It’s Christmas in Louisiana and the oven’s set to 350. . .

. . .that’s exactly what John Folse, famous chef around these parts, said on his radio show this morning. I laughed as I thought about my own kitchen — his description certainly fit. From Thanksgiving to Christmas, I go into baking overdrive. For one thing, our old house is drafty, and keeping the oven on helps me stay warm. More importantly, though, the constant scent of something sweet permeates the house, reminding me and everyone else who enters that this is a season to celebrate.

The holidays were so much fun at my house growing up — my dad would take all of us out to cut an enormous tree, Mom would pull down the decorations, and I would revel in the sheer energy of always having something to celebrate.

As David and I have started our own holiday traditions, making treats to take to parties, to snack on, or to give away later, has become one of the constants. This handy little shortbread recipe has been used over and over during past months of December. I don’t know why I don’t make it during other times of the year, but I started taking it to holiday gatherings some years ago, and for whatever reason, it feels like a holiday recipe.

For one thing, it’s incredibly sweet and rich — not the kind of everyday dessert I usually make. For another, it cuts nicely into cute little squares, and makes an elegant package wrapped in parchment paper and tied with a ribbon. People seem to love it, and one recipe goes a pretty long way (unless you leave it sitting out on your counter for passersby to nibble on.)

This month will be full of recipes like this one. As I prepare for the holidays, dinner is usually the last thing on my mind: the 350-degree oven is usually on and baking something sweet.

I LOVE December. It’s a good thing that I’m such a holiday fanatic because I really don’t care that much for cold weather. The holidays keep my spirits up, even if I am grumbling just a bit about my ever-icy hands and nose. I know, I know, I would never survive in a less temperate climate. Or perhaps I would just bake more.

Caramel Nut Shortbread

For the crust:
2 sticks butter
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 t. salt
1 t. almond extract
1 egg
2 3/4 cup flour
Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Line a 15×10 jelly roll pan with parchment paper. In a food processor or mixer, combine the butter, sugar, salt, almond extract, egg and flour. Process until the dough starts to come together. Press into the jelly roll pan, halfway up the sides. Cover the dough and refrigerate for an hour. Prick it with a fork and bake for 10 minutes.

For the topping:
2 sticks butter
1/4 cup sugar
1 cup brown sugar
1/3 cup honey (or a combination of honey and maple syrup or cane syrup)
1/4 cup heavy cream
3-4 cups of nuts (I used half sliced almonds, half pecans this time, but whatever you have on hand will work)
Good salt, like fleur de sel (regular sea salt works too)
In a saucepan, combine the butter, sugar, brown sugar, and honey over medium to medium-low heat. Simmer (but don’t boil) until the sugar dissolves. Once you can’t detect any granules with your spoon, bring the mixture to a boil. Boil for 3 minutes without stirring, remove from the heat, and stir in the cream. Pour the mixture onto the baked crust, and sprinkle the nuts evenly on top. Bake for 10-12 minutes more. The mixture should be bubbly. Dot with a few grains of sea salt (I place them on one at a time. You don’t want the bars to be salty, just to add a hint of contrast every now and then). When cool, cut into small squares.
adapted from Intercourses by Martha Hopkins and Randall Lockridge

7 Responses to “It’s Christmas in Louisiana and the oven’s set to 350. . .”

  1. Tanna Says:

    Simple things can become the very important tradition. These look sooo good I can see they wouldn’t last sitting out on a counter.

  2. Claire N Says:

    I love this time of year, too. It means lots of baking without feeling guilty! Unfortunately, I won’t be able to help (or DO) Mama with her baking because I can’t go home until the 24th. I guess I’ll just do my own. These bars look so good. I think shortbread is one of my favorites.

  3. Ivonne Says:

    Hey sis!

    I make a very similar recipe. But of course I do as we are sisters and it only makes sense that we would gravitate to the same recipes. Yours look just beautiful. And I’m impressed that you actually had the willpower to photograph them before eating them. I usually gobble them right up!

  4. lisa Says:

    This looks amazing.. melt in your mouth kinda good. I am looking forward to seeing and hearing about more of your family traditions this holiday season! =)

  5. Becky Says:

    This recipe is perfect for some holiday gift baskets I’m going to make this weekend! Thanks so much!

  6. Margaret Says:

    Those caramel nut bars look SO good! They look like praline bars, basically! MMMMmmmm. I can’t wait to make some of these to give as gifts! Thanks!

  7. Megan Says:

    Oh! These sound great! I’m so hungry now after looking at these! =) Great picture, too.

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