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| 2025 cookie box |
- Double chocolate crinkles
- Snowballs, also called Mexican wedding cookies and by many other names
- Crispy gingersnaps
- Cranberry almond biscotti
- Spritz cookies
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| The 2025 holiday cookie line-up |
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| The year I learned to decorate cupcakes |
It is that time of year when the annual round-ups and best-of lists pop up everywhere. NYT had a fun article covering random favorite things of the year. Here is my own incomplete and idiosyncratic list:
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| Wine bottle bag |
This week, I did whip up a quick wine bottle bag from this free pattern, to take some wine and cookies to my neighbor's boxing day party. It was a fun little project using some cute seasonal fabric from my stash.
A huge sewing-related surprise this year was that my husband learned to sew. He had some old scientific posters that he wanted to upcycle into tote bags. Back in the day, posters (sheets that are approx. 3 x 4 feet) were always printed on paper and you carried them to conferences in a big unwieldy tube. These days you can get them printed on a synthetic fabric and fold them- much more convenient to carry around and store. Anyway, with a bit of help from me, and some video tutorials, V made a few cute tote bags from his old posters and enjoyed learning a new skill. He has since been mending his own and our son's clothing- sewing is a very useful hobby and even beginners can make minor repairs and extend the lifespan of everyday clothing.
Best self-care- an evening routine of herbal tea, no screen time, magnesium supplements. I've been dealing with intermittent insomnia (yay, perimenopause) and this has helped quite a bit.
Best keeper recipe- crispy gingersnaps. It made my day to see my kids enjoying my homemade cookies- not that they don't like the food I make, but they vastly prefer store-bought snacks over anything I make. It is hard to compete with ultraprocessed food. But they are begging me to bake these again.
Best new kitchen purchase- air fryer. We use it several times a day for everything from re-heating food to making quick sandwich melts, roasted veg and non-fried appetizers.
Best thing I made all year- roasted pistachio ice cream. There's a special joy in nailing a recipe or technique, and making great homemade ice cream (and using my neglected ice cream machine) was a very rewarding endeavor this year.
Best technique learned- decorating cupcakes. I wish I learned this simple technique decades ago, but better late than never. It is handy to have a standardized, crowd-pleasing recipe for good cupcakes, tasty frosting, and presentable decoration (easy, minimal skill required) that I can make for just about any occasion. Pictured above are some rose-hydrangea decorated cupcakes that I made this summer while my parents were visiting.
Best new activity- line dancing. This year our youngest is old enough to stay home on occasional evenings with his sister, and we have been going out a little bit more than we used to. Line dancing was a memorable evening with friends.
Best old activity re-discovered- trivia nights. V and I loved trivia nights in St. Louis and even before then. This year we went to bar trivia a few times, including one very fun evening (our son was away on his first overnight field trip- another milestone) when we won second prize- the theme was "disasters" LOL.
Best author discovered- Carlo Rovelli, a theoretical physicist who is a wonderful science communicator and writes books for the general public on the subjects of quantum physics and its intersection with philosophy. I read two of his books this year- Reality is Not What It Seems (2014) and Helgoland (2021).
Helgoland is a slim book that packs quite a punch. Rovelli says, "Rather than explaining how to understand quantum mechanics, I explain why it is so difficult to understand" and he goes on to explain it beautifully. It was interesting for me to read this book in the space between 2025 and 2026, as it is exactly 100 years since the discovery of quantum theory, which is thought to have come into existence between 1925 and 1926. Yes, this is no new-fangled theory but the basis of many of the latest technologies that has not been proven wrong in a century of experimentation and close examination.
I might write a longer summary of this book one of these days, but the premise of the book, as I see it, is this: Classical physics and our own perception leads us to believe that the world is made of things, of objects. Quantum theory (which is not mere conjecture but a solid science) makes us abandon this simple idea. It says that a thing exists only through its interactions. The physical world is a net of relations. Objects are the nodes. The best description of reality that we have found is in terms of events that weave a web of interactions. It shows that the solidity of the physical world melts into thin air.
The inside book cover jacket of Helgoland says, "Rovelli makes learning about quantum mechanics an almost psychedelic experience", and I find this to be so true. Not just about this particular book, but many of the books I read this year on the subjects of quantum physics, philosophy, and neuroscience (Being You by Anil Seth being another exceptional read.) When I read these sorts of books right before I sleep (my typical reading time), my mind is in a different place and I drift off to sleep with a feeling of awe, turning over ideas in my head, picturing concepts I've just read and trying to make sense of this universe. This is much more pleasant than the usual, decidedly more mundane things that are on my mind when I go to sleep- the next day's schedule and endless to-dos.
For me, 2025 was an exceptionally good year for books. They gave me solace and enriched my daily life at a time when the news is so bleak. I read for pleasure, any genre I like, as much as I want to. I don't track my reading seriously, don't complete reading challenges, and I don't hesitate to put a book down if it doesn't vibe with me for any reason.
It was fun to peek at my annual stats generated by Goodreads and see my 2025 books at a glance. Apparently, I've read 47 books and they are an eclectic mix- memoirs, mysteries, assorted novels, and a whole lot of non-fiction. I loved so many of the books I read this year.
What are your own favorite things from 2025?




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