Friday, June 15, 2012

Rum Cake--Diane Ahlden Recipe


In life, there is no “list of ingredients” to guide you to love, success, and happiness.  Real life has no step-by-step instructions telling you what to add, when to do something, and what will happen next.  Life is not a dessert.  Sometimes, life is delicious, but occasionally the sweetness burns to a crisp and you have to try something else.  I don’t just want to have my cake and eat it too.  I also want to have the cookies, brownies, fruit crisp, and pie—Don’t forget to include the recipe.  Trying to figure out the ingredients to life keep me busy enough!
            It took us almost a year, but Grams and I have officially baked our way through the entire dessert section of the Ahlden Family Cookbook.  Our final dessert was Rum Cake, which was submitted by Diane Ahlden.  This recipe was the last to be done because we never had the main ingredient at my parents house-Dark Spiced Rum.  Not only was this me and Grams first time baking with rum, it was also my mother’s first time tasting dark rum.  Rum Cake was the perfect dessert for June 12th.  We made the cake for my dad’s birthday, so we were able to eat and “cheers” to my dad in the same swallow!  Grandma was laughing was we dumped an entire cup of rum into the cake batter.  Grams was in a happy mood, but she was so wound up that it still wasn’t her true self.  We were baking with rum, but her temperament was most similar to that of a drunken teenager.  She was all over the house, jumping from one task to another, without ever really finishing a single project.  
            After she swept the floor for the fourth time, I decided it was time to settle her down with some baking.  The dough for this cake is very thick.  I was nervous as we poured it into the pundt pan because the batter was so heavy.  Grams reminded me that sometimes you have to wait until the end of the baking time to find out if it will be edible.  It can be difficult to trust your baking or to go through with a tough decision without knowing the results or the outcome.  The Rum Cake batter reminded me that sometimes you have to make the choice that gives you inner peace, not necessarily the one that everyone else wants you to make.  Grams was right, the Rum Cake turned out great for my dad’s birthday dessert.  We were all surprised at the taste potency of spiced rum in the baked cake.  I will warn you that you can certainly taste the rum in this cake.  Out of curiosity and concern, we Googled the amount of proof that alcohol contains while baking at a high temperature.  As I stated, an entire cup of rum when into this cake.  We were worried that my mom would be feeling a bit tipsy after eating her piece.  We learned that after baking for an hour, the proof of alcohol is reduced to less than 25% of the original percentage.  Still, you’ve been warned, and be cautious of eating and driving!
            Some recipes are better than others, just as some days are better than others.  I have seen this first hand as Grandma Ahlden’s mind slips in and out.  Over this past year, we tasted amazing desserts, and tasted a few that we would not make again.  The same idea goes with life; Grams and I have both had some “sweet” experiences, as well as some “burnt” experiences.
Sweet Moments
Grams
·       Having her best Great-Grand-Girls over for Christmas Sugar Cookies
·       Holding her 30th Great-Grand Child
·       Seeing her children’s names engraved in her and Grandpa Ahlden’s headstone
·       Making Rhubarb Crunch
·       Baking with Amber :)
Me
·       Family vacation in Missouri
·       Seeing my sister happy and independent in her new home
·       Falling in love
·       Successfully making a layer cake
·       Baking with Grandma :)

Burnt Moments
Grams
·       Not recognizing people close to me
·       Getting lost in Danforth
·       Loosing keys
Amber
·       Moving out of Bloomington-Normal
·       Missing family
·       Getting lost in Chicago

Together, the sweet and the burnt experiences in this year have completely changed me into a different person than I was last June when Grams and I began our baking journey.  I have become more of an adult, while Grams has regressed farther into a child’s perspective.  It’s certainly true that Grams needs more guidance in the kitchen than she did last June, or last week for that matter, but it is also true that she can whip a blender and spatula around like nothing’s changed.
Most of the desserts Grams and I have baked have been prepared and eaten at my parents’ home in Danforth.  It’s the place that I always find myself going back to.  Its home, but home doesn’t have just one definition or single location.  Home is wherever you feel love and give love in return.  Love is always present in a home.  It’s the photographs on the wall and the mail on the counter received from family and friends.  Love can be brought to any home or any place of living.  This year, my family has packed many moving boxes and built up new “homes”: Ashley moved in Parkview, I moved back to Danforth, my boyfriend Andy moved to begin his career, and Adam’s girlfriend, Lauren, moved to be closer to Adam in Missouri.  When you unlock the front door it is just a house; but after the first hug or smile, it’s a home.  Many people in our family have struggled with the term “home.”  True, Ashley moved into a “group home” and yes, we’ve talked to Grams about a “nursing home.”  But I like to think that this just gives people the opportunity to have multiple “homes.”  Ashley still has her home here, as well as her new home at Parkview.  Grams will always have the Crescent City homestead as her home, and I still think of Grandma’s first house and Danforth as her home.  Really she is home whenever she is at my parents’ house too.  Home is just where you are loved.
I have been putting off making the Rum Cake partly because I didn’t have spiced rum, but mostly because this is the last recipe in our journey through the cookbook.   Over the past year, Grams and I have baked 40 new desserts.  Just because I won’t be blogging about me and Grams’ baking, doesn’t mean that we won’t continue baking together.  The day that we baked the Rum Cake, Grams called my cell phone early in the morning just to say hi and see what I was doing that day.  It made me smile that she remembered our baking and wanted to spend the day together.  Ironically, as we are finishing the last recipe in our baking journey, Grams is getting the gas to her oven turned off.  The flame to the stove will never light again, and someday much too soon, the light in Gram’s mind will stop sparking too.  Thankfully, I and others who love Grams always carry around a match to try and kindle the flame as at starts to dim.  My match will always be a cookbook and a delicious dessert!

The Lights Go Dark
By Amber Johnson

She pulls out a piece of paper and a pen to jot down the recipe for her famous potato salad.  She has made it so many times that she knows the recipe by heart.  It has been a staple at every family event for as long as she can remember.  She writes down three pounds of peeled white potatoes and one cup mayonnaise.  She stops writing.  The pen rests still against the paper as she tries to think of the other ingredients.  She can’t recall what is in this recipe that she has made countless times before.  She can’t remember the things she used to know.

            The lamp on the coffee table near the old lazy boy recliner illuminates the room through its half moon glow.  The once powerful bulb slowly begins to dim as its strength fades with time.  The lamp near the chair has been the source of light for reading the morning newspaper and doing crossword puzzles on cold winter evenings.  Darker and darker the room grows until eventually the lamp’s bulb gives out, and the corner of the room where the old lamp sits goes dark.
***
            She stares blankly out the window.  It’s a beautiful spring day, and the pansies are in full bloom.  She looks down to find a roll of paper towels in her left hand and a bottle of glass cleaner in her right.  She is not sure why she is holding these things, or what you do with them.  She can’t remember what she was just doing.

            The bright ceiling light illuminates the kitchen for sweet baking and coffee drinking.  Hanging from above, it provides the light for exact measuring and taste testing.  Many years of lighting the warm kitchen has made it tired and weak.  Losing strength, it flicks twice as the room is warned with a flash of dark-light-dark-light.  A soft pop is heard and the ceiling light goes out leaving the once bright kitchen quiet and dark.
***
            The woman in front of her looks familiar.  She wonders if they have met before.  Their emerald green eyes sparkle in the same way, and they have matching crooked noses.  The woman seems kind, and her voice sounds like a sweet song heard many times before.  She smiles at the woman who leans in to hug her.  Closing her eyes, she breathes in the familiar smell of the woman’s lavender shampoo.  She smiles back, but she can’t remember who this person is.
            The lights of the old house have worked hard through the years lighting the rooms through tears and laughter.  Illuminating the old house day after day has caused the lights to grow tired with time.  It’s these old bulbs that hold the memories of family and home.  But as the memories fade, so do the lights, and eventually the bulbs can burn no more.  Throughout the house the rooms grow still as the lights die out.  The old family home is still and dark.
***

She sits in her parked car staring out the dashboard window in front of her.  The place is unfamiliar though she may have been here before.  She can’t recognize the homes around her or the mini vans and pick-up trucks parked in the driveways.  She shifts the car into drive, but isn’t sure which direction to steer her old Buick.  She can’t remember where she is.
The sturdy street lights running down Jefferson Avenue provide the light for lazy summer evening on the front porch swing.  Like clockwork, the bulbs start burning every evening at seven o’clock, and give off the light needed to read a good book as the lightning bugs dance around in the breeze.  No matter what was happening in life, a person could always count on the street lights to turn on at seven.  The street changed as families moved in and out, and houses came up and down.  Eventually the dependable street lights could keep up no more, and down the road the lights went out one by one until the entire street went dark.
***
            She reaches out to touch the face of the woman looking back at her in the mirror.  The woman she sees in the glass has a frail face and tired eyes.  There is something familiar about the soft smile of the woman in the mirror.  She feels a cool wetness on her cheek, and sees a tear fall from the emerald green eye of the woman in the mirror.  She looks away from the glass, and realizes that she can’t remember who she is.
            The lights of the small town are the foundation of all things meaningful in life.  The bulbs at the school burn where classes are held and football games are played.  The church lights illuminate the sanctuary where Sunday services are attended and weddings are held.  Reliable and true, the lights brighten up the homes of friends and family throughout town, but like all good things the city lights grow dim and tire.  Over time, they cannot keep up with life, and their illumination begins to fade. Unable to produce light anymore, the bulbs throughout the town flick off, and the entire town goes empty and dark.

Rum Cake—Diane Ahlden Recipe

1 box of yellow cake mix
1 large instant vanilla pudding
½ cup rum (dark)
½ cup water
4 eggs
1 cup chopped nuts

Beat all ingredients for 2 minutes.  Grease and flour pundt pan.  Put one cup chopped nuts into bottom.  Pour batter over. Bake at 325 for 1 hour.

Glaze:
½ stick margarine
1 cup sugar
½ cup water
1/3 to ½ cup rum (more or less)

Pour over cake in pan while still hot.  Take from pan in 2 hours.


Monday, May 21, 2012

Rhubarb Crunch-Lorraine Ahlden Recipe/ Rhubarb Strawberry Pie-Diana Ahlden Recipe



            My boyfriend and I were recently at a restaurant that was serving Rhubarb Pie as the dessert special.  When the waitress, who was in her sixties, named the dessert special she said, “Oh wait, I’m sure you kids don’t even know what rhubarb is!”  Defensively, I rattled off all of the facts I knew from the few recipes Grams and I made last summer that had rhubarb in it.  For some reason, I felt that I needed to prove my bakers knowledge, as well as my understanding of Iroquois County native plants.  She looked at me like I was crazy that asked, “So do you want the pie or not?”  We didn’t try the restaurant’s pie, I knew me and Gram’s homemade rhubarb would be better anyway!
            This year our rhubarb came from “soon to be newlyweds” Jeremy and Chelsea (Robinson) Wichtner’s yard in Crescent City.  Grandma commented that it would be good because there is always good rhubarb grown in Crescent.  Before picking the rhubarb, I did have to Google how to harvest the plant (that was not one of the facts I rambled off to the waitress).  I learned that you are not supposed to break the stem, or else the plant will not grow back the following year.  To harvest rhubarb, you have to get a firm grip near the root, and twist it until the base comes above ground.  It seemed like I picked more than enough rhubarb for my recipes.  I bet that I had around twenty decent size stems.  Even with that many plants, I had just enough for the three cups I needed to make the Strawberry Rhubarb Pie and the four cups for the Rhubarb Crunch.  For those of you who are new to rhubarb, it takes a lot of stems to make the dessert.  Have more than you expect to need, and possibly then you will have enough!
            Grams and I made our last two rhubarb recipes on the same day while we had the fresh rhubarb picked and diced.  First we did the Strawberry Rhubarb Pie followed by the Rhubarb Crunch.  Overall, the recipes are very similar.  The crunch even has a bottom crust, making it seem more like a pie than a crisp.  Obvious by the name, the main difference in the recipes is that one also contains diced strawberries.  Grandma Ahlden said that she remembers making a rhubarb jam and a type of rhubarb bread with her mom when she was a little girl.  Rhubarb is surprisingly sweet, even before baking.
             Today wasn’t a great day for Grams.  When I picked her up, I noticed that she had a pan soaking in warm water and dish soap.  I asked her about it, and she told me that she was making something with meat and it burned.  Now I shouldn’t judge because my cooking skills are under par, and I often burn things.  That being said, it does make me wonder if Grams had forgotten that she was cooking while the burner was on.  Whatever was in that pan was no longer identifiable.  My suspicion about this was confirmed by the second part of this story.  When Grams and I pulled into my driveway a few minutes later, she confessed that she wasn’t sure if she had turned off the stove before we left.  This was about three o’clock in the afternoon, so if her stove was still on from lunch, it would have probably became a bigger problem by now.  Still, I told her that we weren’t in a rush, so we would go back to her house to check the burner.  We drove the short time it takes to get down the block in Danforth.  About a two minute drive later, we go into Grams house, and she asks me what we came back to get.  Grams had completely forgotten that we went back to check on the burner.  I looked, and the stove was turned off.
            It seems that Grams does better making the recipes in our family cookbook that were contributed by her.  The Strawberry Rhubarb Pie is a recipe submitted by Aunt Diane and the Rhubarb Crunch is a Grams recipe.  I think that the recipes she made often in the past come back to her memory through the routine of the next step of the recipe.  Many times she will question what recipe we are making or whose recipe it is, even when it is her own, but it seems she still vaguely remembers the next step if she doesn’t over think it too much. 
            Since I am biased as the baker which rhubarb recipe is better, I left it up to my dad to make the decision.  He concluded that if you enjoy the taste of rhubarb, and are looking for a dessert that highlights that, then the Rhubarb Crunch is the way to go. The pie was good, but the strawberries did overpower the taste of the rhubarb.  Of course, that is just one dad’s opinion.  Try both recipes and decide for yourself.  If you have a differing opinion, feel free to challenge Mr. Kevin Johnson.
Rhubarb Strawberry Pie—Diana Ahlden Recipe

9” pastry shell

Filling:
Mix together 3 cups chopped fresh rhubarb (1” pieces), ¾ cup sugar, 1/3 cup flour, 1 ¼ cup or 10 oz. package of frozen strawberries, thawed and undrained.

Topping:
Mix together ¾ cup flour, ½ cup sugar, and ¼ cup butter.  Sprinkle evenly over filling.

Bake at 425 for 45 to 40 minutes until mixture is bubbly in center.  Serve warm or cool.

Note from Diana:  Both rhubarb recipes are Ronnie’s favorite as he just loves anything with rhubarb!

Rhubarb Crunch--- Lorraine Ahlden (Grams) Recipe

1 cup flour                              ¾ cup quick cooking oatmeal
½ cup melted butter               1 cup brown sugar, packed
4 cups diced rhubarb              1 cup sugar
2 T. corn starch                       1 cup water
1 t. vanilla

Mix flour, oatmeal, brown sugar, melted butter until crumbly.
Press half of mixture into ungreased 9 inch square pan.
Cook sugar, corn starch, water until mixture becomes clear.
Place diced rhubarb over crumbled mixture.  Pour thickened mixture over rhubarb.  Top with remaining crunch mixture.
Bake 1 hour at about 350.

Note from Lorraine:  This is a very old recipe which I made often when my family was growing up.  I double this recipe and put it in a 9 x 13 pan.

Both recipes are great with ice cream!!!

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Savannah Praline Carrot Cake- Jan (Ahlden) Schuette Recipe




            I really wish there would have been a video camera in the room the day that me and Grams made Savannah Praline Carrot Cake!  We were dancing around the kitchen           like little girls on Christmas morning.  Grams and I were giddy proud of ourselves for making this cake and having a finished product that actually look edible and beautiful.  Aunt Jan’s recipe for carrot cake is a layered cake with frosting in between the layers.  I suggested to my mom that perhaps me and Grams would just go the old 9 x 13 inch pan style and frost the top.  My mom said, “Well you know, a layered cake would be really cool.”  Thanks, Mom.  Grams and I decided we would give the layering our best shot since it was going to be served at our Mother’s Day gathering.  We hoped to show off all the hard baking work we have been doing; and show off we did!

            There are a lot of steps to the carrot cake, but the steps themselves aren’t overly difficult.  As I said, it is the layering that is the challenge.  I decided to grate the carrots and chop the pecans before Grams came over for the actual baking part.  When Grams arrived at my house, we made the actual cake, the frosting, and the candied pecans. 

            The morning that we made Savannah Praline Carrot Cake, Aunt Jan had stopped by Gram’s house before work to tell her about Mother’s Day dinner with her six kids and spouses.  Because Grams had seen Aunt Jan this morning, she was truly obsessed with what, where, and how Aunt Jan was.  Repeatedly Grams would say, “I wonder if Jan is working today?”  “I need to call Jan.”  “I better go now because Jan needs me.”  I would always ask her, “Grandma, Do you need something from Aunt Jan?”  And after several minutes, she would always reply that she didn’t need Jan for anything.  I love my Aunt Jan to death, but that day, I was so tired of hearing about Jan, Jan, Jan (At least it wasn’t Marsha, Marsha, Marsha :))

            Grams and I never really did figure out how to candy the pecans.  We tried to batches, and each time, the sugar coating got to crunchy in the skillet.  I think that maybe we let the sugar cook to long, and should have put the pecans in earlier.  We decided that since they were more for decorative purposes, we would just go with our “sorta” candied pecans.  The day we made carrot cake, Grams was also confused about our families Mother’s Day plans.  On the night we baked, she was supposed to go out to dinner with her six children and her spouses, and then a few days later, the entire family: aunts, uncles, cousins, great-cousins, were all to meet for a day at the park.  She kept going back to the idea that I and the other cousins were not invited to dinner that night.  No matter how many times I told her that dinner that night was “just for the adults” and we would all be with her on Sunder, she could not get it right.  She kept telling me that it wasn’t fair that they didn’t invite me. 

            So, although it was a trying morning with Grams, it as all worth it when we got our carrot cake to layer.  We really had no clue what we were going to do for this part.  Grams had the idea to put the plate that we wanted it on the open end of the cake, then flip the cake over and lift off the pan.  She had a great idea, and the bottom layer of the cake turned out easy. We put a n ice think layer of frosting on that cake to act as a glue for the second layer.  This layer was trickier since we couldn’t just flip over a plate with cake already on it.  We decide to flip the second cake unto a flat cookie sheet.  We did that, and then just looked at it for a few minutes wondering why we did that and what our next step was.  I decided our only hope was to try for a lucky flip of the baking sheet until the original layer.  We did a one-two-three count, and it actually landed on top of the other layer!   This is when our kitchen dancing began; this is when my stressful morning with Grams became worth it.  I am very guilty about looking over the simply joys and pleasure that pop up in life: Getting a cake to layer, seeing a summer blue jay, finding your favorite movie on TV, or receiving a cheery text message from an old friend.  Smile for the small things because the small things always add up to something big!

Savannah Praline Carrot Cake- Jan (Ahlden) Schuette Recipe

1 - 18 oz pkg. carrot cake (I use Betty Crocker)
3 lg. eggs
1 cup water
1/3 cup vegetable oil
3 lg. carrots, crated
1 cup chopped pecan toasted
1 – 8 oz crushed pineapple, well drained
2/3 cup sugar
24 pecan halves
Can use 3 (8”) round cake pans or a 9 x 13 pan.
Because it is so moist, it is a great one to do in layers.  If you use round pans, line with wax paper and grease.  Grease 9 x 13 pan also.
Beat first 4 ingredients on low for 30 seconds.  Beat on medium speed for 2 minutes.  Add carrots, 1 cup pecans, and pinapple. 
Pour into prepared pan or pans.  Bake at 350 for 20-22 minutes or until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean.
Cool 10 minutes and remove from pans.
Coat a sheet of wax paper with cooking spary.
Place sugar in a heavy skillet.  Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon 5 to 10 minutes or until sugar melts and turns light brown.  Remove from heat.  Working quickly, drop pecan halves in sugar a few at a time, turning to coat.  Remove to wax paper.  Cool completely. Use for garnish around edge.

Cream cheese frosting:
3 cups powdered sugar               4 oz. cream cheese
½ stick butter                                        2 t. vanilla
Mix together. Frost cake and garnish with sugared pecans. 

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Pumpkin Cookies - Lindy McIntyre Recipe


          Our oven has stayed cold and our pans have been collecting dust.  It has been far too long since our house smelled of fresh baked cookies.  Since I have been away at college, my poor father has been living off Oreos and Chips Ahoy.  That is simply unacceptable.  Thank goodness I have returned from college, and reunited with my baking mentor, Grandma Ahlden!  What makes me most eager to get my hands in some dough is that Grams has also noticed my absence in the kitchen.  Just a few weeks ago, Grams asked my mom when I was going to want to do some baking with her.  Mom reminded Grandma that I am away at school most of the year, but I would be home soon for the summer.  Although I feel bad that Grandma felt somewhat abandoned by me, it makes me smile to know that she missed our baking bonding.
          Lucky for her, I am part of today’s “boomerang generation.”  We go off to college and live on our own, then find our way back to our parents’ house.  Although I am grateful to have parents who welcome me back with free laundry and a stocked kitchen, I am less than thrilled about the decrease in entertainment and peer interactions in the five-hundred populated town of Danforth.  At least I have Grams to spend time with! I moved home yesterday, unpacked last night, and called Grams this morning.  “Are you ready for a cup of coffee and a morning of baking?” Of course she was!  This morning Grams and I made Aunt Lindy’s recipe for Pumpkin Cookies.  Grams thought this would be a great fall recipe to make today…It’s May 10th.
          It is always a recipe plus when the ingredients are things most people have on hand.  The only item that I had to purchase for today was canned pumpkin.  Canned pumpkin is cheap, so I didn’t even charge it to my dad’s tab.  That would be the tab for the father who is letting his 23 year old daughter live at his house free of charge :) Grams and I fell back into our usual pattern: I find the ingredients and measure; Grams stirs and mixes.  Something that has stood out for me during our baking experience is that Grandma can no longer follow a recipe or remember which recipe we are doing.  In our cookbook, there are two to four recipes on each open page.  Every time that Grandma looks at the cookbook, she reads something from recipe that we are not baking that day.  If I wasn’t there to redirect, she would be combining four different recipes into one.  That could taste interesting!
          Pumpkin is a vegetable of the squash family, but Pumpkin Cookies have no healthy component to them.  As I added loads of sugar, shortening, and chocolate chips, Grams and I talked about an assortment of things.  Recently, I have noticed that Grandma Ahlden jumps quickly from topic to topic.  We were talking about my prom dresses, and that soon our great-grand-girls would be going to prom; next thing I know, we are talking about the accident that took Grandpa Ahlden’s life. For a while, she spoke about how it is hard to know what God’s plan is, and why things are the way they are.  Grams said how young Francis was when he died, and how lucky she is to still have her boys who were also in the accident.  Then we started talking about the cats who hang out on her porch.
          The recipe calls for a white frosting on the pumpkin cookies.  Since we had cream cheese in the fridge, Grams and I decided to make a homemade cream cheese frosting.  Who doesn’t love cream cheese! If anyone makes these cookies, I would definitely recommend frosting them with a cream cheese frosting.  We thought it made them more rich, and more velvety that a store bought frosting.  The pumpkin cookies are very moist, so you have to be gentle when you frost them.  Today, Grams and I talked about how proud we are of all our great grandchildren.  They all have special talents and unique personalities!  Today, we would like to give a special GOOD LUCK to Jacob as he heads to the state track tournament this weekend!
          I have restocked our cupboard with sugar and baking soda, and our cake pan has been moved to the front and center drawer.  Get your sweet tooth ready for another summer of baking our way through the Ahlden Family Cookbook!

Pumpkin Cookies-Lindy McIntyre Recipe
1 cup pumpkin                   1 t. baking powder
½ cup shortening              1 t. soda                
1 cup sugar                       1 t. pumpkin pie spice
1 cup chocolate chips       1 t. vanilla   
1 ½ cup flour
Mix together.  Drop by teaspoons on ungreased cookie sheet.  Bake at 350 for 15-17 minutes.  Frost with white frosting.  

“Vegetables are a must on a diet.  I suggest carrot cake, zucchini bread, and pumpkin pie.”
-Jim Davis “Garfield”