Thoughts:
With a hand-typed recipe and a name like that, how could I resist? This is the latest recipe from the very cool family cookbook, The Way to a Man’s Heart (link), and like the others, is a quirky look back in time. In my book, the recipe is typed onto a small piece of paper, and pasted onto the back cover. However, my Google-fu skills led me to a very similar recipe in Dr. Price’s New Cookbook, from 1921. That recipe calls for a good deal more baking powder, which I think would not go amiss.
On its own, this cake is not going to win any beauty contests. However, a good layer of icing serves to really spruce it up. The cake itself is also helped by the icing, because as you might expect, it’s a little on the dense side. The raisins and nuts are evenly distributed throughout the cake, giving each bite a little bit of interest and moistness.
Although it’s not going to be a a new staple in my kitchen, it’s a fun historical experiment that’s delicious with tea!
Recipe for Eggless, Butterless, Milkless Cake
Put into a sauce pan the following and boil together three minutes, then cool:
- 1 cup brown sugar
- 1 cup water
- 2 cups seeded raisins
- 1/3 cup lard or shortening
- 1/4 grated nutmeg
- 1 tsp. cinnamon
When cool, stir in
- 1 cup English walnuts
- 1 tsp. soda, dissolved in 1 Tbs. water
- 2 cups flour
- 1/2 tsp. full of baking powder
Grease a round pan and gently spread the elastic batter in it.
Bake at 300F for 45 minutes to an hour.
If you like, ice the cake with:
- 1/2 cup confectioners sugar
- enough water to bring it together
I love finding old recipes to try :) I dare you to tackle a 50s Jello cookbook though–yuck!
Oh, dares are a dangerous thing. :)
This recipe is quite similar to one in a short story I read years ago. It too was called “Eggless, Milkless, Butterless Cake” and was written by Ethel Pochoki.Maybe she got the recipe from the same source? The tale was published in Cricket magazine and is about how this cake featured in the life of the protagonist as she goes from maiden to mother and crone. Tis an adorable read.
How cool! It’s a typed recipe pasted into the back of one of my cookbooks, so I don’t know who picked it, or from where. I bet you’re right!
lard isnt vegan
Correct! But shortening is, and can be easily substituted.