Previously I tried Laura Ingalls Wilder's recipe on German Honey Cake as she reported it from her visits to the 1915 Panama Pacific International Exposition. Visit that post by clicking here.
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ISBN 0-06-440081-6 |
It was not successful. The cake or cookies came out as too hard to eat, and it wasn't until I had them stored in a bag with a damp paper towel for several days did they get reasonably soft enough to bite without
too much discomfort.
I speculated that her liquid-to-flour ratio was off. Comparing her ratio to other recipes I found both in my books and on the internet, I thought she needed to use 1/2 cup of flour instead of two cups.
So I tried the recipe again: I beat the honey and sugar together for 20 minutes, mixed in the spices, mixed in the baking powder, then hand-stirred in the flour. I definitely had a batter that I could pour into a well-buttered pan. Take 2!
After 18 minutes in the oven at 350 degrees F, I saw that the mixture was bubbling (almost bubbling over the edges of the glass dish) but not firm. But I took it out and let it cool, just to see.
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Right out of the oven. |
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After cooling. |
In the meantime, I made another batch of the (luscious) chocolate frosting, cooking it to 220 degrees F instead of the 230 degrees I did last time, and using more water to start with. I also used some water to wash the sides of the pan, hoping to avoid sugaring.
Once it had reached temperature (but no threading showed up in the cool water test), I poured it over the mixture in the baking dish.
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And then it sank. |
Not surprisingly, the chocolate topping sank through the mixture. What I had was a pan of goo -- spicy, sweet, tasty goo with chocolate syrup underneath -- but goo, nonetheless. Failure.
Clearly 1/2 cup of flour was not enough to produce anything that resembled a cake or cookies. My speculation was way off! I let it cool completely and thought about what to do next.
Even though I could reasonably expect to separate most of the goo from the chocolate syrup, I decided it wasn't worth it. The honey mixture's water content was changed from when I started Take 2, so I chose to just mix in more flour to the combined goo and syrup to see if I could get it to something that resembled a cake.
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Tasty goo. |
Take 3! I stirred in 1/2 cup of flour by hand, a little at a time. At that stage, the goo had turned into something that resembled a cake batter -- thicker but not too thick. It was still soft enough to spread into a greased pan. This time I chose a wide pan with short sides and baked it in the toaster oven at 350 degrees.
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Goo with flour added. |
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In a wide, short pan. |
It, too, bubbled up and got puffy. It went over the sides of the pan. After 15 minutes, I pulled it out (and cleaned the oven). It cooled.
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A mess, but not difficult to clean. |
The result was dubbed "almost a cookie." It was still sweet, spicy, and had a wonderful chocolate flavor throughout. But it wasn't quite a cookie, more like a soft candy: it held its shape, was sticky but not to everything, and had some bite resistance. It also had an underlying taste of not-quite-cooked flour to it.
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It reminds me of the molasses lace cookies I've made before. |
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It held its shape! |
Yet another failure. However, I feel that I was closer to success! I need to try Ms. Wilder's recipe again, and perhaps the chocolate topping recipe, too.
Stay tuned for the next installment of "Trying to Get It Right!".