I found this recipe looking for cupcake recipes on the FoodNetwork. Huh? It's a cookie called Raspberry Lemon Thumbprint Cookies. From Emeril Lagasse, the "BAM Man." It called for Chambord or kirsch, neither of which I had. I didn't want to buy more booze. This recipe only called for a bit, and driving to the store and purchasing it just wasn't in the cards at 7am on a Saturday morning. No company, no shower, just me and the cat. Nuf said.
So, I embraced the Jacqueline mantra: Substitution is Key. And, then I proceeded with cassis!
First, I mixed up the jam and booze. I used an assortment of jams: Sarabeth's Strawberry Raspberry (my favorite store-bought that I buy at Home Goods or TJ Maxx), Smucker's Red Raspberry Seedless (I use this for my xmas cookie, Jellies) and my own home-made strawberry jam (I horde this stuff, really, not a generous bone in my body on this one...Mine-all mine). I made a larger batch so that I could both bake some into the cookie and then fill the cooled cookies.
No being a huge fan of the thumbprint cookie, I wasn't convinced these would actually work. Well, as you'll see, they kinda worked and kinda didn't work. I made them work in the end...Always the goal.
Play-by-Play
Sift the dry ingredients together in a separate bowl. You get the idea...
| I separate my eggs the Nigella Lawson Way. Easy. A bit messy, but that's what your hands are for, right? |
Cream the sugar and butter until light and fluffy. Beat in the egg yolks, lemon zest, lemon juice and vanilla.
Fill the well with a scant tsp of the jam-booze mixture.
Sorry for the fuzzy picture here. You get the idea.
Bake them until set, about 20 minutes, no joke. I then filled them while they cooled with more jam-booze goodness. Honestly, these came out looking like hell, not all pretty and neat. So, I improvised and I think they looked AND tasted better with both baked and non-baked jam-booze goodness. Just sayin'.
* Blackcurrants have a very high content in antioxidants and vitamins. In particular, they're very rich in Vitamin C. Blackcurrants also contain several rare nutrients, like GLA (Gamma Linoleic Acid, a very rare Omega-6 essential fatty acid) and MAOI (Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors), and may be used in therapies against depression. YAY!
| Sorry for the blur. Believe it or not, my camera skills HAVE improved since this shot. |
