
How delightful to be back in a beautiful home area where we can freely visit the cows who share their thick cream and milk with us and the chickens (and occasional ducks or geese, apparently) who provide us with fantastic fresh eggs. How can I not want to return to cooking and baking!
The ladies at Dungeness Valley Creamery run a tight ship—I’m guessing the trio above brook no nonsense!—but are friendly and generous nonetheless, as Juliet here will happily tell you in exchange for a little bit of cheek-petting and conversation. Bonus points if you let the calves and cows suck on your sleeve for a while when they pop by to say hello.
This is dark and sticky and chewy and heavy and spicy and a zillion other adjectives that end in y that are so overused, they border on hackneyed, but you know what? It is not this cake’s fault. It can’t help being awesome, and fragrant (our living room smells like Christmas), attention-grabbing (nobody puts it in the corner) and totally respecting of your busy schedule (because it tastes even better on days two and three than it did out of the oven).
Gramercy Tavern’s Gingerbread [Sparks edits bolded here]
Claudia Fleming
The only snafu I ran into with this recipe is that the cake sank a bit. Since it was in a bundt pan (flipped upside-down for serving) no one will be the wiser, but I suspect if the problem is anything like the sinking honey cake, there might be too much baking powder in it. You’ll only want to consider dialing it back a pinch if you are subdividing it into a pan that you won’t serve upside down.
Speaking of, I have successfully divided bundt pan recipes into two full-sized loaves before, but haven’t tested it with this recipe yet. If you do, let us know.
1 cup dry-style hard apple cider
1 cup dark molasses
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
2 cups all-purpose flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
2 tablespoons ground ginger
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
1/4 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon of ground cardamom
3 large eggs
1 cup packed dark brown sugar
1 cup granulated sugar
3/4 cup peppery olive oil
Diced/chopped add-ins for 2nd loaf: preserved soft ginger, TJ’s candied orange slices, candied citron, dark chocolate, and toasted piñon (whole) and walnuts (chopped).
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Preheat oven to 350°F. Generously butter pan and dust with finely powdered decaf coffee and/or Dutched cocoa powder, knocking out excess. (She is not kidding about this. I used a nonstick pan with a butter/flour spray and still lost a chunk of cake. I will be more generous next time.)
Bring cider and molasses to a boil in a large saucepan and remove from heat. Whisk in baking soda, then cool to room temperature.
Sift together flour, baking powder, and spices in a large bowl. Whisk together eggs and sugars. Whisk in oil, then molasses mixture. Add to flour mixture and whisk until just combined.
Pour batter into pans and rap pans sharply on counter to eliminate air bubbles. Bake in middle of oven until a tester comes out with just a few moist crumbs adhering, about 50 minutes. Cool cake in pan on a rack 5 minutes. Turn out onto rack and cool completely.
Douse with dark rum, wrap, and store in a cool dark spot until serving.
Eat up, everyone! And don’t blame me for your lack of self-control; I did warn you about mine.
It certainly is nice to see you back.
My friend, what a delight to hear from you! Hope all’s swell in your garden-patch and brewhouse!
Despite our much-anticipated move Home to the PNW, we will miss our TX friends and hangouts and already look forward to work/play visits coming up in February and June. I just heard from a Denton friend it’s gotten slightly chilly there tonight, but am guessing it’s still slightly warmer than where we’re visiting in DC right now, where we saw a tiny snow flurry this afternoon. Who’d’a thunk.
Cheers!
I too am delighted to see you back here again – and I am mightily tempted to try the gingerbread recipe!
Hi, Maggie!! Thanks for the welcome. If you should happen to have a try with the gingerbread, I’ll look forward to hearing how it goes. Meanwhile, great to pop by your place and have a look again. More to come!!! Congratulations on moving forward with your writing in new ways: it’s an uphill but exciting adventure, to be sure. I wish you every delight the process can possibly bring.
Best to you!
Howdy stranger 🙂
Ms T! So lovely to see you here. And as you obviously know, there’s nobody stranger than me. 😉 It’s fun to think of getting back into a groove here eventually, though it’ll likely be a less rigorously attended one than my first…I do enjoy the company, above all!
Xoxo
Oh, I knew you weren’t dead! Ha ha! I knew that retirement and opening the gates to whatever blows yer skirt up had you wandering about like a couple of nomads! I’m so happy you’ve been busy enjoying life. Isn’t it grand?
I have a really great gingerbread recipe somewhere. My Dallas sis-in-law and I tried it one year at Christmas and it was absolutely mouth-watering DEE licious (despite in our excitement we forgot to put the fresh-ground ginger in it – had to fork it in gently after the first ten minutes in the oven, GAH!!). But your idea of dousing with rum sounds like it could go a level higher on the DEE lish scale. Woot!! I’m going to try it!!
Dearest! So great to hear from you. You’ve undoubtedly noticed on FB as well that we’re in our own deer country! The blacktails here are a bit too tame for their own good, but I’ve not seen any evidence of serious problems between them and the locals, so it’s lots of fun to simply have them pop up here and there on a regular basis and show off their beauty and leaps and straight-up-the-cliff trotting and such delights. I do love being back where we can manage to get OUTDOORS and walk regularly without frying in the heat!
Your family gingerbread recipe sounds fabulous (not least of all in being flexible enough for the late add-in spice!!), and yes, I suspect it would not be the least bit harmed by the addition of rum! (So few things are, right?) The big bonus of the rum/booze is, of course, that it’s such a great preserver: I have kept past dense loaf cakes in their boozy state for well over a year with delicious success. You’re making me look forward all the more to getting home and trying this year’s experiment out myself. 😀
Meanwhile, sending big hugs to you,
K