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Gray Matters: Tastes Of Christmas

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  • Gray Matters: Tastes Of Christmas

    GRAY MATTERS: TASTES OF CHRISTMAS
    Margaret Dorr

    Chronicle Times
    http://www.chronicletimes.com/story/1487781. html
    Dec 22 2008
    IA

    The Blessed Christmas Season touches all of the senses, but today let's
    consider the sense of taste. Do you remember those tasty things when
    you were a child that could only mean Christmas? My mother didn't do
    a lot of baking so my rememberings are of goodies brought home from
    the store. Mixed hard candies loom large.

    Ribbon candy was special. I loved the way it folded back on
    itself. Once inside my mouth, those folds made wee storage places out
    of which I could suck the tasty juices. I dimly recall some little
    pillow-shaped candies that had a mysterious filling inside.

    Anyone remember what those were all about? Then there were always big
    bowls of mixed nuts in their shells and I loved those. I could sit
    for a long while sorting through the different varieties, cracking
    and picking, savoring and enjoying.

    Sometime when I was a bit older, an aunt, my mother's sister,
    introduced us to a new and unforgettable treat. They were called
    Aplets. I wonder how she found out about them. I'm wondering, too,
    if any of you have enjoyed this special confection. I hadn't thought
    of them for years until they appeared in a catalog from which I
    sometimes order.

    This led me to an internet search which brought some fascinating
    information. Aplets and Cotlets are made from jellied apple or apricot
    juice combined with walnuts. They replicate a popular Mid-East
    confection known as "Turkish Delight." It seems that early in the
    twentieth century two young Armenians fled Turkey where there was
    increasing danger for their minority group.

    Armen Tertsagian and Mark Balaban met in Seattle and decided to go into
    business together. None of their enterprises was successful and they
    hated the gray damp climate. So in 1915 they headed east and discovered
    the village of Cashmere in the Wenatchee Valley in central Washington.

    Here they were struck with its similarity to their homeland. The two
    bought an apple farm and were soon in business. Armenian relatives
    joined the family firm. One had been a chemist with a French perfume
    firm so he turned his skills toward improving the products. This
    amazing enterprise has remained in the family.

    Greg Taylor, grandson of Tertsagian, is now the president and has been
    for 30 years. In addition to the apple and apricot treats the company
    now produces peach, strawberry, and orange, with walnuts; blueberry and
    raspberry with pecans; and pineapple with macadamia. Consider yourself
    lucky if a tin from central Washington shows up in your stocking!

    Cookies were my specialty. For years, I made at least a dozen
    varieties, often in double batches. I wasn't good at rolling, cutting
    and decorative icing, but I employed almost every other technique. I
    had a Spritz press which was fun to use. Between my palms, I rolled
    spicy dough and cut it into quantities of "pepper nuts." There were
    pans of date bars, toffee squares and lemon squares.

    Little balls of cookie dough were rolled into thumbprints and Russian
    tea cakes, all to be doused with powdered sugar. The list goes on and
    on, and my mouth is watering. Trays of cookies were often gifts from
    our house.

    Too, I would catch up on our entertaining obligations with many a
    holiday evening with friends and relatives over cookies and coffee. It
    took all of the rest to satisfy my hungry crew.

    Now join me in relishing the memories of your own special tastes
    of Christmas!
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