As described in "What's everybody cooking for the holidays, 2007?" here's what we made for our friends and neighbors this year:
The Menu


12 kinds of cookies and bars: Left (top to bottom) Peanutbutter and Chocolate Bars, Jam and Cream Cheese Kolachki(sp?), Lemon Bars, Mint Brownies; Middle: Chocolate Crinkle, Nut Crescents, Soft Spice Cookies, Pistacio; Right: Butter Balls, Chocolate Filled Shortbread bars, Pinwheels, Caramel Bars
Kosher mini hot dogs in crescent roll dough (no pic, they didn't last long enough for me to grab one)
Deviled eggs with smoked almonds, dijon and chives - not as mutant as previous years, but my guests cleaned this plate
Vietnamese Chicken Salad (the recipe from the picnic -- MrsF loved it)
Came out a little wet, but tasty.
Morrocon Seafood Phyllo Rolls (Tribune sunday magazine recipe)
Burgundy Beef mini-pies (from a book called Finger Food we picked up at Printers Row Book Fair this year)
Carmelized Onion and Feta mini-quiches (same book, forgot to take a pic)
Fried Goat-Cheese Stuffed Olives, which I nicknamed Reindeer Droppings (same book)
Blue Cheese and Spinach calzones (from a book called First Impressions)
These were amazing. Just garlic, spinach, bleu and cream cheese in pizza dough.
Curried Cheesecake with chutney and fruit (same book)
This was delicious but awkward to eat, we've got a lot of this left.
Chicken in Green Pipian (Bayless "Mexican Kitchen") in mini corn cups (Martha Stewart)
Smoked salmon sushi Napoleons (Definitely a Martha Stewart)
'Porcupine' balls (meatballs coated with rice that pops up when steamed - Complete Asian Cookbook). One of the few recipes I didn't double, and they were all gone quickly (the pic is about a third of them)
Yellow Curry Potato Egg Rolls (experimental recipe attempting to duplicate a restaurant dish). Tasted great, but we fried them early and kept them in a warm oven, they got kinda mushy.
Cheese Board -- violated Cathy2's rule of threes, but it still worked. Banana leaves make a nice base.
What is patriotism, but the love of good things we ate in our childhood?
-- Lin Yutang