Shortbread has long been linked with the Christmas season. We can find reference in his collected letters to novelist Charles Dickens receiving shortbread (and haggis!) as a Christmas gift from a friend while in Edinburgh. Between Christmas and Jan. 6 there is, of course, New Years, or Hogmanay -- Scottish New Year's Day -- which is generally thought to be a perfect time to munch on some shortbread. In addition to being an ideal gift to anyone with taste buds, shortbread's associations of home resonate with those of Scottish descent around the world. It's been said that as Christmas approaches, enormous quantities of shortbread are prepared, packaged and sent from the homeland to exiled Scots in every corner of the globe. Everyone knows that baked goods have a special power to conjure decades-old memories of childhood comfort and familial good cheer. If the shortbread happens to come in a handsome thistle tin, or one adorned with a saltire or a bagpipe-playing kitten, well it's all the more evocative. And we tend to think that shortbread season pretty much runs all year round.
Shortbread has long been linked with the Christmas season. We can find reference in his collected letters to novelist Charles Dickens receiving shortbread (and haggis!) as a Christmas gift from a friend while in Edinburgh. Between Christmas and Jan. 6 there is, of course, New Years, or Hogmanay -- Scottish New Year's Day -- which is generally thought to be a perfect time to munch on some shortbread. In addition to being an ideal gift to anyone with taste buds, shortbread's associations of home resonate with those of Scottish descent around the world. It's been said that as Christmas approaches, enormous quantities of shortbread are prepared, packaged and sent from the homeland to exiled Scots in every corner of the globe. Everyone knows that baked goods have a special power to conjure decades-old memories of childhood comfort and familial good cheer. If the shortbread happens to come in a handsome thistle tin, or one adorned with a saltire or a bagpipe-playing kitten, well it's all the more evocative. And we tend to think that shortbread season pretty much runs all year round.