Recipe

“Nutty Finger” Cookies

This holiday staple from the Reutter family of Caroline’s Cakes is “shockingly simple and incredibly delicious”

A tray of cookies

Photo: Richard Reutter


G&G’s 12 Days of Cookies

“I learned to bake at Mom’s elbow in the kitchen,” says Richard Reutter of Caroline’s Cakes, a bakery in Spartanburg, South Carolina, that opened four decades ago when Reutter’s mother, Caroline, started selling caramel cake off her front porch. Today, the business is still a family affair, and though Caroline passed away in 2017, the mother-son baking bond lives on in a special Christmas cookie they call a nutty finger. 

“They’re shockingly simple and incredibly delicious, and similar to a Mexican wedding cookie,” Reutter explains. “They have the somewhat salty crunch of the pecans and a shortbread-like base.” His mother always made them during the holidays—Reutter’s job as a young boy was shaping the dough into fingers—and would bring a box of them along as a hostess gift at Christmas parties. 

These days, Reutter makes the cookies with his daughter, named Caroline after her grandmother. “Baking together is a way for me to tell her about the legacy her grandmother left,” Reutter says. Nutty fingers, in their simplicity, are a great starting point for a young baker, too. 

A recipe card
Photo: Courtesy of Richard Reutter
Reutter’s mom’s recipe card.

To make them, simply blend all the ingredients, shape and bake the dough, and roll the finished cookies in confectioners’ sugar when they’re still just a little warm to help it stick. “There is no amount of confectioners’ sugar that is wrong—it’ll just be a little richer if you are more heavy-handed,” he says. “And you’ve earned the right to sample one during the coating process. That’s a rite of passage.”  


Nutty Finger Cookies

Yield: 40–50 cookies

Ingredients

    • 1½ stick of butter

    • 4 tbsp. confectioners’ sugar

    • 1 tsp. cold water

    • 1 tsp. vanilla extract

    • 2 cups flour

    • 1 cup pecans

Preparation

  1. Blend all ingredients together in a mixer until fluffy. 

  2. Shape the dough into fingers and bake at 350°F until light brown, about 15–20 minutes.  While still warm, roll each one generously in confectioners’ sugar. 


Lindsey Liles joined Garden & Gun in 2020 after completing a master’s in literature in Scotland and a Fulbright grant in Brazil. The Arkansas native is G&G’s digital reporter, covering all aspects of the South, and she especially enjoys putting her biology background to use by writing about wildlife and conservation. She lives on Johns Island, South Carolina.


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