Pastries
Cornbread Muffins with Maple Butter
These are just a tiny bit sweet. For the tenderest result, stir in dry ingredients just until blended.
Mini Star-Anise Scones
Get the freshest ground star anise by making your own. It's as easy as grinding a few star anise pods in a spice mill or a coffee grinder.
Chicken and Biscuits
Homey and old-fashioned, this comforting dish can be on the table in a flash, thanks to store-bought rotisserie chicken and biscuits made with self-rising flour.
Banana and Mango Spring Rolls with Coconut-Chocolate Ganache
East meets West in this dessert version of the spring roll.
Elsie's Apple Strudel with Burnt Caramel Ice Cream
Pastry chef Gale Gand found this family-favorite recipe in her Hungarian grandmother's recipe file.
King Cake Eclairs
This recipe was created by chefs Slade Rushing and Allison Vines-Rushing of the Longbranch in Abita Springs, Louisiana. It's part of a special menu they created for Epicurious's Wine.Dine.Donate program.
Orange-Pumpkin Roulade
Pumpkin, packed with vitamin A, proves it has a life after Thanksgiving.
Black Bun
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from Christopher Trotter's book The Scottish Kitchen As Trotter mentions, black bun is enjoyed at Hogmanay, which is the name for New Year's in Scotland..
This is a very traditional Scottish sweetmeat and is usually associated by most Scots with Hogmanay when it is eaten with a nip or two of whisky! It differs from most fruit cakes in that it is baked in a pastry case. It should be kept for several weeks to mature.
Figgy Scones
Drop scones are a boon for busy holiday bakers, since they're a snap to make and almost foolproof. These bake up light and fluffy. A touch of maple syrup and pieces of fig make them just sweet enough — ideal for breakfast or an afternoon snack.
Quince Apple Strudels with Quince Syrup
Served with small scoops of ice cream and a pink-hued syrup, this fruit-filled dessert delivers a glorious finale to a special dinner. Strudel dough looks more difficult to make than it really is. The secret is using bread flour, a high-gluten flour, which allows you to stretch a small amount of dough over a large surface.
Liver and Mushroom Pirozhki
The Russian version of pierogies, pirozhki are small turnovers that are baked rather than boiled. Their savory, rich mushroom-and-liver filling packs a big punch within a crisp little pastry.
Cranberry-Cheese Danish
Perfect for the morning after Thanksgiving.
Chocolate, Caramel, and Walnut Tart
Inspired by one of the most popular desserts of the '70s, as immortalized by Wolfgang Puck when he was at Ma Maison.
Uncle John's Moon Rock Biscuits
Astronaut or not, anyone can enjoy these raisin-studded drop biscuits. Eat them while they're warm, because they lose their stellar appeal when cool.
Sesame-Citrus Crackers
Evelyn Herring of Laguna Woods, California, writes: "My mother was raised in Scotland and learned to cook at a time when quality ingredients were hard to come by. She had to be imaginative, often substituting ingredients and improvising recipes. My own cooking has become Americanized over the years, but I still rely on her recipes. They're easy and always taste as good as the first time I tried them."
These savory treats, called biscuits in Scotland, go well with cocktails or tea.
Samosas
(Deep-Fried Pastry Stuffed with Spicy Potatoes)
Chernowitzer Challah
In the late nineteenth century, the city of Czernowitz, known as the Vienna of Eastern Europe, was famous throughout Austria-Hungary for its tolerance, civic beauty, culture, and learning. Frequently renationalized over the last millennium, Czernowitz has passed through Romanian, Ottoman, and Austrian control and is now a Ukrainian city called Chernivtsi. At its cultural peak at the turn of the twentieth century, it was populated and governed by Jews from Poland, Russia, Austria, and Romania — it even hosted the first-ever Yiddish-language conference in 1908. Of course, World War II destroyed this idyll, and most of the city's Jews were deported to Auschwitz.
This recipe for a classic European challah (pronounced "chern-o-vitzer") comes from the late Lotte Langmann. It is not terribly sweet or eggy, but it is generously enriched with oil. The Austrians traditionally use a four-stranded braid, but this dough holds its shape so beautifully during baking that it is a great choice for showing off any fancy shape. This has become one of my favorite challah recipes.