Period Fruit Cake Recipe!

Joined
Jul 12, 2007
Location
Aledo, IL
FRUIT CAKE
(from Housekeeping in Old Virginia, by Marion Cabell Tyree, 1878)

Ingredients:
2 lbs. best stoned raisins
2 lbs. currants
1 lb. citron
12 eggs
1 lb. fresh butter
1 lb. loaf sugar
1 lb. flour
4-1/2 tsp. cream of tartar
1-1/4 tsp. soda
1 large tbsp. ground cinnamon
1 small tbsp. white ginger
4-1/2 nutmegs
1 tbsp. best molasses
1/2 teacup best brandy
Instructions:

2 pounds best stoned raisins.
2 pounds currants.
1 pound citron.
12 eggs.
1 pound fresh butter.
1 pound loaf sugar.
1 pound flour.
Make the batter as you would for nice cake, and before adding the fruit, stir into the batter --
4-1/2 teaspoonfuls cream of tartar.
1-1/4 teaspoonful soda.
1 large tablespoonful of ground cinnamon.
1 small tablespoonful of white ginger.
4-1/2 nutmegs.
1 tablespoonful of best molasses.
Add by degrees the fruit and one-half teacup best brandy; bake slowly five hours. Excellent, and will keep good six months.
-- Mrs. F.
 

I was making a beef stroganoff for dinner inspired by the Tasting history guy and spotted this while browsing on his website. I don't eat fruit cake that often anymore but remember them fondly from visiting my grandparents in the countryside.
 
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Looking at the recipe, it seems heavy on spices which I'd have thought were hard to come by and a bit skimpy on fruit. It appears to have been somewhat akin to Norwegian Julekake (Christmas Cake)--which Norwegians eat all year (with raisins instead of fruit) as a sweet bread.
 
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Looking at the recipe, it seems heavy on spices which I'd have thought were hard to come by and a bit skimpy on fruit. It appear2 to have been somewhat akin to Norwegian Julekake (Christmas Cake)--which Norwegians eat all year (with raisins instead of fruit) as a sweet bread.

I reckon these websites like to embellish their dishes to seem more creative. I don't think Mace for instance was easy to find in them days. Its like the dish I was cooking today he insisted on smetana and sarepska mustard so I went to local Polish supermarket. When I was cooking the dish I realised I could have just used Dijon mustard and sour cream that I already had in the fridge.
 
I reckon these websites like to embellish their dishes to seem more creative. I don't think Mace for instance was easy to find in them days. Its like the dish I was cooking today he insisted on smetana and sarepska mustard so I went to local Polish supermarket. When I was cooking the dish I realised I could have just used Dijon mustard and sour cream that I already had in the fridge.
I do a lot of dumbing-down of recipes because I live in an area which is without a lot of exotic resources. I have a friend, a retired chef, who will drive for miles for THE right ingredient--but I don't bake or cook on her level. I guess that you and I are more like the ACW cook who improvised.
 

I was making a beef stroganoff for dinner inspired by the Tasting history guy and spotted this while browsing on his website. I don't eat fruit cake that often anymore but remember them fondly from visiting my grandparents in the countryside.
I just discovered Max Miller and I find his content fascinating! I especially like the Hellfire Stew and hardtack episodes.
 

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