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Pennsylvania-Pittsburgh

Cookie table tradition

Hello knotties of Pittsburgh! I am in VA, but FI and his entire family are from that area. I'm wondering if anyone knows if there is any background on the purpose/meaning of the cookie table. Any help would be great, TIA!

Re: Cookie table tradition

  • edited December 2011
    Yes, there is an article from the Post-Gazette that just gives an explaination of the Pittsburgh cookie table.  I used it on our cookie table since DH and his family were from Maryland-they all read it and said they loved the cookie table!  I'll try to find it and post ithere if I can.
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  • edited December 2011
    That would be great!!! Thanks!
  • gmc22gmc22 member
    2500 Comments
    edited December 2011
    Hi!! Here are a few articles I have bookmarked to use as a description of the cookie table for my OOT guests:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/16/dining/16cookies.html

    http://www.pifemaster.com/blog/the-cookie-table-a-pittsburgh-tradition/


    Here's a copy/paste from a word file I have from the Pittsburgh Post Gazette:

    An excerpt from “The Cookie Table: A Pittsburgh Tradition” by Suzanne Martinson, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Food Editor

    You can have a designer wedding gown and tuxedo or hand-me-downs. You can have an “A-copy” guest list or just the closest of kissing kin. You can receive your guests at the fanciest restaurant or at a potluck at the firehall. But you aren’t truly a Pittsburgher unless you have The Cookie Table.

    When we first moved here and a bride-to-be mentioned The Cookie Table, I was puzzled. “What do you need cookies for?” I asked. “At a wedding, you eat cake.”

    Little did I know. The Cookie Table is as much a part of Pittsburgh as the Pirates and the Steelers and the Penguins. We may bleed black and gold, but at any event worth writing home about, we have cookies.

    And most of these cookies are homemade by the mother of the bride, sisters, aunts, cousins and grandmothers. Sometimes both sides of the extended family get involved. Friends are also called into the fray. Happy to do it, in fact. The Cookie Table is, indeed, the gift of love.

    Nobody knows the exact origin of the tradition, which has been exported to other parts of Pennsylvania, other states, too. It may be Italian or Slovak or Polish or Croatian or Greek. The Scandinavians may get involved, and the Indians, too. The Germans do cookies, and so do the Irish. If we’ve left anybody out (like the English), add them to the cookie equation. There may be no greater tribute to cross-cultural friends and marriages than The Cookie Table. It’s what makes America great; a medley of cultures taking the best from each. The best, in this case, being favorite family cookie recipes. When we researched the topic for the premier edition of the Food Section in 1996, we talked with more than 150 people. The cookies that emerged most often as the “must haves” on the table were: Pizzelles; Biscotti; Italian Anise Drops; Baklava; Cherry Cheesecakes; Thumbprints; Pecan Tassies; Apricot, Poppyseed, and Nut Rolls. And two indicators that Americans never stop innovating: Buckeyes and Hershey Kiss Cookies…

    Remember, in Pittsburgh, people don’t wonder, “How was the wedding?” They ask, “Were the cookies good?”

  • edited December 2011
    THANK YOU, gmc!!!!!!!!! That's perfect! Obviously his side would know, but I wanted my side to understand why there is a table full of cookies :)
  • gmc22gmc22 member
    2500 Comments
    edited December 2011
    NP! Glad I could help! :)
  • edited December 2011
    And if you need any ideas for the table, check out these cookies: http://www.delish.com/entertaining-ideas/parties/wedding/wedding-cookie-recipes
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  • edited December 2011
    thanks, laurlaur! We will be having red drops (red velvet with choc. chips), chocolate and original pizzelles, nut roll, lady locks, biscotti, oatmeal choc. chip, maybe buckeyes, and thumbprints....so far!
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