49
HOLIDAY TRADITIONS
C
indy Acosta was out of town when her sister texted her. “Look
what I found!” the message from Jeaneen Rouse said.
A small but important part of the Rouse family Christmas tradition
had been rediscovered. Going through a stack of recipes as she
packed to move into her new home, Jeaneen found her recipe for
Mom’s Cocoons. It had been missing for years, and along with it,
part of their childhood Christmas.
On Christmas Eve, “we used to leave (Cocoons) with a bottle of
Coca-Cola for Santa,” Jeaneen said. “I don’t know why we left
Coke. I guess we thought Santa wanted the best. Maybe he was
tired of milk?”
“I was so glad she found it,” Cindy said. “We are going to keep up
the tradition, to start it again. It’s been a long time since Mom did
them.”
As the only girls in a family of six kids, Jeaneen and Cindy made
Cocoons with their mother, Joyce Rouse, and Jeaneen’s godmother,
Celina Rodrigue, whom they called Nanny. Celina was the wife of
Wilfred Rodrigue, a close friend of their father, Anthony Sr., who
worked with him at the store before it was even called Rouses.
Their mom and Nanny would set a baking date. “I always looked
forward to it,” Cindy said. Cindy says they made double batches of
the cookies — for the Rodrigues as well as the Rouses.
“I had four older brothers,” she said. “You know how boys eat.”
When the girls were allowed to help shape the cookies, they often
would have to redo them if they were deemed too big or too small.
The women were extremely particular about how the cookies
looked, the sisters remember. The girls’ main job was passing the
cookies through bowls of powdered sugar.
There was no heavy-duty mixer, and Jeaneen remembers how the
buttery dough moisturized their hands after they had mixed it. (“It’s
a lot
of butter!”)
Instead of baking racks, they cut open paper bags from the
family supermarket to place the cookies on for cooling. They were
everywhere, Jeaneen remembers.Their mom had just one oven.
The process was labor intensive, since the cookies must be dipped
in powdered sugar twice. The first coating partially melts into the
cookie. For the second dipping, in the Rouse family, a fresh bowl
of clean powdered sugar, sifted to make it fluffier, was always used.
Buttery and delicate, the cookies were so popular with the family
that their mom would have to put some in a tin and hide it, to
guarantee that the Cocoons would be part of a sweets platter on
Christmas Day.
“She liked to have a cookie platter: Pecan Cups,
Cocoons, Italian Anise Cookies, Fudge, that
kind of thing,” Jeaneen said. Cindy recalls
that it included her mother’s Pralines, too,
as well as Italian Fig Cookies made by
their aunt.
Cocoons are a version of a cookie popular
around the world for Christmas and other
special occasions.They also are known as
Russian Tea Cakes, Mexican Wedding
Cookies, Sand Tarts, Snowballs, Kourabia, Melting Moments,
Butterballs, Nut Butter Balls, Napoleon Hats, Moldy Mice, Italian
Wedding Cookies and by many other names as well.
The nuts in the recipes can be hazelnuts, walnuts or almonds, but
in this part of the country, it’s our beloved pecan. The cookie has
just a few ingredients, but they are firmly in the tradition of rich
baked goods for special occasions, using the best butter, sugar and
expensive nuts for special treats.
Food historians cannot pinpoint it, but think perhaps this cookie
originated in sugar-rich medieval Arabian cuisine, subsequently
migrating to Spain with the Moors and then spreading throughout
Europe. Baking historian Nick Malgieri has speculated that the
recipe went to Mexico with nuns, who were known for baking in
their convents. Vanilla and pecans are staples of baking in Mexico.
Recipes for Mexican Wedding Cookies started to appear in
American cookbooks in the 1950s.
Almost all the cookies with other names are shaped into balls,
or occasionally crescents. As far as I can find, only in the South
are they called Cocoons and shaped like the silken cases spun by
butterflies and moths.
None of the many stories on the universality, history and names of
these cookies mentions “Cocoons.” In fact, I never heard of them
until I moved to Louisiana, which makes me think they may be a
Creole/Cajun/South Louisiana variation of a worldwide favorite.
(Anyone with a clue about this cookie, please email me!)
Recipes for Cocoons appear in Ursuline Academy’s
Recipes and
Reminiscences of New Orleans
, first published in 1971, and in the
NOPSI cookbook,
From Woodstoves to Microwaves
, which contains
the recipes tested and then distributed on streetcars and other
places by the New Orleans Public Service Company, the one-time
electrical utility provider for the city.
When Joyce Rouse started to have trouble standing for long periods
of time, she gave her recipe box to Jeaneen and told her daughters
to take over the baking.
Then the recipe disappeared. For years.
The Rouse brothers asked, “Where are the Cocoons?” Jeaneen says.
This year, finally, Cindy and Jeaneen will bake the little white
cookies again.
“We will continue the tradition with my daughters, Caroline and
Madalyn,” Jeaneen says. “I am passing this on to them.”
Cindy plans to make more with her daughter-in-law as well. Her
sister is the real baker, she said, but now that she’s got a small
grandson, she just may bake cookies more frequently.
This year, when the Cocoons return, the group
will bake them in
three
ovens in Jeaneen’s
kitchen in her new home in Thibodaux.
They’ll use cookie racks for cooling
instead of brown paper grocery bags. But
there will be lots of butter.And tradition.
Find Mrs. Rouse’s Cocoon recipe at
www.rouses.com/cooking/recipes/.