Kelly Cochran is a culinary
dreamer, but some dreams are better left unfulfilled. As the author of Buying Time, the first in her humorous
mystery series, Kelly leaves the cooking to other writers, preferring to let
her protagonist, Aspen Moore, sustain herself on snacks and restaurant food. Learn
more about Kelly and her series at her website.
Attempting to cook with Kelly
Cochran – The Applesauce Cake Adventure
Last Christmas Eve, my sister-in-law brought an apple pie as her contribution
to our family dinner. When it was time for dessert, she announced, “This is Not
Your Mother’s Apple Pie,” to which the apple of my eye, my adult son, responded,
“Thank goodness!”
From burning bacon to permanently scorching my brand new pressure cooker,
I have somehow managed to keep my family alive. It’s not that I’m a terrible cook;
I’m just culinary-challenged despite the cookbooks and cooking magazines that
adorn my bookshelves.
As an experimenter in the kitchen, I tend to use recipes as guidelines,
which results in family meals being more like one-time adventures. If a meal turns out really good, my family
knows it will be the first and last time it will ever taste that way, and if
it’s bad, well, it quickly becomes part of their comedic repertoire.
I wondered, was I even capable of following a recipe? And if I could,
would it make a difference in my cooking? So, in honor of my so-called – apple
of my eye - and National Applesauce Cake day (June 6th), I decided to find a
recipe and follow it as written. But, I’m a rebel in the kitchen, so I couldn’t
simply open a cookbook. I needed a little twist. What better way to create my
Applesauce Cake Adventure than to choose a recipe almost 100 years old. Thank you
Miss
Nellie Maxwell.
Let the adventure begin!
The day before making the Cocoa Applesauce Cake, my husband whipped up
some homemade applesauce. I stored it in the refrigerator overnight. The
applesauce was delicious, but chunky. So the day of, I added a little bit of
water and ran the applesauce through a food processor to get a smooth texture
before heating it up for use in the cake recipe.
Because the recipe was almost 100 years old, I had to figure out a few
things. Like moderate oven means 350° and soda means baking soda (hopefully).
And an executive decision had to be made to utilize my Bundt pan since I don’t
own any other type of fluted pan. Although the recipe did not indicate whether
or not to grease the pan, I thought I should, so I rubbed in some butter
flavored Crisco.
I mixed all the ingredients according to the directions and placed the
mixture in the oven. After 45 minutes, I removed the pan and put it on a rack
to cool. When I was able to pick up the pan without potholders, I turned it
over and out came the cake with a thud! Still, I wasn’t discouraged. It was
time to make the Sour Cream Icing.
I wasn’t quite sure how I was going to boil two-thirds of a cup of sour
cream and two cups of granulated sugar. But, I figured Nellie Maxwell must know
what she’s doing since she had a syndicated food column, The Kitchen Cabinet,
during the mid 1900’s.
Amazingly, the contents of the pot became liquid in no time. I continued
to cook until it threaded, which I took to mean that when you pulled the wooden
spoon up you got a long string back to the contents. I turned off the burner
and waited until it became tepid. When I applied the icing, I think it was
actually warmer than it should have been because it ended up being more like a
glaze. I put the pot in the refrigerator for a little bit then applied more
icing to the cake. This resulted in a thicker icing and a big puddle of icing
in the middle of the cake. But let’s face it; the icing is the best part isn’t
it?
In writing this blog, I had to re-read the recipe and I think I found
the culprit that produced my heavy and dense cake: Baking soda. The recipe
called for one and one-fourth teaspoons of baking soda, and I vaguely remember
only putting in ¼ teaspoon.
At this point, it is quite clear why I don’t write culinary mysteries. However,
if I did, my Cocoa Applesauce Cake would make the perfect murder weapon!
Cocoa Applesauce Cake & Sour
Cream Frosting (Arizona Tombstone Newspaper – November 18, 1917)
Cocoa Applesauce Cake - Mix
together a tablespoonful of cocoa, a teaspoonful of cinnamon, a
half-teaspoonful of cloves, two cupfuls of flour and a cupful of raisins. In
another dish put a cupful of sugar, a half-cupful of sour cream, a cupful of
hot applesauce and one and a fourth teaspoonfuls of soda, which has been
stirred into the apple sauce. Beat in the flour mixture and bake in tube pan
for 45 minutes in a moderate oven. Frost with sour cream icing.
Sour Cream Icing – Take
two-thirds of a cupful of sour cream, two cupfuls of granulated sugar and boil
gently until it threads. Cool until tepid. Add a teaspoonful of orange extract
and beat until creamy, when it can be spread quickly over the cake. This makes
a cream colored frosting.
Applesause (from
Betty Crocker’s New Cookbook):
Ingredients:
4 medium cooking apples, peeled and each cut into fourths (1 1/3 pound)
1/2 cup water
14 cup packed brown sugar or 3 to 4 tablespoons granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1/2 cup water
14 cup packed brown sugar or 3 to 4 tablespoons granulated sugar
1/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon ground nutmeg
Heat apples and water to boiling in 2-quart saucepan over medium heat,
stirring occasionally; reduce heat to low. Simmer uncovered 5 to 10 minutes,
stirring occasionally to break up apples, until tender. Stir in remaining
ingredients. Heat to boiling. Boil and stir 1 minute.
Buying Time
Aspen Moore has a new life in a new city, complete with a new career. As
a personal concierge, she sells her time to those who don’t have enough. One of
the perks of her business is focusing on other people’s lives so she doesn’t
have to face the demons in her own.
When Aspen’s most loyal customer dies and his suicide looks eerily like
murder, she anonymously tips off the police so she won’t expose a secret she
desperately needs to keep. But, murder and mayhem are a bothersome duo and she
soon finds herself caught in a web of chaos.
A string of crimes, long enough to make a real detective sweat, threaten
her livelihood and ultimately her life. Aspen’s only hope is to untangle the
mess before they cause permanent damage. Pursuing the truth means solving the
mystery of a decade-old land deal, while juggling a quirky DJ and his dog, an
eccentric paraplegic, a curious set of twins, and a flirtatious neighbor with
spy gadgets.
Buy Links
3 comments:
I had a fun time finding and attempting to follow the recipe. And taking the photo to make my disaster look scrumptious was also a blast!
I ended up eating a small piece and although it was quite dense, it didn't taste too bad as long as you had a couple of gallons of milk to wash it down!
The remaining cake found its way into my husbands car, so he could take it to his office. And guess what? His co-workers actually ate it!
My husband said that it reminded them of fruitcake - go figure, I created a "beloved" holiday treat (enough sarcasm?) without even trying!
Maybe I am a good cook!
Every now and then my husband asks about something I made that was delicious, but of course I have no idea what I did to make it a success. If I come up with something else, he asks, Did you write it down? I'm a regular at making lemon chicken without the lemon, etc.
Loved your post.
We all need adventures in our lives. Your culinary adventures add a lot to your family's (beloved) memories!
This was a FUN blog! Thanks!
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