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- Newsgroups: rec.food.recipes
- From: boss@scooby.cs.umass.edu (Ronya Boss)
- Subject: Belle of Amherst Black Cake Recipe
- Message-ID: <9308181247.AA06821@scooby.cs.umass.edu>
- Organization: Taronga Park BBS
- Date: Wed, 18 Aug 93 08:47:28 -0400
-
- No, I have not attempted to scale down the recipe to see if it comes out,
- but I did get a copy of "The Belle of Amherst" by William Luce.
-
- If anyone does scale down this cake, and actually makes it, I'd love to
- know how it turns out!
-
- Don't know if this recipe has any "Dickinsonian authenticity" or if it
- was just a dramatic invention of Mr. Luce, but here goes:
-
- ACT ONE:
- EMILY:
-
- ..."Oh! The cake!
-
- "I do all the baking here at Homestead. I even banged the
- spice for this cake. My father always raved about my baking.
- He would eat no cake or bread but mine."
-
- (She samples a piece of cake)
-
- "Mm. Lovely.
-
- "No, no -- it's easy to make. The recipe? Of course. It's
- really very simple. Now, I'll go slowly."
-
- (She places the cake on the tea cart)
-
- Black Cake: two pounds of flour, two pounds of sugar, two pounds
- of butter, nineteen eggs, five pounds of raisins, one and a half
- pounds of currants, one and a half pounds of citron, one half pint
- of brandy -- I never use Father's best -- one half pint of molasses,
- two nutmegs, five teaspoons of cloves, mace, and cinnamon, and --
- oh, yes, two teaspoons of soda, and one and a half teaspoons of salt."
-
- (Emily has removed her apron)
-
- "Just beat the butter and sugar together, add the nineteen eggs,
- one at a time -- now this is very important -- *without beating.*
- Then, beat the mixture again, adding the brandy alternately with
- the flour, soda, spices, and salt that you've sifted together.
- Then the molasses. Now, take your five pounds of raisins, and
- three pounds of currants and citron, and gently sprinkle in all
- eight pounds -- slowly now -- as you stir. Bake for three hours
- if you use cake pans. If you use a milk pan, as I do, you'd better
- leave it in the oven six or seven hours."
-
- "Everybody *loves* it. I hope you will too. Thank you.
-
- (She hangs her apron on the back of the chair.
- Then she sits down and pours tea)
-
- "Sometimes I bake one for a neighbor and I enclose a short note
- that is usually so obscure . . .
-
- (Gleefully)
-
- ". . . no one can understandit! I hear my little notes are
- becoming collectors' items in the village. People compare them
- to see who has the strangest one."
-
-
-