scrawls
still cheaper than therapy*
1.10.09
two years
honey, you don't deserve this.you are so exuberant, so vital. And i feel like your life and your future is crumbling and i can't stop it and you can't either, of course.
There are so many cliches i could use. So many. And the world is spinning, dancing like lights, swirling like vultures or sharks. Like a hurricane. Killer bees. and here i am at the eye, the center, the vortex, the nadir, where nothing ever changes and nothing is ever surprising if i expect the worst and i can see the thought hanging there, in people's heads, from thousands and thousands and thousands of miles away, and they breathe and don't say it but it comes out anyway, i can feel it in the air.
Anyway.
This is the cake i am making for you, from here - half of this recipe makes one Bear-Shaped Silicone Cake Pan:
Servings: Makes 3 loaf cakes or 1 bundt or tube cakei have it in the oven. I have raised the motivation i needed to make it: i'm not a baker, it was hard. Mommy is sad, sweetheart. And it's not your fault, and you make me so happy, which in turn makes me so angry that someone could do this to you, could consider doing this to you. Your statistical possibilities will plummet, your probabilities of doing all the things which are not so nice will rise ...
Comments:
Rosh Hashanah-Jewish New Year
Celebrated this year (2004) from sundown September 15th to sundown September 17th.
I created this recipe for Rosh Hashanah Honey Cake after searching "high and low" for an easy yet scrumptious dessert to serve at our Rosh Hashanah dinner this year. I finally gave up on all of the honey cake recipes I looked at (and there are a zillion of them out there!!) and decided to create my own Moist and Tender Honey-Applesauce Cake recipe from scratch. Since apples and honey are such a big part of the Jewish New Year meal, what better type of dessert to make than a cake that incorporates both of these wonderful "sweet" foods.
My husband Kenny says, "the cake is sweet, but not too sweet, and has just the perfect texture and is moist and just a little bit spongey", which he likes in a cake. He also says to mention that it goes so well with a nice cup of coffee.
I have to agree with him, taking a bite of the cake and then a sip of coffee is heaven. I am sure you'll love this cake too. It will definitely make your New Year start off on a "sweet" note.
One word of advice though, do NOT leave out the applesauce as this is what makes this cake so moist and delicious.
L' Shanah Tovah, ("for a good New Year")....Diana
Ingredients:
Dry Ingredients:
3 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup granulated sugar
1/2 cup light or dark brown sugar
2 tsp. baking soda
2 tsp. baking powder
2 tbsp. ground cinnamon
2 tsp. ground nutmeg
1/2 tsp. ground cloves
1/2 tsp. ground allspice
Liquid Ingredients:
1 cup clear honey
1 cup vegetable oil
1 cup strongly brewed tea, cooled to room temperature
3 large eggs
1/4 cup orange liqueur or orange juice
1 1/3 cups unsweetened applesauce
1 tsp. vanilla extract
Optional Ingredients:
1/2 cup raisins, golden or dark
1/2 to 3/4 cup chopped almonds or walnuts (or other nuts of your choice)
Topping: (optional)
Confectioners' sugar
Sliced or slivered almonds or chopped walnuts
Instructions:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (180 C). Lightly grease or spray a 9 or 10-inch tube, angel food or bundt cake pan, or three (8 x 4-inch) loaf pans. If you are using an angel food, tube or loaf pans, line the pan (s) with parchment paper and lightly grease or spray parchment paper also. (Note: Because of the design of a bundt style pan, it cannot be lined with parchment, so this type of pan MUST be lightly greased with butter or shortening, or sprayed with a non-stick cooking spray).
In a large mixing bowl, combine all of the dry ingredients. Mix well.
In a small bowl, combine honey with oil. Add honey/oil mixture to dry ingredients and whisk in the remaining liquid ingredients in the order stated above. Add raisins and chopped nuts if using. Combine thoroughly.
Pour batter into prepared cake pan (s) and bake in preheated 350 degree F (180 C) oven for 60 to 70 minutes if using a tube, angel food or bundt pan. If using three loaf pans, bake cakes for 45 to 55 minutes. Cake (s) should spring back when lightly pressed when done and when cake tester inserted in cake comes out clean.
Remove cake (s) from oven and leave in pan (s) for 10 minutes before inverting onto wire rack (removing parchment paper) to cool completely. For best flavor, make the cake (s) the day before you are going to eat them. Wrap cake (s) in aluminum foil or plastic wrap and store at room temperature for up to 3 days.
When ready to serve, transfer cake to serving plate and dust top with confectioners' sugar and sprinkle with sliced or slivered almonds or chopped walnuts, if desired.
Makes one (9 or 10-inch) tube or bundt cake, or three (8 x 4-inch) loaf cakes.
Note: Cake may also be made in a rectangular 9 x 13-inch baking pan. If making in this size pan, bake cake for 40 to 45 minutes.
Freezing:
Although this cake tastes best a day or two after baking, it also tastes very nice after being frozen and thawed. This is a cake that freezes well. To freeze, wrap cooled cake (s) in aluminum foil and then wrap in plastic wrap and place in a zip-loc bag; seal, label and date. Cake will keep 4 to 6 months in the freezer.
To Thaw and Serve:
Thaw cake at room temperature, covered, 3 to 4 hours.
Honey Tips:
When making either cakes or cookies with honey, first mix the honey with the fat or the liquid in the recipe. Then mix it thoroughly with the other ingredients. If this is not done, a soggy layer will form on the top of your cookies or cakes.
Desserts or other goodies made with honey brown faster than foods made with other sweeteners. So when you bake desserts made with honey, set the oven temperature 25 degrees F lower than what is indicated in the recipe.
Source: Diana Baker Woodall© 2004
Date: August 31, 2004
You are two. And I will always, always, always love you, and now at least, at last, I know that when I say that I mean it, come what may.
I will do all that I can to keep a home for you in which you are loved and safe and don't have to worry about things children shouldn't have to worry about. I will keep it together for you when I can because when Mommy cries it scares you.
You have stacks and stacks of presents and since I am writing this before we have opened them all I don't even know what they all are yet: you have girly flowery headbands and a shiny princess tiara with pink rhinestones and marabou feathers, you have a lot of new Duplos so i don't think more will fit in your big Duplo storage box (or at least not very many more), you have a trumpet and a cute in-tune xylophone and we brought out the drum again, you have sticker books about bugs and potty-going and fish and dinosaurs, you have a hobby-horse that neighs when you push a button, you have clothes and shoes and boots, balloons, colorful band-aids, and our neighbor gave you your first Twinkies, full of globby cream and preservatives. My big girl!
You are so tall, now, and you talk all the time, with sentences in English and sentences in German, and you know who speaks which language, and you can run run run and walk all the way back from the tagesmutter's, you can kick things and throw things and climb things, you can build real things with the Duplos and claim that what you have drawn is representative of something, and you can do so much and know so much and understand so much. (Which makes it all worse, somehow.)
E, i love you, baby. It's all that keeps me going, some days, but i'm doing my best.
Labels: drama, milestones
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