, people can buy them at a few online shops. (Smith knows as she sadly had to replace her decades-old one in 2009 after it went missing.)

She and her daughters are always thrilled to pull out that press each holiday season.

“I just saw a lady in here who said, ‘I’ve been buying these for 50 years,’” Smith said. “Food and goodies are some of our favorite things this time of year and they’re linked to memories. Like you eat Grandma’s cookies and it takes you right back to that kitchen. Those things do make you happy.”

 ?? ?? Juana Williams' pecan pie is her husband's favorite dessert. Williams is the owner of J's Sweet Treats, which has locations in the Polaris Mall and on Parsons Avenue.
Juana Williams' pecan pie is her husband's favorite dessert. Williams is the owner of J's Sweet Treats, which has locations in the Polaris Mall and on Parsons Avenue.
 ?? PHOTOS BY BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Sue Bissonnett­e with a batch of chocolate chip scones in her bakery, Sweet Tooth Cottage in Powell.
PHOTOS BY BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Sue Bissonnett­e with a batch of chocolate chip scones in her bakery, Sweet Tooth Cottage in Powell.
 ?? BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Juana Williams pours the filling for the pecan pie recipe she’s perfected over the years.
BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Juana Williams pours the filling for the pecan pie recipe she’s perfected over the years.
 ?? BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Sue Bissonnett­e’s chocolate chip scones.
BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Sue Bissonnett­e’s chocolate chip scones.
 ?? PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH BARBARA J. ?? Juana Williams’ pecan pie.
PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH BARBARA J. Juana Williams’ pecan pie.
 ?? ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Debbie Smith and her two daughters, Emilie Smith, left, and Miranda Smith, who all co-own the Original Goodie Shop in Upper Arlington hold a variety of cookie offerings, including the German springerle­s.
ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Debbie Smith and her two daughters, Emilie Smith, left, and Miranda Smith, who all co-own the Original Goodie Shop in Upper Arlington hold a variety of cookie offerings, including the German springerle­s.
 ?? ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Springerle cookies from the Original Goodie Shop in Upper Arlington sit alongside the rolling pin used for the floral relief design.
ADAM CAIRNS/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Springerle cookies from the Original Goodie Shop in Upper Arlington sit alongside the rolling pin used for the floral relief design.
 ?? BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Jenny Voll at her bakery Golden Delight in Gahanna.
BARBARA J. PERENIC/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Jenny Voll at her bakery Golden Delight in Gahanna.

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