Ready, Set, Swap!
Baking and socializing are two of our favorite holiday pursuits. But as the season progresses and schedules get squeezed, it becomes just a bit challenging (face it: downright daunting!) to play hostess. That’s why we love the cookie swap, an easy and rewarding way to combine baking, fun, and gift giving.
At a cookie swap, or exchange, you and each of your guests bake one kind of cookie—a classic, a family favorite, a holiday–themed treat, or a tempting new recipe—in quantities sufficient to share with everyone else. Each guest leaves the party with a dozen of each cookie offering, ready to share right away or to freeze and enjoy later in the season.
How Did Swaps Start?
Cookie exchanges have probably gone on for as long as bakers have been sharing recipes. The 1963 edition of the Betty Crocker Cooky Book called the idea a “popular” one—which means it was already well known! Robin Olson, whose Robin’s Christmas Cookie Exchange is the oldest cookie–swap website on the Internet, has found newspaper articles about cookie swaps that date back to 1936.
The longest-running cookie swap in America, according to this online Food Timeline, is the Wellesley Cookie Exchange in Wellesley, Mass., which began in 1971 and is still going strong. In 1988 the Wellesley cookie–bakers published a cookbook based on their experiences. It’s out of print, but you may be able to find a used or library copy.
How Do I Host a Swap? First, pick a date. Early December is the best time for most people—after Thanksgiving and before the really busy holiday season begins. Choose a weekend afternoon or weekday early evening when everyone can spend about two hours chatting and nibbling.
Send out invitations a month before your cookie exchange to give your guests plenty of time to schedule the event and do their baking. For sample invitations you can personalize and print, as well as other cookie–swap ideas, see the special Cookie Swap section of this website.
Keep your guest list to a manageable number—large enough to enjoy an interesting variety of cookies, but not so large that you and your guests feel overwhelmed. Between eight and twelve people is about right.
If you like, choose a theme. For example, make it a “generations” party by asking each guest to bring her mother, grandmother, sister, or teenage daughter (young children tend to be disruptive at cookie swaps—take it from those who know!); ask each guest to share a childhood photo, family recipe, or a beloved family story. If you work full– or part–time, consider hosting a colleagues’ cookie swap; if you’re self–employed, turn your cookie exchange into an informal networking party. For more ideas, see our Cookie Swap section.
Rules of the Game Cookie swaps work best when the hostess has a firmly but amiably enforced plan. Many hostesses like to make assignments by cookie types (see below) so they don’t end up with 10 dozen brownies or eight dozen sugar cookies.
Ask each guest to bake and bring one dozen cookies for each guest on the list, along with plates or platters on which to display them. (If there will be eight guests in all, including you, that means each guest will bring eight dozen cookies.) She should also bring copies of her recipe to share. And don’t forget containers for taking cookies home!
To sample or not? That’s up to you. Some cookie swaps encourage tasting; others are all about taking cookies home. Be sure, though, to provide light snacks such as raw vegetables, apple slices, or grapes. Coffee and tea are fine, but homemade beverages provide a special touch: Hot Mulled Cider and Spiced Cider Punch are the essence of holiday cheer, while Fresh Squeezed Breeze makes refreshing use of seasonal citrus fruits.
After fifteen or twenty minutes of socializing, start the cookie swap by ringing a bell or making an announcement. Then ask each guest to introduce her cookies with a story: how she learned the recipe, why she chose it, how she changed it. The cookie stories will enhance everyone’s experience of the event.
What to Bake? One way to organize your cookie swap is by suggesting a cookie category to each of your guests. That way you’ll give everyone an enjoyable challenge—without being overly rigid—and you’ll end up with an attractive array of cookies.
Looking for ideas? Start here:
- Cutout cookies. Get out the holiday–themed cookie cutters and make a batch of stars, snowflakes, or other festive shapes. This Chocolate Sugar Cookie recipe can easily be doubled to make as many as eight dozen cookies. Our Fancy Sugar Cookies are enriched with sour cream, tenderized with lemon juice, and decorated—if you like—with colored sugar crystals. For a crisper version, try Crisp Sugar Cookies, a longtime favorite of our customers.
 - Bar cookies. That means brownies, of course—we’re especially partial to Classic Unsweetened Chocolate Brownies (don’t worry—they’re sweetened with C&H Pure Cane Granulated Sugar!), Chipper Brownies (made with three kinds of chocolate), and Brown Sugar Brownies. But don’t forget Cranberry Jewel Bars, Blueberry Almond Squares, and Sweet Cherry Blondies—three out–of–the–ordinary taste treats that are beautiful and flavorful.

- Butter cookies. Shortbreads and tea cakes are foolproof and crowd–pleasing. Our Mexican Wedding Cookies recipe yields five dozen of these buttery, nutty little balls. Tea Leaf Sugar Shortbread Cookies are subtly flecked with loose tea leaves; the dough is shaped into logs and can be frozen for as long as a month before baking—a holiday time saver!
 - Drop cookies. Enlist the kids to help you with fun and easy recipes like Pumpkin Drop Cookies, Chocolate Chip Crunchewy Cookies, and Bittersweet Chocolate Mocha Cookies.
- Seasonal specialties. Fancy and gorgeous, Stained Glass Windows and Star Bars require a little extra effort, but the oohs and aahs make them worth it.
You’ll find even more cookie–swap recipes and party–theme ideas in the Cookie Swap section of our website. We’ve also created templates for invitations, recipe cards, recipe labels, and name tags—all ready for you to personalize on your computer and print out!
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It’s easy to bake multiple batches when you line your cookie sheets with parchment paper. Each sheet can be reused several times (discard when it begins to turn brown), and cleanup is fast.
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Sandra Ventura
This year marks the 24th consecutive holiday season that Sandra Ventura will open her Pico Rivera, California, home to friends and family for her famous cookie exchange. The coffee and conversation are always warm and inviting, but the guests will tell you it’s the competitive spirit that keeps them coming back.
Find Out More – >
Bake with America’s Best—Win a Bay Area Vacation!
Imagine taking a private baking class with a noted Italian chef and then enjoying a few days’ vacation in San Francisco after the busy holiday season.
You may be in luck! C&H Sugar and Land O’ Lakes have teamed up to sponsor a new sweepstakes, “Bake with America’s Best for the Holidays.” The winner will receive a trip for four to San Francisco, a private class with celebrity chef Nick Stellino, and $1,000 in spending money. The entry form is just a few clicks away, and you can enter once a week through the end of 2007. Official rules are on the Land O’Lakes website.
C&H Sugar and Land O’Lakes are natural partners in this contest. Earlier this year C&H Brown Sugar received the ChefsBest™ Award for Best Taste from the independent professional chefs at American Culinary ChefsBest™, the independent judging organization dedicated to recognizing and honoring the best–tasting products in America. (All of the independent professional chef judges are certified Master Tasters.) Land O’ Lakes won the same honor for its butter, margarine sticks, and Dairy Case Cheddar Cheese.
You may already have "met" Nick Stellino through his popular Family Kitchen cooking shows, which have aired on PBS stations since 1994. In each program, Chef Stellino demonstrates two recipes and shares tips and stories from his native Sicily.
To make this baking season sweeter, here are a few of Chef Stellino’s tricks:
- Always read a recipe thoroughly before you begin and collect all the ingredients and equipment that are called for. Being prepared will make the baking process easier and more successful.
- Keep a few sticks of butter at room temperature. Unless a recipe calls for chilled or melted butter, use room-temperature butter in your recipes.
- When a recipe calls for brown sugar, measure out the required amount and carefully break it up with your fingers as you add it to other ingredients. Your fingers will find chunks and break them up more easily than a spoon or mixer. The result: sweetness will be evenly distributed.
One of Chef Stellino’s favorite desserts—Berry Tart, or Crostata di Fragole—calls for pure, fresh ingredients. Try it this holiday season for your family and friends with Chef Stellino’s compliments!
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