Peppernuts Recipe – Window On The Prairie (2024)

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A couple weeks ago, I did a post about the ladies of the Main Street Cafe in Durham, Kansas, making peppernuts. At the end of the post I asked if anyone would like to share a family recipe for peppernuts that I could bake and share here on the blog. I received many responses (Thank you everyone!)and ultimately chose a recipe sent in by Hollyce from her grandmother, Ethel Collett.

Grandad and Grandma Collett 1988

According to Hollyce, her grandmother actually had 3 recipes for peppernuts:

“My Grandma, Ethel Collett, is the common denominator between three different recipes for peppernuts in our family. Grandma was a hard-working farm wife and mother to nine adorable children, including my mother. Life on herMarion,Kansas, farm meant milking cows, tending a garden, sewing clothes, an outhouse, cleaning, cooking from scratch, trips to town and every Sunday in church. Ready with a hug and kiss, Grandma was as kind a person as you’d ever meet.

Grandma’s peppernut recipe is a mystery. Or should I say Grandma’s three peppernut recipes are mysteries. As I mentioned in my comment to the peppernut story in “Window On The Prairie”, when several cousins realized we were still making peppernuts at Christmas we found there were three different recipes. One recipe calls for boiling sugar, shortening and sorgum; no pepper, no anise. The second uses molasses, evaporated milk, pepper, and anise. The recipe my Mom received from her Mom uses white syrup, honey, sour milk and anise oil; no pepper. All are called “Grandma’s Peppernuts”.

When Suzanne asked me to write a couple paragraphs about the peppernut recipe I’d sent in, I immediately emailed my mom and aunts hoping to receive some history of their Grandma making peppernuts. Or maybe a story about helping their Mom roll the dough, cutting the lengths into kibble-sized bits and laying them meticulously on a cookie sheet, as I did with my mom and my two kids did with me. Or, as my adult kids still do, impatiently waiting for the crunchy nuggets to cool before munching on the first handful of the season. However, as much as peppernuts have become a Collett family tradition, Mom doesn’t remember Grandma making these cookies when she was at home. Apparently, no one has information on where Grandma got her recipes or why she gave different recipes when asked for “her” peppernut recipe. Regardless of the unsolved mystery, it doesn’t change the fact that many of her kids and grandkids love “Grandma’s Peppernuts”.”

Here is one of Grandma Collett’s recipes for Peppernuts:

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RECIPE

Yield: 4 1/2pounds

  • 3/4 cup shortening
  • 1 1/2 cups white sugar
  • 3/4 cup white cornsyrup
  • 3/4 cup honey
  • 1/2 cup sour milk (stir 1 teaspoon lemon juice into milk and let sit for about 10 minutes)
  • 1 egg
  • 1 teaspoon anise oil
  • 6 cups flour
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1/4 teaspoon cloves
  • 1/2 teaspoon nutmeg
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon bakingsoda

In a large mixing bowl, cream together the shortening and sugar.

Then add the egg,

corn syrup,

honey,

milk,

and anise oil.

Mix well.

In a medium mixing bowl stir together the flour, cinnamon, cloves, nutmeg, baking powder, and baking soda.

Then add the flour mixture to the wet mixture about one cup at a time mixing well in between.

Dough will be stiff. I used a wooden spoon and my country girl arm muscles. Pack dough into an airtight container, pressplastic wrapon the top of the dough tokeep out air,cover with a lid, and refrigerate at least one night, or longer.

To bake cookies, preheat oven to 350 degrees. Grease baking sheets. Remove dough from fridge, and cut into small workable sections. Roll out each section about the diameter of your finger and then cut into 1/2 inch pieces.

Place oncookie sheets leaving about 1/2 inch space between them.Bake at 350 degrees for 10 minutes or until a light golden brown.

Remove from oven and allow to cool on sheets for a few minutes.

Remove cookies from pans with a spatula, and seal into airtight container.

Take heed: I started the baking process alone, then enlisted Harland to help. We were rolling, cutting and baking in both our regular oven and toaster oven as well. This is not a one person job, unless you have a lot of time on your hands. Get help: your spouse, boyfriend, kids, the mailman, the plumber, even your dog or cat if you can get them to help you. This is a production.

But that said, it is a lot of fun, and so worth it in the end. These little cookies are so delicious, and perfect with a cup or coffee or tea. And as everyone told me, they are addictive. It is physically impossible to eat just one, or two, three, 10, 15….HELP, get these away from me!

A big THANK YOU to Hollyce for sharing her Grandma’s recipe!
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Peppernuts Recipe – Window On The Prairie (2024)

FAQs

What is the history of peppernuts? ›

The dainty, big-flavored cookies we now call “peppernuts” were originally baked in European kitchens as a part of yuletide celebrations. Germans called them pfeffernüsse, the Dutch knew them as pepernoten, and the Danes served them as pebernødder. Kansans began eating them thanks to another culture.

What is the meaning of peppernuts? ›

A pepernoot (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈpeːpərˌnoːt]; plural: pepernoten [ˈpeːpərˌnoːtə(n)]; literally, "pepper nuts") is a Dutch cookie-like confectionery, traditionally associated with the early December Sinterklaas holiday in the Netherlands and Belgium. The ingredients have some similarities with German Pfeffernüsse.

Where did Pfeffernusse come from? ›

Pfeffernusse, or “peppernuts,” are little balls of holiday cheer that originated in Germany. It's believed their name comes from the whole spices that are ground into powder to flavor the dough since traditional Pfeffernusse don't contain nuts, despite the name.

Why do you bake cookies at 350? ›

350° is the standard temp for a cookie, and it's a great one. Your cookies will bake evenly and the outside will be done at the same time as the inside. Baking at 325° also results in an evenly baked cookie, but the slower cooking will help yield a chewier cookie. The outsides will be a little softer, too.

What not to do when baking cookies? ›

15 Common Cookie Baking Mistakes You Might Be Making
  1. Your cookies aren't baking evenly. ...
  2. You use eggs straight from the fridge. ...
  3. You use the wrong kind of flour. ...
  4. You measure flour the wrong way. ...
  5. You soften butter too much — or not enough. ...
  6. You use stale baking powder or baking soda. ...
  7. You overwork the dough.
Nov 4, 2020

Can you put cookies back in the oven to finish cooking? ›

Light colored cookies with dark speckles typically indicates that the cookies are underbaked. You can stick the stone back in the oven for another few minutes and they should finish baking.

When were pepernoten invented? ›

These are bite-sized spiced cookies, made with rye flour, honey and the warming spices of cinnamon, cloves and aniseed. Pepernoten have been baked in German abbeys since the 13th century. In some Northern provinces of the Netherlands they were a symbol of fertility.

When was Pfeffernusse invented? ›

Pfeffernusse, also known as 'pepernoten' or peppernuts, originated from Central Europe. A confectioner from Offenbach am Main, named Johann Fleischmann, is believed to have created the recipe in 1753.

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