Cinnamon
Crème Caramel with Orange and Cinnamon
Prepare the custards the day before you plan to serve them.
Pear Gingerbread Upside-Down Cakes
This luscious homespun treat is great with vanilla ice cream or frozen yogurt.
Sort of Sephardic Sweet Potatoes and Squash
Sephardic Jews from Turkey, Greece, Morocco, and other countries of the Mediterranean region say seven special blessings over seven different symbolic foods at their Rosh Hashanah dinner. Five of these blessings are over vegetables — apples (candied or dipped in sugar or honey), leeks, beet greens or spinach, dates, and zucchini or squash. These blessings symbolize their hopes for the New Year. Many of these Jews trace their ancestors back to Spain, which is called Sepharad in the Bible. Over the centuries, the Sephardic Jews took advantage of the abundance of vegetables available in the Mediterranean countries, often throughout the year. Among these vegetables are sweet potatoes and squash, great favorites of my family. The special blessing you can say over your sweet potatoes and squash at the beginning of your Rosh Hashanah dinner goes like this:
Yehi ratzon mi-le-faneha Adonai Eloheinu ve-lo-hei avoteinu she-tik-rah ro-a gezar dinenu ve-yi-karehu lefa-neha za-hee-yo-teinu.
May it be thy will, Lord our God and God of our fathers, that you should tear up any evil decree and let only our merits be read before You.
Cinnamon Apple Crumb Pie
This easy pie is the perfect marriage of apple crumble and apple pie, because you shouldn’t have to choose.
Brochettes de Kefta
Moroccans call their diminutive kebabs brochettes, in the French manner. The streets of Fez are dotted with little braziers of glowing charcoal over which turn wood or metal skewers heavy with tiny pieces of meat, liver, or kefta, enveloping passersby with their irresistibly enticing aromas. Many spices are used in the kefta, but so discreetly that you can hardly guess what has gone in.
Veiled Farm Girls
This Danish dessert consists of layers of applesauce and sweet cinnamon-scented bread crumbs, veiled with whipped cream.
Giant, Gooey Cinnamon Roll
Cinnamon bun fans, our time has come.
Candied Purple Sweet Potatoes
Slowly roasting purple sweet potatoes in a sticky-sweet mixture of brown sugar and spices gives them a glossy sheen that’s as stunning as it is flavorful.
Pumpkin Flan de Queso
This seasonal take on a Puerto Rican favorite adds pumpkin purée and a touch of warm spice for an autumnal flair.
Pumpkin Tiramisu
Everything good about the classic dessert with the warming notes of a pumpkin spice latte.
Coffee Cake Scones
Sour cream scones get treated to a cinnamon-sugar swirl and crunchy streusel crown.
Cranberry-Maple Mule
This big-batch cocktail made with ginger beer, cranberry juice, fresh lime, and a spiced maple simple syrup makes the perfect low-alcohol holiday drink.
Pumpkin Chiffon Pie
It's like eating a pumpkin-spiced cloud.
Cinnamon Butterscotch
No need for a candy thermometer in this easy recipe for butterscotch hit with warming ground cinnamon and a hefty pinch of salt.
Pork and Chickpea Stew With Cinnamon
Bust out the cinnamon sticks for this simple, cozy one-pot braise—they’ll imbue the dish with a gentle warming flavor over 4 hours of hands-off cook time.
Baklava Cookies
A snickerdoodle-like exterior with a surprise filling of honey-sweetened, gently spiced pistachios.
Vegan Coquito
This dairy-free version of the Puerto Rican holiday classic is punched up with Jamaican aromatics.
Coquito
This classic take on the coconutty Puerto Rican cocktail features warming spices and a generous glug of rum.
Hot Buttered Rum Pie
This boozy pie tastes like a Hallmark Christmas movie—you know, in the best way.