There was a wonderful blog, Butter Me Up Brooklyn,
the 2012 winner of Saveur's best baking blog. Authored by the
lovely Lillie Auld (we met when we did a food event together a few years back),
the blog abruptly stopped in 2014. (Lillie: where are you?) What I
enjoyed best, aside from the imaginative recipes and writing, was its tag line:
Baking Makes Friends. I've always subscribed to that theory, but could never
express it as well as these three simple words do.
Which brings me to
this Royal One-Egg One-Bowl Cake. James, a porter at work, stopped by my
office recently to tell me he had resigned, having purchased a house (for $10K!) in Youngstown,
Ohio. James was always a big fan of my baked goods. So what better send off
than to bake him a goodbye cake.
Trouble was, I had
no time. Or so I thought, until I discovered this easy-as-pie vanilla cake
recipe. And an equally easy frosting recipe. It is a delicious old-fashioned one-layer cake; the recipe was probably originally from Royal Baking Powder, founded in the 1880s.
Begin by sifting the flour, baking powder
and salt. No one has a flour sifter these days, so just use a strainer, pushing
the ingredients through with the back of a large spoon.
Add
all the other ingredients except the egg into one bowl and beat for two
minutes. Add the egg and beat for one minute.
Pour into a greased and floured nine-inch round cake pan and bake
until golden.
While
the cake is cooling, start the frosting.
Beat the butter and add the cocoa-sugar mixture.
It
won’t look very good, but once you add the brewed coffee (at room temperature),
it will smooth out.
Make sure the cake is cold! Never frost a warm cake. Mine formed a bit of a dome, so using a serrated knife, I sliced it off and then shared that thin layer with a very appreciative DH.
Some
beauty shots.
I
thoughtfully sliced the cake for James, because I thought he'd want to share
with colleagues. Turned out I was wrong and he ate most of it himself.
Full
disclosure: The first time I made this cake it was a bit of a disaster. I
followed the recipe: Used an eight inch square pan, greased (and not floured). The cake wouldn't release, but it was so good, I thought I'd try again.
My
attempt to salvage the cake failed miserably, but at least I could eat my
mistake.
Production notes: I followed this recipe exactly, and it resulted in failure. Save yourself the heartache by greasing and flouring the pan, and use a nine-inch round pan. And be sure your butter is at room temperature, i.e., pretty soft.
This
very simple frosting is from The General’s Cook Book, a 1961 collection
published by the Women’s Board of Akron General Hospital.
James, on his last day of work.
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