Welcome to Sundays with the Lechlers. This blog shares recipes and events in our lives. It's written for family and friends and people who like to cook and read about good food. We all live busy lives, so we set aside Sundays to rekindle.
Monday, February 11, 2013
Comfort Cakes ~
To me, the UK equals comfort cakes. We call them snack cakes, they may call them slices, but I will always associate those one layer goodies with my (antiquing) days in England. They may come in loaves, in rounds or squares, but they ooze goodness and comfort even if they are not always that pretty. They are featured in every bakery and in every hamlet that I visited. But the places I remember them most would be at flea markets and antiques shows. The slices were easy to carry and to eat on the run while the eyes wandered over the market tables in search of the very prize that could be added to a collection or sold for a profit. The bake shops made these cakes too, because they held well. They were good for several days and they only got better as they wait to be bought and consumed. Housewives slapped them together at the last minute for unexpected company or as a sweet ending of a meal. Children anticipated them as they skipped home from school. And, everyone had their favorites. So this is an ode to comfort cakes...easy to make, satisfying to eat.
Sandy Schmoker of Nebraska gave me this recipe while we attended a pork roast during our 1982 miniature convention. Not only is it easy, but heads my list of fast, delicious snack cakes. I always make it in a bunt pan or a loaf tin.
Poppy Seed Slices
1 package yellow cake mix
1 cup hot water
1/2 cup cooking oil
1 package instant banana pudding mix (or any flavor you wish to add to the cake in pudding form)
4 eggs
1/4 cup poppy seeds
Combine cake mix, water, oil, and pudding mix in a bowl. Mix until well blended and stir in the poppy seeds. Spoon into a well greased and floured 10 inch tube pan (or loaf pan). Bake 350 for 45 minutes--depending on your oven, of course.
Double Fudge Slice
You can serve this with any enhancement but floating on creme , a l'anglaise (custard) it is perfection.
1/2 cup butter
3 ounces unsweetened chocolate
3 eggs, beaten
1 1/2 cups sugar
1/4 cup flour
1/2 tsp. vanilla
1/2 tsp. salt
1 tsp. milk
Preheat oven to 325. Melt butter and chocolate and cool slightly. Gradually mix into eggs. Add remaining ingredients and stir until just mixed. Spread into a buttered 9 inch pie plate and bake for 40 minutes--less if you have a convection oven. Center WILL BE SOFT and moist when taken from oven. It firms when cooling. Serve with ice cream, or whipped cream...but loose custard is the best.
For any of the above (pictured) recipes, just email me and I will get it to you.
Linda McFarland gave me this recipe. We taught together and enjoyed this simple treat on many occasions.
Ritz Cracker Squares
25 Ritz crackers crushed and rolled, to this add: 1 tsp. baking powder to one cup pecan pieces
3 egg whites
1 cup sugar
1 tsp. vanilla
1/2 pint whipping cream.
Whip egg whites to a stiffness, add sugar and vanilla. Add cracker mixture slowly.
Bake in a greased pan at 350 for around 20- 30 minutes... but watch it, it burns like crazy. Cool and top with whipped cream and chocolate curls. Refrigerate.
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