Fruit
Coconut-Macadamia Nut Cookies
For a more pronounced coconut flavor, lightly toast the coconut along with the nuts before adding the coconut to the dough.
Lime Glaze
Speckles of grated lime zest in this pretty soft-green icing give the finished cookies a fresh citrus flavor.
Lime-Glazed Cookies
To keep these cookies flaky and light, do not over mix the butter and sugars; the dough must not become too soft before adding the remaining ingredients.
Oatmeal-Raisin Cookies
These classic drop cookies are large, soft, and chewy. Look for grade B maple syrup, which has a deeper flavor than grade A.
Glazed Lemon Pound Cakes
Poppy seeds give these cakes an interesting texture and appearance, but you can certainly omit them if you prefer.
Pear Chips
For the prettiest chips, use blemish-free pears that are not quite ripe. A mandoline will help make the pear slices perfectly even.
Pear-Spice Bundt Cake
This is a slight twist on applesauce cake, relying instead on a homemade pear sauce. The cake can be made a day ahead. Keep it at room temperature, then glaze it and garnish it with pear chips just before serving
Cherry-Streusel Coffee Cake
Sour cream gives this cake a particularly lovely tang. Tube pans are made with both regular and removable bottoms; either is fine for this recipe.
Irish Soda Bread
The addition of raisins, caraway seeds, and egg makes this version richer and even more delicious than traditional Irish soda bread.
Fig-Walnut Bread
If you use miniloaf pans, reduce the baking time to forty-five minutes. Because this recipe calls for dried figs, it can be made year-round; the figs’ seeds give the bread a nice crunch.
Banana-Nut Bread
If you use miniloaf pans, reduce the baking time to forty-five minutes. The recipe comes from Deanna Caceres Cahn, a former brand manager in the Martha Stewart Signature furniture group.
Fennel and Golden-Raisin Scones
The dough for these savory scones gets its unique texture and flavor from a combination of butter and olive oil. It was inspired by a similarly flavored yeast bread sold at Amy’s Bread in New York City.
Oat and Dried Apricot Scones
Feel free to substitute other dried fruits for the apricots. We particularly like using sour cherries, cranberries, golden raisins, or chopped figs.
Currant Scones
Sanding sugar is coarser than granulated sugar and lends a lovely sparkle when sprinkled over the tops of scones, biscuits, pies, and cookies before baking. It is available at baking-supply stores and many grocery stores.
Date-Bran Muffins
Be sure to use unsulfured molasses—not sulfured or blackstrap—in this recipe. Also, buy the freshest, moistest dates you can find.
Plum Coffee-Cake Muffins
You can substitute an equal amount of chopped peaches or nectarines for the plums. Or use your favorite berries instead—the recipe is very versatile.
Blueberry Muffins
Try sprinkling granulated sugar over the tops of the unbaked muffins (one tablespoon should cover all twelve) to give them a bit of crunch.
Raisin Pie
Amish and old-order Mennonites bake this pie, also called rosina pie (German for raisin) or “funeral” pie, during any season. Some recipes include milk, making it more like a custard pie, and others use water, but they all seem to agree on the necessity of a double-crusted pie, often with a lattice top. If you like raisins, you’ll love this pie. Walnuts, pecans, hazelnuts, or almonds would be perfect choices for the chopped nuts.