Sunday, November 20, 2011

Mom's Ginger Sparklers (AKA Rock Cookies)

Someone told me years ago that in Egypt, they have a saying. "A soul will live forever if you speak their name each day." If this is true, poor ol' Mom isn't getting much rest. Not that she ever did...

These cookies were, without question, her absolute favourites. I can't see a ginger snap cookie without thinking of her. She loved to eat something sweet with her tea and often baked huge batches of these to keep on hand. Ginger cookies weren't necessarily MY favourites or my brothers, for that matter, so they would last for months. She kept them in a big tupperware container until they were so hard, they HAD to be dipped in tea to eat. I should mention that at this point, they also made impressive projectiles. They would leave dents in the walls and wouldn't crumble on impact. (They hurt like hell when you got hit with them, too.) My brother and I fondly dubbed them "Rock Cookies" and tested their strength in numerous creative, if ill-mannered ways.

 I sometimes bake these cookies for no other reason than to feel close to my Mom. I can picture her sitting contentedly at the kitchen table in her housecoat, with a steaming cup of tea and two or three "Ginger Sparklers" stacked beside her teacup. The recipe card has little dough splatters on it and the ink is beginning to fade but  the smell of them baking evokes memories that are oblivious to time.                        

Ginger Sparklers
3/4 cup butter or margarine
1 cup brown sugar
1/4 cup molasses
1 eg
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp ginger
1 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp cloves
Granulated sugar


Pre-heat oven to 350 (It once read 375 but it's been scratched out on the card...probably in an effort to make them softer.)

Cream butter and brown sugar - molasses and egg until light and fluffy - measure flour, soda, salt and spices - blend - stir into creamed mixture until blended - shape into small balls - roll in sugar - place 2" apart on a greased baking sheet - bake 8-10 minutes.

Store in an air-tight container for weeks...months...
years...hell, these cookies might even survive a nuclear holocast...(Love you Mom.)