Top 100 Cake Blog

Top 100 Cake Blog
Showing posts with label Butter Me Up Brooklyn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Butter Me Up Brooklyn. Show all posts

Sunday, December 4, 2016

Royal One-Egg One-Bowl Cake and Coffee Butter Frosting


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.

Friday, October 11, 2013

Fruit Cocktail Cake


Growing up in Akron, the fruit most commonly found in our house was in a can, so I have a special fondness for fruit cocktail. And apparently, so do many others -- I found several vintage fruit cocktail cake recipes in my collection.

I made this to bring to the Sugar Sweets Festival at the City Reliquary in Williamburg last Sunday.  I wasn't exactly sure of my role at the event, but the website said I'd be bringing "historic culinary curiosities" so I made this cake from the 1950s, plus desserts from the 1930s and 1940s for sampling, allowing visitors to "eat their history."  The fruit cocktail cake proved quite popular.


If you can open a can, you can make this cake. And the recipe is very uncomplicated -- just put all the ingredients in a bowl and mix until combined.


Then, just pour into a greased and floured pan. (I used a 12 x 9 inch pan. See what happened here when I used a 9 inch pan the first time I made this.)  And as if the cake weren't sweet enough, the instructions call for topping it with a mixture of nuts and one cup of brown sugar!


Note that the recipe has no butter. (But plenty of sugar.)


One of the event highlights at the Sugar Sweets Festival was meeting the charming Lillie Auld, author of the wonderful blog, Butter Me Up Brooklyn, who was judging a cupcake contest at the event.


Below are two of the desserts I brought to the event.  Here's the recipe for the Depression Cake (which is actually a recipe from WW I, but was reprised in the 1930s) and the recipe for the wonderful chocolate cake.



The City Reliquary has some great baking exhibits at the moment, including a display of some of my vintage recipe cards.



Sugar Sweets Festival scene. Special thanks to the DH for these photos.