I couldn't help but post this for the final post this year! Soooo cute. A different kind of chocolate. Have a wonderful 2010.New Year's Resolution: Eat More Chocolate. It's good for you!
Ring in the New Year with Champagne Truffles. Don't have time to make them? Several great Chocolate Companies make Champagne Truffles.
New Year's Eve is coming up and what a better way to celebrate than with Champagne Truffles. I like this recipe because it uses more champagne than most Champagne Truffle recipes. The Cognac also adds some zip.
December 28: Chocolate Candy Day. Chocolate Candy can be whatever you want it to be: Snickers, Kit Kats, M&Ms, Whitman Samplers, See's Candy or chocolate from great chocolatiers such as Recchiuti, Green & Black, Dagoba, Askinosie, and many others.
January 14. 2010. The TASTY AWARDS: Celebrating and recognizing the year's best achievements in food and fashion programs on television, in film and on the web. Winners of the TASTY AWARDS will be announced and receive their honors on January 14th, 2010 at a red carpet Awards Show at the Kabuki Theatre in San Francisco, portions of which will be filmed for broadcast on national television in February 2010 to millions of households.

If you read my mystery blog Mystery Fanfare, you'll know I love themes. I did a whole week of Chocolate and Peppermint recipes here on Dying for Chocolate from drinks to cookies to cakes and fudge. So, today, I have another theme: Chocolate Cookies with Mints. There's such variety. Rather than reproduce all the recipes here (and I haven't tried the last one), I thought I'd just add links to the cookies--and to my favorite baking blogs. You'll love these recipes and the blogs. Hope you have time to make at least one of these recipes.
Every week or so I do a Chocolate Sampler: News, books, reviews, tours. Basically what's happening with chocolate in the world.
The other day I went to my friend Sue Trowbridge's home for a wonderful afternoon. She had bid on an auction item: a reading by a well known San Francisco Bay Area actor, and she was finally collecting. Sue provided various sweets, tea and champagne. My kind of repast. On her tea menu were Chocolate Biscotti. I had two chocolate biscotti recipes on DyingforChocolate awhile ago, one based on Dorie Greenspan's double chocolate biscotti, but this recipe had the added texture and tanginess of dried cranberries. I asked her about the recipe. The source was Parade Magazine: Bake Your own Gifts (December 13) by Dorie Greenspan, so I shouldn't have been surprised.
Continuing with the Chocolate French holiday theme, I thought I'd tackle the Croquembouche. Croquembouche (aka Croquenbouche) is a high mound of profiteroles (choux filled with pastry cream/creampuffs) sometimes bound by dipping in chocolate or carmel and decorated with threats of caramel, chocolate, ribbons or flowers. Croquembouche means Crunch in the Mouth. Although this lovely creation is served at French (and other) weddings, it's also created for other special events.
After my post about Bûche de Noël the other day, and since I don't make my own Bûche de Noël, I thought readers might be interested in where to buy a Buche de Noel for the holiday.
A Bûche de Noël is not for the faint of heart. The few times I've had this Holiday Classic, I've bought it at a French Bakery. Bûche de Noël is the traditional dessert served during the Christmas holidays in France, Belgium, Quebec and other French related and Christian populated countries. Basically it looks like a log ready for the fire. The traditional Bûche de Noël is made from a Genoise (see recipe below) filled and frosted with buttercream. The Bûche de Noël is often iced to look like a piece of the branch has broken off. Sometimes there are fresh berries and meringue or marzipan mushrooms. The Bûche de Noël is one of my favorite holiday desserts. The log represents the hearth--the center of the house, and this yule log (Bûche de Noël) will be the center of your holiday table.
Remember how you used to find great recipes on the back of the sugar box or bag? You'd cut it off after you finished the bag, and you'd save those paper recipes for years. Well sugar boxes and bags still have them, but your limited to the two or three that fit on the package. Most sugar companies now have great websites and blogs with those recipes and more. Domino Sugar is one of those sites. I found this fabulous recipe for Chocolate Chunk Coffee there, and it's a must bake for a holiday breakfast. Serve it with a great cup of Hot Cocoa. Perfect for guests, too.

So many great cookies out there for the holidays. I will admit to loving all types of Christmas cookies, but this is a chocolate blog, so I've put together a few of my favorite cookie recipes. They are all easy to make, and they're all very easy to eat. Maybe too easy... they're so good. You can always have a cookie swap if you'd like other types of cookies for the holidays.

CHOCOLATE SAMPLER: Every few weeks I like to do a round-up of Chocolate Stories, Reviews and News.
t The Santa Fe Chocolate Trail: Kakawa Chocolate House, Todos Santos Chocolates and Confections, and CG Higgins Confections and Chocolate Smith, the last stop on The Santa Fe Chocolate Trail.
Chanukah, the Jewish Festival of Lights, starts tomorrow. When I think of Chocolate and Chanukah (Hanukah/Hanukkah/ so many ways to spell this holiday), I always think of Chanukah Gelt, those chocolate candy coins wrapped in gold foil that are given to the children.
Kristin King of the Norfolk Cooking Examiner has a holiday dessert after my heart. Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Truffles. What's so unique about these truffles is that they're easy, delicious, no bake and safe. I reported about the recall of raw cookie dough a few months ago, but that was more to do with processed refrigerator cookie dough. This recipe substitutes condensed milk for raw eggs, so it's definitely safe. Kristin King has a video on the Norfolk Cooking Examiner site. Always fun to watch.
I love a good trifle, and I have posted several recipes for trifle before, but since I'm on a chocolate peppermint jag this week I thought what could be more English for the Holidays than a Chocolate Peppermint Trifle.
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