Oscar’s $100 Cake

Gram liked this recipe so much she wrote it out twice. The funny thing is that the first one, on the blue paper, has a seafood casserole recipe on the back of it. Maybe she was planning a dinner? It’s interesting to note that the second recipe has increased quantities of the ingredients and makes a large and small cake pan full, maybe for a tiered cake? Oscar’s $100 Cake is a favorite in our family because it is so moist and flavorful.

This recipe is great because it doesn’t have any eggs. A friend of mine has a child with an egg allergy but who also loves cupcakes. This would be a perfect recipe for him if egg-free mayonnaise were used.

The story of Oscar’s $100 Cake goes that one of Gram’s friends went to New York City and enjoyed a delicious cake at the Waldorf Hotel. After she returned home, she wrote to the chef and asked for the recipe, indicating that she would be happy to pay for it. When she received a letter back in the mail, it included the recipe and a bill for $100, which at that time was a shocking amount of money. She decided that if Oscar was going to charge that much money for his recipe, she would be happy to pay it…but also share the recipe with her friends. Of course this is an earlier version of the Neiman Marcus and Mrs. Fields’ cookie recipe stories, but one would hope the story started out in truth at some point. I like the Oscar’s story because it significantly predates the modern stories.

Oscar’s $100 Cake

Sift together:

1 c sugar

2 c cake flour

4 tbsp cocoa

2 tsp soda

pinch salt

Add:

1 c mayonnaise

1 c water

1 tsp vanilla

Banana Cake

Today we have what looks like will be a very moist and sweet – but not chocolately sweet – banana cake. There has been a shift in baked goods over the years. Slowly but surely, they have become more sweet. Some desserts are so sweet they hurt your mouth all while they taste pretty good. Many sweets from around the world are not as sweet as American desserts. For example, Chinese candy isn’t really sweet-like-sugar at all, it’s more sweet flavors, like fruits. Canadian versions of American candy bars are not as sweet. Mexican versions of American sodas are not as sweet. We have a serious addiction to excessive sweetness, it seems. Just looking at some of these old recipes though, you can see that it wasn’t always that way. This one seems less about the sweet and more about the flavor. Enjoy!

Banana Cake (Lorraine H)

1 1/2 c sugar

1/2 c Crisco

2 eggs

2 bananas (sliced)

2 c flour

pinch of salt

1 tsp B.P.

1 tsp soda dissolved in 1/2 c sour milk

1 tsp vanilla

Cream sugar & butter. Add beaten eggs & bananas. Mix soda with sour milk & add to mixture. Flavor. Bake in slow oven. Will take about an hr to bake.

Date Cake

You don’t really think about fruit cake these days, except at Christmas time, but this recipe for date cake from the elusive Anne reminds us that cakes need not be chocolate or white cake alone. Checking into the family tree again, Gram did have an Aunt Anna – her father’s sister. I need to do more work on this part of the family…in all my spare time.

Date Cake (Aunt Anne)

#1

1 3/4 cups rolled oats – grind fine

1 1/2 cups flour

1 tsp soda

1/2 tsp salt

1 c brown sugar

3/4 c shortening

#2

1 c sugar

1 c water

1/2 lb chopped dates

Cook til thick.

Mix the above (#1) & reserve 1 c. Spread the rest thin in a cake pan. Then put in second mixture (#2). Then top with reserved cupful and bake.

Happy Mother’s Day

In honor of Mother’s Day I’d like to post not a recipe today, but a few memories about Gram supplied by my mom (Gramma A), who is Gram’s daughter. When my mother was born in the 30s, the United States was not only in the grips of the Great Depression, but families were still fairly self reliant in terms of raising gardens. Some folks kept chickens and cows depending on where they lived. Mom grew up in Erie, PA in what a lot of us might call a traditional Eastern-style home. It had a basement, first and second floor with front and back stairs, and an attic. There were both a front porch and a back porch, and a separate garage behind the house. All of this was on a large piece of land which abutted an alley. Their street, West 9th, was lined with large trees, I believe maple and elm. I hope that sets the stage for you. So, here are some of my mom’s thoughts about this housewife of the mid-twentieth century.

For as long as I can remember, Gram always had a large garden in the back yard. Some of it was flowers, just now the first daffodils would be blooming and she would have some of them picked and in the house. There were lots of other varieties too – roses, tulips, asters, something blooming all summer long. Then there was a small grassy area. Behind that at the rear of the property she had the vegetable garden. On one side were two rows of asparagus, which is a perennial and comes early in spring. Then she would also plant green beans, carrots, onions, beets, tomatoes, and other things which I can’t really remember. Then of course there were the cherry trees (2 of them), the pear tree and the apple tree which was just outside the back door. At one time there was a peach tree too, but it got old and gnarly and had to be removed. Directly behind the garage was rhubarb. I would say 90 percent of the produce went into canning jars and jellies and jams. She was an extremely busy lady. On top of these things she would go out in the country and find the best prices on berries, eggs, etc. (And several times a week she would bake the bread.) All this in addition to laundry, cleaning, volunteering at church and dance club on Friday nights (maybe only once a month I think.)

Then came WWII. Residents of Erie were offered plots of ground in the outskirts of town to plant – in a war effort to grow your own veggies. Everything was scarce and at times rationed. This is when Grandpa got into the “farming” business. He took one or two plots and there planted corn, more varities of beans, strawberries – I can’t remember all the items. Then one year for Christmas Uncle Ed [Selden] deeded him 20 acres at Swanville, which was part of the Selden family holdings. He gave up the other acreage (maybe it was because the war ended.) There he sunk a well, cultivated several acres with more “truck”. He did plant potatoes, strawberries, corn, and lots of other things. At the back of the property he planted several fruit trees – just to try – and raspberries both red and black – the hand-pump well was used to keep things watered when there was not enough rain. He went out several times a week – after dinner – to tend the garden. Of course it stayed light until almost 9:30 in the summer so there was plenty of time.

My grandparents were resourceful and creative people. Clearly they took advantage of the resources around them! They also made pottery, Grandpa made wine, Gram was a home sewist, knitter, and home maker. To all the mothers and daughters out there, find the Gram in you today and celebrate who you are!

Fresh Apple Cake

Here we have a recipe for fresh apple cake. It sounds a bit like a spice cake, or similar to the applesauce cake I made a while back. I bet it’s really moist and delicious.

Fresh Apple Cake (Winnie Meyers)

Big Al(uminum) pan 350 – 60 min

2 c sugar

1/2 c margarine

Cream

2 eggs plus 1 tsp vanilla –  add & beat

Sift together:

2 c flour

1 1/2 tsp soda

1/2 tsp B. P.

1/2 tsp salt

1 tsp cinnamon

1/2 tsp nutmeg

Add to mixture, blending well.

Add 4 c. fresh cut apples & bake.

Sauce

1/2 c gran(ulated) sugar

1/2 c brown sugar

1/2 c margarine

1/2 c sweet cream

salt

Cook to desired thickness, add 1 tsp rum flavoring