Visions of sugarplums dance in her head

Karen Happ puts the 'happ'-y in sweet treats

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If you're a fan of the Food Network, no doubt you're familiar with Ina Garten, aka Barefoot Contessa, who hosts a cooking show by the same name. Garten, a lovely lady who always has a countertop filled with wonderful treats, is soft-spoken, smiles easily and is known for her recipes that entice many to get out a bowl, a wooden spoon and turn on their ovens.

If you didn't know better, you might think you're meeting Garten when you walk into Karen Happ's Mendota kitchen. Like her famous cooking counterpart, Happ — a lovely lady in her own right who smiles easily and speaks softly (and who ironically resembles the well-defined Garten) — turns the chore of baking into an experience that makes you want to dive into the nearest cookbook and create a culinary masterpiece of your own.

Happ's kitchen — well, actually her entire home — smells of something wonderful baking in her oven. The former elementary school teacher, who recently retired after 30 years in the Mendota School District, moves around her kitchen with ease. From the counter ... to the cupboard ... to the oven ... and back ... she clearly knows her way around the kitchen, and the sweet treats she produces is proof of her culinary calling.

Happ grew up in rural Dimmick, and she credits her mother, Arlene Schmidt, for helping her develop her love of baking.

"I was always raised on home cooking," Happ said, as she placed Hershey kisses in the center of her well-known recipe for Peanut Butter Blossoms. "Once she (Schmidt) trusted me to use the oven, she always let me do the chocolate chip cookies."

Those early chocolate chip cookies have since turned into a myriad of cookie varieties and other baked goods that has turned Happ's reputation into being well known for her baking. She jokes that some of the teachers in the Mendota District refer to her as "Betty," a shortened version of the famous Betty Crocker.

While Happ makes a mountain of sweet sensations, she's probably best known for those chocolate chip cookies and her holiday cut-out cookies. Her secret? She doesn't hesitate when she reveals a good cookie is always made with Parkay margarine, and she just shrugs when she says she uses a standard Toll House cookie recipe.

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