Top 100 Cake Blog

Top 100 Cake Blog

Monday, January 4, 2010

Spice Cake (good one)


On Sunday, knowing my daughter, Alex, and her sugar-loving boyfriend, Josh, were stopping by for dinner, I decided to bake a cake. After pouring through the contents of a recipe box I purchased at an estate sale in Akron -- (I remember the person making the sale kindly offered to dump all the cards -- she thought I just wanted the box!)-- I was all set to make Sugarplum Spice Cake, mostly because I liked the name.

Then, I discovered a recipe card simply titled "Spice Cake." On the reverse side was the notation: (good one). So with that endorsement (from an unknown 1940s home cook) that's the one I made. It's a keeper. Simple to make and absolutely delicious. Josh said it was like carrot cake, but without the carrot. All of us liked the fine crumb, moist texture and bold spice of the cake. And having just eaten two more pieces, I can guarantee that it's as good, if not better, the day after it's baked.

Like many butter cakes of the 1940s (and those popularized more recently by Rose Levy Beranbaum in The Cake Bible), this is made using a rather uncoventional (by today's standards) method. The butter is initially mixed with the dry ingredients (flour, salt, baking soda, etc.), not with the sugar. This method produces a very fine textured cake, according to uber baker Nick Malgieri, who notes that it was called high ratio baking when it was introduced by Proctor and Gamble in the 40s.
Tomorrow: The caramel frosting for the cake.



9 comments:

  1. Love spice cake! Even the school cafeteria variety.

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  2. Margaret! What are you doing reading blogs (and craving spice cake) at 3:11 a.m.?

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  3. mmmmmm, it was really really good. we may need to come back tomorrow to finish the rest off!

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  4. Sue, I got woken up by a call from the alarm company at Steve's office. False alarm, of course.

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  5. Also, I think your time stamp is set to PST. The reply I just posted was stamped at 10:12 a.m. when it was actually 1:12pm est. There is probably a blogger setting for this. But I was woken up at 3am and never got back to sleep - fun!

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  6. Thanks, Margaret. That time stamp is just one of hundreds of things I have to fix on this blog!! Baking is so much easier than blogging!

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  7. Just a note about this recipe (and the frosting): This is one of my six recipes featured in the March issue of Ladies Home Journal, so if you want to make this, please check the magazine for its version of this recipe, well-tested and fool-proof!

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  8. Good is an understatement! These are superb! I made them into cupcakes and they are so light and fluffy and flavoursome. Can't wait t0 try more!

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    1. Thanks, Jodie! And I just checked out your blog and am super jealous that you have chickens, well mostly jealous for the fresh eggs.

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