Christmas has passed. I am sure you all had a great time with your families or friends. But don’t get sad, we have New Year’s Eve still coming. It is a big celebration as well. I know that some of you may have had all their share on cookies, but I promised to give you a second recipe of melomakarona and I am a woman who sure honors her word. Plus we have to sweeten 2011, so as to be gentle with us.
This recipe is from Simone Kafiris and her book ‘Anthologion Ellinikon Glykon’ which means “Anthology of Greek Sweets”. What it means is that it is a Collection of the best Greek Sweets.
While I was in the States studying, I had a friend called Jeff. One day I was so mad at a teacher for giving us tons of work to do, that I started cursing in Greek. So, Jeff turned and said to me it’s all Greek to me and he laughed. So I replied that of course it was Greek to him, because I was talking in Greek. Then he explained to me that you use this phrase to say that you do not understand a thing. It is so funny, because we use almost the same in Greece, only we say that it is all Chinese to us. Lol, you see we cannot say Greek because we speak the language, so what other language is completely different than any other? Well Chinese is one such language. Don’t you think? I remembered this story as I was trying to translate the name of the book and I laughed a lot.
Anyway, enough of my college reminiscence. This is the recipe I use every year. These melomakarona are more on the crispy side and that is the reason why I like them so much.
Let’s dive to the second recipe for melomakarona. Christmas is knocking our doors, we have to be ready.
Melomakarona
By Simone Kafiris
Ingredients
1 cup olive oil
1 cup corn oil (the recipe calls for 2 cups of extra virgin olive oil but I prefer to use a mixture it makes them lighter in taste)
¾ cup orange juice
¼ cup brandy
1 cup sugar
2 tsp orange zest
2 tsp baking powder
1 tsp baking soda
1 cinnamon stick
10 cloves
7 cups all purpose flour
For the syrup
2 cups honey
1 cup sugar
1 cup water
Juice of half a lemon
Ground walnuts
Instructions
In a pot we put the cinnamon stick, the cloves and ½ cup water. We boil for 5 minutes and then we keep ¼ of cup from this aromatized water after we have taken out the cinnamon and cloves.
For the syrup
In a pot we put the water and sugar. Boil for 5 minutes. Remove from stove and add the honey and lemon juice. Return to stove and boil for a minute. Remove and let it cool.
In the mixer we put the oils, the orange juice, the brandy, the sugar, the aromatized water and the orange zest.We mix well.
In a bowl we mix the flour with the baking powder and soda. In a big bowl we pour the liquids and then add the flour. Again we knead just until everything is incorporated. We do not over knead it.
Again we make the melomakarona the same way as in the previous recipe. We bake in a preheated oven at 175° C for 20 to 30 minutes. We take them out and immediately we throw them to the syrup.

Now if at some point the syrup becomes thick, just turn on the stove and let it warm for a minute. It will be runny again. I am linking this to
Magical Monday Blog Hop,
Tuesday Night Supper Club,
Tuesdays at the Table and
Decidedly Healthy or Horridly Decadent Saturday.
My friend and fellow blogger Marion from
Cooking and Art (a Greek blog) asked me to play a game. I have to show you the ornament I like the most and make a wish for the New Year. The ornament follows and the wish is the following. I wish for the New Year any wish spoken or unspoken, any dream known or unknown, any desire admitted or not, to become true during this coming year. But most of all I wish for me and everybody in this world peace of soul and love. Now please tell me what you wish for New Year, I would love to read your wishes.
Labels: Greek, Sweets