
Yes, Helen!
Today is the 25th of the Month and it’s
Cookie Day at North Star,
in this ‘the year of the Cookie!’
February’s cookie was inspired by one of my favorite book series
The Mitford Series written by Jan Karon.

Millions of Mitford fans will agree – it’s easy to put on a pound or two reading a Mitford novel! In scene after scene, you find colorful characters enjoying ravishing dishes like Puny’s golden-crusted cornbread and Father Tim’s baked ham with bourbon glaze. And before you know it, you’ve read several pages by the glow of the refrigerator lightbulb!
If you love the Mitford books, like I do, you’ll devour Jan Karon’s Mitford Cookbook & Kitchen Reader, edited by Martha McIntosh
The book is filled with recipes for 150 dishes of your favorite scenes from each of the Mitford books. Today I have chosen Avis Packard’s Shortbread Cookie to bake!
Avis Packard, proprietor of The Local
In the little village of less than a thousand, everyone’s dinner – party or otherwise – began at The Local, unless they wanted to make the fifteen mile drive to Food Value. Of course, they could go out to Cloer’s Market, but Hattie Cloer was so well-known for telling customer’s her aches and pains that hardly anyone ever did that. Avis Packard once said, that Hattie Cloer had sent more business to The Local than any advertising he had ever run in the paper. One thing Father Tim liked about Avis Packard was the way he got excited about his groceries. He could rhapsodize about the first fresh strawberries from the valley in a way that made him a veritable Wordsworth of garden fare. “We got a special today on tenderloin that’s so true to the meanin’ of th’ name, you can cut it with a fork.” At Home in Mitford, Chapter 4
Avis’s Shortbread Cookies
5 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon salt
2 cups unsalted butter, at room temperature
2 cups granulated sugar
2 large eggs, at room temperature
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
Nonstick cooking spray for the pans, Confectioners’ sugar, for sprinkling over the cookies.
Sift the flour, baking soda, and salt into a large bowl and set aside. In the bowl of an electric mixer, cream the butter and granulated sugar on medium speed for 8 minutes, until light and fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time, and continue beating. Add the vanilla, then add the flour mixture and beat until the mixture just holds together. Chill the dough for at least 1 hour before baking.
Preheat the oven to 325 degrees. Coat a cookie sheet with nonstick cooking spray. Use an ice cream scooper to scoop the dough out onto the pan.
Bake for 12 to 15 minutes, or until the edges begin to brown. Remove the shorbreads from the pan, place on a plate, and sprinkle confectioners’ sugar over the warm cookies.
nibble, nibble, nibble…
crumbs on the plate.
nibble, nibble, nibble…
it’s almost too late!
Hurry-Up!
Or you’ll miss the last bite
of something that is great!
Every great baking day needs a faithful Cookie Tester!
“it’s th’ unblessed food that makes you fat.” -Puny Bradshaw Guthrie
hugs n’ blessings and yummy food that sometimes makes you fluffy!
“t’s the unblessed food that makes you fat” I was writing that as a haha, but upon consideration, it is probably right. When one sits down and blesses the food, she is probably eating what is good for her. But the “un-blessed” – all the snacking in the refrigerator light and in front of TV or while sitting in the recliner – yep, that is what makes me fat.
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Yes!!!! You are right on the mark!🏹🎯 And perhaps that’s when we learn the greatest…when our life lessons enlighten our hearts yet tickle them just the same! Hugs!😘
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I love your idea of The Year of the Cookie. Who doesn’t love a good cookie. Thanks for reminding us about The Mitford series. I love that series and have been missing Father Tim….time for a visit!
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Going through the cookbook periodically brings me to the town of Mitford! It’s as if I get to be a part of the Church pot-luck suppers & cake-walks! Hope you find a slice of time to visit with Father Timothy soon! Hugs!
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Dawn Marie, I loved the Mitford series and have also read them all! lol They just seem to “hook” you and you can’t stop reading them. Great of you to post recipes! Thanks for your great posts.
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Jan Karon has done a fabulous job with the town of Mitford! A true sign of a gifted writer who weaves her reader right into the setting…it is as if you’re shopping at The Local or sharing a piece of Orange Marmalade cake with Fr. Timothy in the rector’s parlor. (Which by the way truly lives up to the description of ‘diabetic disaster!’) But oh my it is Yummy!!🍊🎂🍊🎂
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Those crumbly cookies look yummylicious ! I liked that poem you have written towards the middle of your post 🙂
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Thank you dear heart! whenever one tastes a treat that delights the tummy, that sing-song, rhyme along happiness bubbles up!!! Hope you have a chance to bake a batch to rhyme along too!!!
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Great post. Thanks for sharing your world. Beautiful.
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Thank you, thank you, thank you for visiting with me!😉
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Hugs and Blessings to you.
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Ditto!!!
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