Snowball Cookies

snowball cookies

I have powdery, sugary, pecan embedded glorious butter ball cookies sitting on my windowsill. They look like a row of snowballs, blissfully unaware that they are resting, warm and moist, on the inside. Snowball cookies are a perfect treat for this time of year. Meant to melt in mouths, this sweet cookie delivers more than the snow that melted in my mouth as a child. I used to pour maple syrup over a pile of snow on a little plate, a silly treat and pre-cooking concoction that tickled my fancy. But snowball cookies are even better, heralding a confectionery melt-in-your-mouth experience.

Their cold, wintery cousins—bonafide icy outdoor snowballs—have a different fate than the cookie version. Both the indoor snowball cookies and the outdoor snow packed globes do have something in common: both provide a pile of pleasure for children and adults. Both beckon a heartfelt experience, something in the range of a smile to screeching laughter—a moment to savor.

This warm and sweet tribute to the snowball is a salute: to snowballs that provide hours of fun and laughter for children playing in the snow. Yes, these quintessential cookies are the essence of our inner children, standing with stubborn resolve in the face of challenge, yet with an all-out embrace of the amusing side of life. And might I add, it is so lovely to eat snowballs in their warm row, while watching my own children douse one another with flying, splatting orbs of icy packed snow—my moment to savor.

Snowball Cookies
1 cup butter, softened
1/2 cup powdered sugar
1 1/2 tsp vanilla
2 1/4 cup flour
dash salt
3/4 cup finely chopped pecans
powdered sugar to coat cookies

Beat butter, sugar, vanilla for 3-5 minutes until light and fluffy. Add flour, salt until dough starts to come together. Add nuts and blend. Form golf ball size balls and bake at 400 for 12 minutes; roll warm cookies in confectioners sugar to coat. When cooled, roll in sugar again if desired.

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Comments

bea at La tartine gourmande December 19, 2006 19:50 pm

I had never heard about these delightful treats before. So seasonal indeed. If only they could call for the snow to come!

Kristen December 19, 2006 21:58 pm

This may be one way we can have a White Christmas this year. These look really good!
Love your writing style.

Jeff December 20, 2006 8:46 am

I’d wanna throw one ;)

Jennifer December 20, 2006 11:39 am

How purdy!! If I weren’t so cookied out (seriously), I may just try this recipe. But I really don’t want to see another cookie til sometime in June 2007. LOL!!

janelle December 20, 2006 15:50 pm

Bea: this year my son placed hand-cut snowflakes on the window to ‘call for snow.’ The best part? His timing worked and snow did fall!

Kristin: in Seattle we usually have to aim for our mountains to get a peek at the white stuff. I love white christmases!

Jeff: yes, and straight into my mouth!

Jen: Okay, I agree, no cookies until June… what kind should they be?

Jennifer December 21, 2006 15:54 pm

I’m thinking coconut macaroons. I’ve been having a hankering for those. When I was in college (the first time around) during Passover my Jewish roommate had them and offered me some and they were the absolute best. Her mother made them from scratch and everything.

sher December 22, 2006 0:31 am

I love these cookies. My mom made them and called them Sandies. They’re addictive!

J November 6, 2007 10:34 am

Those look like something we call “Mexican Wedding Cookies”…I wonder if they’re the same? I love the look of them on a plate, with a few thumbprint cookies with bright raspberry jam in them, and some nice fudge for contrast. :)

janelle November 6, 2007 14:54 pm

Jennifer: Sounds interesting, I would love to try them!

Sher: very, very addictive.

J: YES the same. Delish!

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