Are – Jum-Jills! Everyone has some traditional and tasty treat that is made year after year at Christmas. The internet is full of blog posts describing a favorite candy or cookie that is included in decorative tins, mason jars or pastry boxes for friends and neighbors. All of them are good and all of them make wonderful gifts. My family is no different and I decided that I might as well join the flood of internet recipes with a family delicacy of our own. However, I will venture a bet that few other traditions are QUITE like ours. Ours is more than a cookie that has been part of our family world since I was a little girl. Our tradition is also a story about the cookie, with a happy ending, and, I’m quite sure, a moral which I have yet to figure out even over these past 5 decades! Captain Kangaroo used to include a book on his show about a little old man and a little old woman who just wanted a little cat. They wound up with “hundreds of cats, thousands of cats, millions and billions and trillions of cats”. (That was before ‘quadrillion’ and ‘google’ were invented) It is a predicament we rural folk seem to find ourselves in all the time. Children all over the country were glued to the television as strains of an oboe and flute accompanied the pictures from the book one could swear were moving. A deep, pleasant voice intoned the story line. The book was written in 1928 by a German author, Wanda G’ag, and was a favorite in many households. A second book she had written in 1929 , however, does not seem to be as well-known. That is the one my family absolutely loved and it has now been read to grandchildren with an eye on great-grandchildren. The title? The Funny Thing. The Funny Thing “looked something like a dog and also a little like a giraffe, and from the top of its head to the tip of its curled tail, there was a row of beautiful blue points.” He called himself an “aminal”. He ate good little children’s dolls. “And very good they are, good little children’s dolls.” There is a little old man of the mountains named “Bobo” who is the hero and Bobo makes some little round balls from nut cakes and other items. He calls them “Jum-Jills”. Bobo tells the Funny Thing that the “Jum-Jills” will make his blue points bluer and his long tail longer. The vain Funny Thing gobbles them up and pretty soon his tail is so long that he has to sit on the top of a mountain, curling his tail around it, while the birds fly by and drop “Jum-Jills” into his mouth. The day is saved and no more good children have to suffer the loss of their precious dolls! And so, when my mother was making the cookies in the recipe below, they immediately became “Jum-Jills” in our household and have been ever since. It is fun to take a batch to a group of young children, read the story and then hand out the cookies. It thrills them every time. So here is the easy recipe for “Jum Jills” so that you too can include them in your traditions! The recipe is also in our family cookbook along with other traditional recipes. 1 cup flour 1 stick real butter salted 3 tbsps powdered sugar 1 cup finely chopped nuts powdered sugar for covering |
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Tags: Christmas, cookies, Funny Thing, Jum Jills, powdered sugar, Wanda G'ag
I am happy to read about the Jum-Jills. I acutally made your recipe from the cookbook once when I was teaching the poem, Jabberwocky. We talked a lot about nonsense words and we had Jum-Jills as an example. They are good!
One of the things that I love to do with children is to read them the story without showing them the pictures and tell them to imagine what the Funny Thing looked like from the description. Then I have them draw a Funny Thing according to what they think. We eat the Jum-Jills as everyone shows their Funny Thing and then looks at the real pictures.
MaryBeth, Love your story and the recipe sounds sort of like my Wedding Cookie recipe. I have to tell you how much I have enjoyed my Oklahoma Pastry Cloth while making all my Christmas cookies. Made Filled Apricot cookies today, making Sand Tarts in the morning – the dough is in the fridge getting good and chilled.
Merry Christmas to you and your family!
Hugs, Ruth
Thanks Ruth!! I am so glad that you are enjoying your Oklahoma Pastry Cloth™ and especially that you are making Christmas cookies!! Good for you!!