

Ana
Ana is a Southern stay-at-home mom of three who bakes the way most people breathe — constantly, naturally, without making a fuss about it. She shows up at new neighbors’ doors with a tin of cookies before the boxes are even unpacked, and she has never once come home from a potluck with anything left in her dish. She Brings Food is where she puts the recipes her family counts on and her neighbors keep asking for.
10 Holiday Baking Recipes to Fill Your Kitchen With That Smell
December in my kitchen smells like cinnamon, butter, and mild panic. Between cookie swaps, teacher gifts, neighbor tins, and the family dessert table, I bake more in December than the rest of the year combined. But I’ve learned the secret isn’t more recipes — it’s the RIGHT recipes.
These ten are my holiday rotation. Some are Christmas-specific, some work Thanksgiving through Valentine’s. All freeze beautifully and look impressive enough to give as gifts.
The Holiday Baking
Holiday Cookie Boxes
An assortment of three cookies packaged in a gift box. My annual December project — 20+ boxes for neighbors, teachers, the mailman, and anyone who made my year better. The gift that says “I baked for you” louder than any store-bought tin.
Valentine’s Cookie Boxes
Heart-shaped sugar cookies and chocolate treats for February. Because December shouldn’t have all the cookie box fun and Valentine’s Day deserves more than conversation hearts.
Cookie Swap Sprinkle Cookies
The cookie I bring to every swap — buttery, loaded with rainbow sprinkles, cute enough for photos. This is how you win a cookie swap without looking like you’re trying too hard.
Cinnamon Rolls
Christmas morning tradition — assembled the night before, baked fresh while presents are opened. Cream cheese frosting while still warm. Non-negotiable in this house since the first Christmas with kids.
Pumpkin Bread
September through January this is always in my kitchen. Warm spices, moist crumb, perfect for gifting in a loaf tin with a ribbon and a “Happy Holidays” tag. Freezes for weeks of advance prep.
Molasses Cookies
Chewy, deeply spiced, crackly-topped. These taste like Christmas distilled into a cookie. My mama’s recipe with a splash of black coffee that deepens every spice. The first cookie I bake every December.
Sugar Cookies
Roll-and-cut cookies that hold their shape — trees, stars, stockings, angels. The decorating activity my kids actually sit still for. Royal icing recipe included because store-bought tubes are a crime.
Pecan Pie Bars
Thanksgiving dessert in bar form. Easier than pie crust, serves more people, just as gooey and nutty and perfect. My Thanksgiving non-negotiable for the last eight years running.
Sunday Supper Pecan Pie
The classic, whole pie — dark corn syrup, toasted pecans, buttery flaky crust. For the Thanksgiving table, Christmas dinner, and any Sunday that needs a proper, dramatic ending.
Cranberry Orange Muffins
Tart cranberries, bright orange zest, sweet glaze. Christmas morning backup — when the cinnamon rolls need 20 more minutes and the kids are already downstairs vibrating with excitement.
Ana’s Holiday Baking Tips
Start in November. Cookie dough freezes 3 months. Scoop, freeze, bag. December-you will thank November-you.
Bake in batches, not all at once. Two types per day, not six. Your sanity matters more than variety.
Gift packaging matters. Dollar store boxes, tissue paper, ribbon. A $2 box makes $1 cookies look like a $20 gift.
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead for Christmas?
Dough freezes 3 months. Baked cookies 6 weeks. Pumpkin bread 3 months. Start November, enjoy December.
Best cookies for gift giving?
Holiday cookie boxes with molasses, sugar cookies, and sprinkle cookies. Three varieties = generous without being overwhelming.

Ana
Ana is a Southern stay-at-home mom of three who bakes the way most people breathe — constantly, naturally, without making a fuss about it. She shows up at new neighbors’ doors with a tin of cookies before the boxes are even unpacked, and she has never once come home from a potluck with anything left in her dish. She Brings Food is where she puts the recipes her family counts on and her neighbors keep asking for.















