Making Anise Cookies

Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays emerge early in the stores.  We see evidence of them in our mailboxes.  Catalogs spill over with gift-giving ideas.  The hustle and bustle will come, but it is not yet here.  While this calm before the storm lingers, it is time to make cookies.  The family  recipe to which I refer is Grandma’s Anise Cookies. (It came to us from Grandma’s mother.)

cracked eggs in bowl, glass mixing bowl, Mix Master, eggs,Her recipe is an overnight recipe of only 4 ingredients.  The trick is to do it on a clear day.  Without the proper conditions, the cookies will not frost themselves.

 

Start with 4 eggs.  Beat at high speed till light.

 

Sunbeam Mix Master, making anise cookies, sugar, Mix Master, anise cookies,Slowly add 1.5 cups of sugar to the eggs.

 

You will want a dependable standing mixer for this job, since you will mix the sugar and egg mixture at high speed for 1/2 hour. The mixture will become light and thick.

 

Bottle of Anise oil, anise oil,

 

 

When the half-hour mixing is completed, add 6 drops of anise oil.  (Extract will not give the strength of anise flavor desired.  Anise oil will. I got my anise oil at my local pharmacy. At this rate of use, one bottle lasts many Christmases.)

 

 

 

 

Mix Master, Flour, Anise cookie batter, Sunbeam Mix Master,

Also add 1.75 cup flour slowly into the mixture.

 

 

 

Beat for an additional 5 minutes.

 

 

 

 

 Flour, baking sheet, jelly roll pan,

 

 

Butter and flour cookie sheets.

 

 

 

 

Cookie sheet, teaspoons, anise cookie dough, jelly roll pan, floured cookie sheet,Place batter by the teaspoonful on cookie sheets.

 

 

 

 

 

floured cookie sheet, anise cookie dough, cookie dough, anise cookies,Let cookies sit overnight Bake the next morning at 325° for 8 minutes or less.

 

 

 

 

 

Self-frosting anise cookies, anise cookies, Grandma's anise cookies, anise cookies baked,These cookies freeze well. This recipe makes about 60 cookies.

photo credit: Wenda Grabau
photo credit: Wenda Grabau
photo credit: Wenda Grabau
photo credit: Wenda Grabau
photo credit: Wenda Grabau
photo credit: Bretta Grabau
photo credit: Wenda Grabau
photo credit: Wenda Grabau

8 Responses to “Making Anise Cookies”

  1. Deena Hall November 19, 2013 at 8:52 am #

    I want one! So yummy!!

    • grabauheritage November 19, 2013 at 9:24 am #

      I have some in the freezer. You will get to enjoy some.

      • Deena Hall November 19, 2013 at 10:10 am #

        oh good! :-)

        • grabauheritage November 19, 2013 at 6:50 pm #

          I got 2 batches made.

  2. Bill Hatfield December 8, 2014 at 8:08 am #

    Just found this recipe and it is the closest I can find to the one handed down through my mother’s side of the family (my recipe calls for powder sugar in place of sugar).

    Do you know where this recipe comes from? We always considered them “Italian” (and always made at Christmas) but I can’t find any Italian anise cookie recipes that are similar. I’d love to find out if they were passed down from my Irish or Italian roots or perhaps were just a favorite recipe that became a family tradition somewhere along the way.

    Thanks!

    • grabauheritage December 8, 2014 at 9:52 am #

      Hi there,
      We call these cookies a family favorite at Christmas time.
      I don’t know that I can answer your question, but we got the recipe handed down from our German ancestors. That would date to the early 1900s and I would assume from the later 1800s, too.

      Maybe the variation in sugar could indicate where your recipe is from. Good Luck and thanks for stopping by!

Trackbacks/Pingbacks:

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