Top 100 Cake Blog

Top 100 Cake Blog

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Canada War Cake (WW I)


Even though the United States is fighting two wars at the moment, there's no evidence of it in our local supermarkets. That wasn't the case during both World Wars, when food (like sugar) and other goods were rationed, here and in Canada (which, during WW I, sent more than 600,000 troops to battle).

Wartime rationing created a cuisine borne of economy and necessity. Canada War Cake is a perfect example -- "no eggs, no butter, no milk!" -- or casualty, since it was the only thing I've made this year that wasn't worth the calories. It was rather dense and heavy and looked like a brick.

This version of Canada War Cake -- and there are so many others as to almost have its own genre (chocolate cakes, pound cakes, war cakes -- who knew!) -- was printed in the c. 1970s South Street Seaport Museum cookbook, where it was renamed Pioneer Cake, after the museum's historic schooner, pictured below in a sketch by maritime historian Frank Braynard. (Off topic, but I encourage everyone to experience NY harbor aboard this lovely vessel -- she sails from spring to fall; check the museum website for details.)

M.F.K. Fisher, the prolific food writer and essayist, included a War Cake recipe in her 1942 book, How to Cook a Wolf , and Sunmaid Raisin (quick to capitalize on a cake whose main ingredient is raisins) developed a three layer Canadian War Cake, complete with icing.

The hardest thing about this cake (aside from the texture) was trying to find mace (the spice, not the weapon) in one of the many bodegas and little markets close to my house. (I finally copped a jar, but I'm sure it's from the last century.)

My experience with Canada War Cake is just another reason to wish for peace on earth (and cakes made with eggs and butter).









17 comments:

  1. Wasn't familiar with Mace.. as a spice! But glad to hear it comes in a jar, as well as in the more traditional "spray" we've come to know in NYC!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for saving the world from that cake! Thought you might be interested in this. (A reason to visit Ann Arbor, perhaps?)

    http://www.clements.umich.edu/culinary/

    Before she donated her collection to the UM, she had all sorts of famous foodies traipse through her house to view it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. @ABA: I'm sure it would have been easier to find the spray than the spice! Really, my search for mace took twice as long as it did to make the cake.
    @Margaret: Thanks so much for that link....maybe I will visit Ann Arbor.

    ReplyDelete
  4. while this cake was "dense and heavy," as susan suggests, i was forced to consume a piece just to make sure. it was as described but still sweet. i'm glad there's no rationing now, although we'd all likely be thinner....

    ReplyDelete
  5. i have the cookbook u r looking for it's by Mrs. Grace Osborn Cakes of Quality (how to make them) the year is 1919 in bay city, michigan.
    it also says in the front cover:
    exceptional cake making successfully taught angel cake, puff cake, klondike cake, mahogany cake and ten others.

    ReplyDelete
  6. @Kelly: Thanks for writing! I do have the cookbook (but it may by the prototype). Does yours appear to be professionally published? Mine is a bunch of typed pages held together with string! Would you be interested in selling your book, by any chance? I'm totally fascinated by Grace. It appears she also had a line of cookware and vanilla for sale - very enterprising in those years. Please email me at visit.susan@gmail.com if you're ever looking to sell your copy. Where did you get it, and have you tried any recipes? What I find intriguing is the fact that she insists that cakes be put in a cold oven to start (which is weird because it's the heat reacting to the leavening in the cake that makes it rise).

    ReplyDelete
  7. Dense and heavy! Yes! That's one of the reasons I like it. The biggest reason, however, is that my Grandmother who lived in Maine was born and raised in Canada. She seemingly always had Canadian War Cake on hand. My Mom (her daughter-in-law ) learned to make it. I guess it's a real "comfort food" to me!

    ReplyDelete
  8. I'm glad I found you...I have a book club where as well as read we have a meal made from the foods mentioned in the book. This time it's the book "the day the falls stood still" by Cathy Marie Buchanan and the Canada Cake is mentioned in it. Looks like a heavy fruit cake to me...:-)

    ReplyDelete
  9. @Francine: What a great concept for a book club! You must choose your books very carefully! Glad you found the blog, and Canada War Cake, while not delicious, was still enjoyed.

    ReplyDelete
  10. I have Grace osbornes 1919 cookbook, would like to sell how much do you think the price should be?

    ReplyDelete
  11. e-mail princes61@comcast.net for last post if anyone knows how much or would like to buy

    ReplyDelete
  12. @Anonymous: I have no idea how much you should ask for the book. You could try to put it on eBay and see what the market brings. I bought my first one (a soft cover, 8.5 x 11 volume) for about $10 and have two others, one a soft cover and the other a smaller hard cover, and I doubt I paid more than $20 or so for each. Good luck!

    ReplyDelete
  13. While not a fan of Canadian War Cake myself, my aunt LOVES it! Every year for her birthday I make her one of her favorites just like her mother did when she was living. I think for her, it is more of a fond memory than the taste of the cake that she enjoys so much! The recipe I have doesn't use mace... I will try to locate it for you. Happy baking!

    Misty

    ReplyDelete
  14. Thanks, Misty. I agree with you, that we like certain foods more for the memory they evoke than for the actual taste. Thanks for writing!

    ReplyDelete
  15. Well this is just a crappy recipe for war cake! EVERYONE had their own version! Try this it's excellent - 2 cups raisins 2 cups brown sugar, 2 cups water and 2 tbsp lard - mix and bring it to a boil, boil for 5 minutes and set it aside til it is room temperature. Sift in 3 cups flour, 11/2 tsp baking soda and the spices you like in a gingerbread I use a 1/2 tsp ginger and 1 tsp cinnamon because that's what my old maritime recipe calls for. Put it in a greased tube or bundt pan and bake at 350 for an hour - the liquid must be room temp or it ends up crappy and dry. Like this it's got a crunchy sweet outside and a moist gingerbread inside. It gets better with age. Store in the fridge. Try this one before you toss war cake into the regrettable recipe pile!

    ReplyDelete
  16. I agree with Mudmama, that is a terrible recipe and you should try hers, it is very close to my own. I make this every year for Christmas instead of fruitcake and my family loves it!

    ReplyDelete
  17. sorry this cake rocks, my grandma made it for yrs. the texture is dense and flavor is full. This is more like a dense bread than a cake. But is does get better as is ages. If you want a cake this is not the recipe for you.

    ReplyDelete