Positive thinking guru Norman Vincent Peale once famously intoned that, "Christmas waves a magic wand over this world, and behold, everything is softer and more beautiful."
Rev. Peale obviously never saw the wreckage that is my kitchen after several rounds of Christmas cookie baking. Which is why I was so relieved to discover that plenty of Twin Cities bakeries stand ready to take the heat off frazzled December bakers, stocking their cases with all manner of holiday favorites.
Walk into 3 Tiers and it's not difficult to get the impression that baker/owner Sarah Herr is into Christmas, because her case is filled with a variety of holiday lovelies, from colorful iced sugar cutouts (don't miss the blue bells), giant spritz, super-moist Peanut Blossoms and thin, teasingly spicy gingerbread boys.
But it's the Chocolate crinkles ($1) that really impress. While they're gooey inside, they've got that hard-to-achieve crisp shell on the outside, with all that chocolate-y goodness buried under a seasonally appropriate powdered-sugar blizzard. They can totally pass as homemade, which may be the most cherished gift that Herr can pass along to her time-crunched customers.
The classic diamants at Patisserie 46 are a year-round staple of baker/owner John Kraus, yet they seem so Christmas-y that they practically go caroling themselves. The coin-shaped chocolate cookies (95 cents) are utter simplicity, each sinfully buttery treat glistening with coarse sugar. Is it possible to sneak just one? Doubtful. Are they attention-getters on a crowded cookie tray? Definitely.
The grandmotherly Christmas cookie selection at A Piece of Cake is not only heartwarming, it's priced to sell. Dainty, sugar-dappled spritz, feisty little gingerbreads, iced sugar cutouts, shortbread horns dipped in chocolate and finished with chopped walnuts, they're all here, but the don't-miss goodie is definitely the star-shaped sandwich cookie ($1) built with that can't-miss combination of chocolate and mint.
Although their place is called Cake Eater Bakery and Cafe, co-owners Emily Moore Harris and Sheela Namakkal aren't exactly slouches in the cookie-making department. Witness their crisp, golden, melt-in-your mouth sugar cookies ($1), iced with a pretty snowflake and sparkling with ice crystal-like sugar. Their Hanukkah version was awfully special too.
While the folks at Patisserie Margo put up a swell apricot-craisin-walnut rugelach ($1.75), their No. 1 eye-catcher is what has to be the Twin Cities' prettiest sugar cookie cutout ($2), a gigantic, intricate snowflake that will put a smile on even the most blizzard-weary Minnesotan.