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.


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