This Christmas cookie has been a family favorite for 60 years. Here's grandma's treasured recipe. (2024)

This Christmas cookie has been a family favorite for 60 years. Here's grandma's treasured recipe. (1)

Every year, on Christmas Eve,my cousins and I sit around the kitchen table fordessert – yes, it's still cool to hang together atthe "kids' table"when you're 27.In the holiday afterglow of the merriment that comes fromdinner and a gift exchange, we chat about whatever arisesover an array of bakery-quality cookies.

My grandma, Vivian Gombert, bakes dozens upon dozens of cookies and each recipe has been perfected byyears of experience.Intricatespritz cookies, sand tarts, butter balls, chocolate chip cookies – the list goes on.Nestled among the variations aremy favorite Christmas cookie: almond sticks.

My grandma has been making almond sticks forsix decades. She started making themafter she married my grandfather, whose mother passed the recipe andtraditionto her.The recipe is either of Swiss orGerman origin, we think. My grandmother got it fromher mother-in-law who got it from her mother – where it came from before that ismurky. Either way, the recipe hasbeen in the family for around a century, if not longer.

"We feel this recipe is special as it has been passed down and enjoyed by five generations of our family," she says. "Also it is quite different from any cookie I’ve ever made."

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This Christmas cookie has been a family favorite for 60 years. Here's grandma's treasured recipe. (2)

My grandmother still uses the originalrecipe card, which is 62 years old. That tiny piece of card stock has been around longer than my mother and is more than double my age. With the years have come tiny stains, maybe from vanilla, andannotations in her small, clear handwriting. Glancing at the recipe, you don't see the dozens of Christmases this recipe has enhanced or the childrenandgrandchildrenwho have savoredthe cookies that come from it.

Since my grandmother has been making almond sticks, shehas added her own notes like placing the cookies on parchment paper as opposed to on a pan directly makes the process of removing the finished almond stripsmuch easier.

This Christmas cookie has been a family favorite for 60 years. Here's grandma's treasured recipe. (3)

The cookies which are made thin, in strips with a puffed,hard, frosted top. Almond sticks have theperfectcrunch when you bite into one. They can be a little messy if they crumble and they're sweet but not too sweet that you can't eat a ridiculous amount of them in a sitting (I had probably 8 in the hour they came out of the oven, oops).

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I'd venture to call almond sticks "the family favorite" but my grandma says that's up for debate.The almond sticks, though, have always been at the top of my list. And, they're gluten-free.

Ahead of the holiday season, I wanted to learn to make almond sticks. So,I spent an afternoon with my grandma,who taught me how – in turn, passing on the tradition once more. It might've been mid-November, but we threw on matching red gingham aprons (and some Christmas spirit) and got to work.

The process was more labor-intensive than I had anticipated. While the recipe only calls for four ingredients, they take a lot of work.After we used a stand mixer to combine the crushed almonds with the egg whites and confectioners' sugar, we had to roll it into a very thin sheet, which took a lot of muscle andthree sets of hands (grandpa jumped in).But these cookies are definitely worth the effort.

She shared the recipe with USA TODAY.

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Almond sticks

Makes:Around 7 dozen cookies

Ingredients:

  • 4 egg whites
  • 1 poundconfectioners'sugar (plus some extra)
  • 1 poundground almonds
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla

Instructions:

  1. Beat egg whites until stiff.
  2. Add confectioners sugar and beat.
  3. Remove 1 cup of mixture and reserve for top.
  4. Add 1 poundground almonds to remainingmixture.
  5. Once combined, remove from bowl and place onto a flat surface covered with extra confectioners' sugar (cutting board works well).
  6. Knead dough and roll thin.
  7. To reserved portion of egg white and confectioners'sugar mixture add 1 tsp vanilla and mix.
  8. Spread the reserved portionover the almond dough base.
  9. Cut into stripsapproximately ½ inchwide by 3 incheslong.
  10. Place the strips on parchment-covered cookie sheets.
  11. Bake at325 degrees for 10 minutes.

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This Christmas cookie has been a family favorite for 60 years. Here's grandma's treasured recipe. (2024)
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