I may be visiting Eric more often than he might wish...
http://www.readingterminalmarket.org/
What really started this Pennsylvania interest was a visit we made to Pittsburgh several weeks ago for a wedding. At the rehearsal dinner, much was made by the bride's mother (whom we had not met before) about how she and a group of family and friends had spent the afternoon traying cookies. "Traying cookies?" I wondered silently. "Huh? Is that a new baking method I don't know about?"
Well, no. Turns out it was exactly as stated. Traying cookies. As in putting them on trays. DUH.
I was captivated by this information. It's the Pittsburgh equivalent of southern hospitality. Is there anything better than family, friends and neighbors coming together to bake for a wedding?
Even the New York Times saw fit to write about it:
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/16/dining/16cookies.html?_r=2&pagewanted=2
Post wedding, I emailed the bride's mom to ask a few more questions. She was beyond gracious in giving me information and shared the fact that 200 dozen cookies had been baked for this event.
200 DOZEN COOKIES = 2,400!!! Yikes! No wonder they spent an entire day "traying cookies."
I asked her if there were specific kinds of cookies that were required. "No," she replied casually, "but I hope you didn't miss the Lady Locks."
I hadn't. But I did not know the back story behind them. They are sometimes referred to as "Cream Horns." More interestingly, they are also known as "Closepin Cookies." That's because in Depression days, the dough was rolled around closepins - not the spring-loaded version we know today, but the wooden ones with the straight sides and the "pin head." Unfortunately (sigh), I am old enough to remember them.
I couldn't stand it. I had to try my hand at making them. I cheated by using frozen puff pastry and I recoiled at the use of shortening and marshmallow creme, but I persevered anyway. They were gorgeous. They were delicious. I would make them again.
I also didn't have any straight-sided closepins on hand. Well, who would? So it meant a trip to the hardware store to buy a wooden dowel, which Henry graciously hacked into 3-inch lengths for me.
The dowel - striaght from the hardware store - lengths courtesy of Henry
LADY LOCKS
1 pkg. frozen puff pastry
3-inch dowel lengths or cornet molds
1 egg, beaten with 1 T. milk or half-and-half
1/2 cup butter, room temperature
1/4 cup shortening, room temperature
1 cup confectioner's sugar
1/2 cup half-and-half
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract (or vanilla paste)
6 tablespoons marshmallow creme
Defrost pastry in refrigerator for 1 hour.
Preheat oven to 375-degrees.
Wrap dowel sticks in non-stick foil (or spray each one with cooking spray). Unwrap 1 section of the pastry and cut width-wise into 3/4-inch strips. Roll each strip around a prepared stick, then brush with egg wash and place on baking sheet. Continue with second pastry sheet.
Bake until just golden brown, about 15 minutes. Cool for 10 minutes, then carefullly remove pastry from dowel sticks. Place on a baking rack to cool completely.
Beat butter and shortening. Add confectioner's sugar and milk. Beat in vanilla and marshmallow creme.
Place filling in a pastry bag fitted with a star tip. Pipe into cooled pastry shells, filling from both ends.
Yield: about 3 dozen
I love the history and the tradition that is interlocked in this recipe. Everything old becomes new again, right?
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