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Today I'm going to make a nut cake for the holidays. I think of it as a
fruit cake without the fruit. Instead of having a mixture of candied fruits and nuts in the batter, it is all nuts and no fruit. But it is similar in nature in that there is comparatively little batter and mostly the good stuff! ;-) My mother made this cake for about 40 years, and I've picked up the recipe since she can no longer make it. I don't know where she got the recipe, but I presume it was out of a magazine in the early 1960s, or even late 1950s. One of the things that to me indicates its age is the use of the term "very slow" oven, in addition to specifying a temperature. The cake keeps pretty well, like a fruit cake, and can be frozen. Obviously it is relatively expensive to make due to the quantity of nuts, but I love it. It's one of the things I've looked forward to at Christmas for so many years. I've scanned in the recipe, so you get to see it in all it's glory as a faded magazine clipping: http://mysite.verizon.net/bcp_public/nutcake.jpg There are a few options in the ingredients, but my mother always made it with walnuts, rum, and vanilla extract. -- ( #wff_ng_7# at #verizon# period #net# ) |
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wff_ng_7 wrote: Today I'm going to make a nut cake for the holidays. I think of it as a fruit cake without the fruit. Instead of having a mixture of candied fruits and nuts in the batter, it is all nuts and no fruit. But it is similar in nature in that there is comparatively little batter and mostly the good stuff! ;-) My mother made this cake for about 40 years, and I've picked up the recipe since she can no longer make it. I don't know where she got the recipe, but I presume it was out of a magazine in the early 1960s, or even late 1950s. One of the things that to me indicates its age is the use of the term "very slow" oven, in addition to specifying a temperature. During the 50s many still used solid fuel stoves (wood/coal) or gas stoves with no thermostat, more typical was an external thermometer, usually mounted on the exterior of the oven door and usually not numerical.. just marked slow/med/hot with a few dots inbetween to interpolate. Electric stoves were still not popular... homes weren't wired to accomodate electric stoves, it would cost as much to upgrade the service and run a line as to buy a stove, still does. Imagine, folks could cook and bake without computer chips. These days folk's cooking skills are about on par with their math skills, all they know is to push calculator buttons, don't ask them to do math with paper and pencil... and don't ask them to cook a 50¢ burger without a $40 electronic probe... imagine some pinheads need a $6,000 blast furnace stove to roast a $3 chicken, figures... when they need a $130 pot to heat a 40¢ can of beans... they need a $70,000 kitchen when the most complicated thing they cook is Lean Coozine. The cake keeps pretty well, like a fruit cake, and can be frozen. Obviously it is relatively expensive to make due to the quantity of nuts, but I love it. It's one of the things I've looked forward to at Christmas for so many years. I've scanned in the recipe, so you get to see it in all it's glory as a faded magazine clipping: http://mysite.verizon.net/bcp_public/nutcake.jpg There are a few options in the ingredients, but my mother always made it with walnuts, rum, and vanilla extract. It's like my mother's date nut loaf, were baked in 1lb coffee cans... we called them "breakfast bombs"... is there still a 1lb coffee can, I think now it's more like a 10 ounce coffee can. Sheldon |
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"Sheldon" wrote:
During the 50s many still used solid fuel stoves (wood/coal) or gas stoves with no thermostat, more typical was an external thermometer, usually mounted on the exterior of the oven door and usually not numerical.. just marked slow/med/hot with a few dots inbetween to interpolate. When I was a kid in the 1950s, we moved to a new suburban neighborhood on Long Island where there were still pockets of the old time residents of the area. On our block was a much older house with a woman in her 80s living there. One of the things I remember very clearly was her kerosene cook stove, as the smell from it was quite strong. I'm certain it didn't have a thermostat on the oven; she probably had to turn the burner up or down to regulate the temperature. It's like my mother's date nut loaf, were baked in 1lb coffee cans... we called them "breakfast bombs"... is there still a 1lb coffee can, I think now it's more like a 10 ounce coffee can. I checked some my brother gave me recently (I don't use canned coffee). It is down to 12 or 13 ounces. I save them for other uses, but not baking. I do miss the metal lids they used to have, with the keys you used to open them with. But times change. I guess people below a certain age wonder how this line from "Margaritaville" is even possible: "Stepped on a pop-top Cut my heel had to cruise on back home" Pop-tops aren't what they used to be! ;-) -- ( #wff_ng_7# at #verizon# period #net# ) |
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"wff_ng_7" wrote in message news:P1Xpf.17425$l25.15601@trnddc03... Today I'm going to make a nut cake for the holidays. I think of it as a fruit cake without the fruit. Instead of having a mixture of candied fruits and nuts in the batter, it is all nuts and no fruit. But it is similar in nature in that there is comparatively little batter and mostly the good stuff! ;-) My mother made this cake for about 40 years, and I've picked up the recipe since she can no longer make it. I don't know where she got the recipe, but I presume it was out of a magazine in the early 1960s, or even late 1950s. One of the things that to me indicates its age is the use of the term "very slow" oven, in addition to specifying a temperature. The cake keeps pretty well, like a fruit cake, and can be frozen. Obviously it is relatively expensive to make due to the quantity of nuts, but I love it. It's one of the things I've looked forward to at Christmas for so many years. I've scanned in the recipe, so you get to see it in all it's glory as a faded magazine clipping: http://mysite.verizon.net/bcp_public/nutcake.jpg There are a few options in the ingredients, but my mother always made it with walnuts, rum, and vanilla extract. -- ( #wff_ng_7# at #verizon# period #net# ) I've converted your recipe for easier reading of the rest of us.. -= Exported from BigOven =- Nut Cake Recipe By: Serving Size: 10 Cuisine: Main Ingredient: -= Ingredients =- 2 lbs Pecans ; walnuts/almonds or mix 6 lg Eggs 1 1/2 cup Butter 2 cup Sugar 3/4 cup Milk 1/4 cup Brandy ; or rum 1 tsp Vanilla ; or almond extract 3 1/2 cup All purpose flour ; sifted 1 tsp Cream of tartar -= Instructions =- Grease and line the bottoms and sides of a 10" tube pan with oiled brown paper. Chop nutes coarsely and put in a large bowl. Preheat oven to 275 degrees. Separate eggs. Beat butter till creamy, add sugar gradually continuing to beat till smooth and creamy. Add egg yolks slightly beaten while continuing to beat thoroughly. Mix milk, alcahol and extracts and add alternately with flour . Beat egg whites to foamy stage and add cream of tartar. Continue to whip till whites hold a peak. Add to nuts and mix well with your hands, then fold in to batter gently. Pour into pan and bake for 2 1/2 to 3 hours. Cool 30 minutes before removing from pan and transferring to a wire rack. Remove paper carefully . Sprinkle the top with Icing sugar if you like. ** This recipe can be pasted into BigOven without retyping. ** ** Easy recipe software. Try it free at: http://www.bigoven.com ** MoM |
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"MoM" wrote:
I've converted your recipe for easier reading of the rest of us.. Thanks... I'm not very good at transcribing things, though this one shouldn't have been too hard for me! ;-) -- ( #wff_ng_7# at #verizon# period #net# ) |
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"wff_ng_7" wrote in message news:5Ffqf.11887$CL.5061@trnddc04... "MoM" wrote: I've converted your recipe for easier reading of the rest of us.. Thanks... I'm not very good at transcribing things, though this one shouldn't have been too hard for me! ;-) -- ( #wff_ng_7# at #verizon# period #net# ) Quite welcome. I wanted to add it to my data base so I covered to things at once. I don't suppose you know where the recipe came from? -- Helen in beautiful Fergus, Ontario Canada ~~ RVTOBFREE www.mompeagram.homestead.com/ |
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"MoM" wrote:
Quite welcome. I wanted to add it to my data base so I covered to things at once. I don't suppose you know where the recipe came from? I have no idea other than it appears to be from a magazine clipping from the late 1950s or early 1960s. The paper is the slightly glossy heavier stock used for magazines as opposed to the newsprint used for newspapers. The portion of the back I can see (it's glued to a sheet of paper) has some Christmas holiday artwork on it, so I presume it came out of a November or December issue of whatever magazine it was in. You can make one addition to the ingredients list if you wish, as I tried something new this time. I didn't have any brandy or rum in house, and since our neighborhood liquor store closed about a year ago, I didn't feel like going out to get any. In my liquor stock I found something I thought suitable... Cointreau. So I put 1/4 cup of that in rather than the specified brandy or rum. The cake (with walnuts) tastes quite nice with that in it, better than brandy or rum. But probably not worth the additional expense. I got my 750 ml bottle relatively cheap though, on sale at $21.99, quite a deal compared to what some stores charge for it. Though this substitution worked, I wouldn't try it with something like Jägermeister! -- ( #wff_ng_7# at #verizon# period #net# ) |
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"wff_ng_7" wrote in message news:CFSqf.84949$fY5.13616@trnddc02... "MoM" wrote: Quite welcome. I wanted to add it to my data base so I covered to things at once. I don't suppose you know where the recipe came from? I have no idea other than it appears to be from a magazine clipping from the late 1950s or early 1960s. The paper is the slightly glossy heavier stock used for magazines as opposed to the newsprint used for newspapers. The portion of the back I can see (it's glued to a sheet of paper) has some Christmas holiday artwork on it, so I presume it came out of a November or December issue of whatever magazine it was in. You can make one addition to the ingredients list if you wish, as I tried something new this time. I didn't have any brandy or rum in house, and since our neighborhood liquor store closed about a year ago, I didn't feel like going out to get any. In my liquor stock I found something I thought suitable... Cointreau. So I put 1/4 cup of that in rather than the specified brandy or rum. The cake (with walnuts) tastes quite nice with that in it, better than brandy or rum. But probably not worth the additional expense. I got my 750 ml bottle relatively cheap though, on sale at $21.99, quite a deal compared to what some stores charge for it. Though this substitution worked, I wouldn't try it with something like Jägermeister! -- ( #wff_ng_7# at #verizon# period #net# ) I'll keep that in mind. Thanks MoM |
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