Posted by Anne M on Monday, Oct 17, 2016
I love history. And I love cake. So Anne Byrn’s new baking book, American Cake spoke to me. Byrn provides a timeline of American history through recipes, from gingerbread and sugar cakes of colonial times to more recent favorites like tres leches or beet velvet cake. Each recipe includes the cake’s significance, whether a change in cooking techniques and ingredients to major societal and technological shifts, as well as an updated recipe.
I tried my hand at a cherry upside-down cake, a recipe that won at the 2014 Minnesota State Fair as an example of Midwestern family heirloom recipes, as well as the Wellesley fudge cake, a recipe that was adapted from the Baker’s Chocolate box. Of course, cake is cake and you really don’t need an extra incentive to bake it beyond the fact that you are going to eat it, but I really enjoyed the historical notes and the context Byrn provides.
So if you want to make Mary Todd Lincoln’s almond cake or want to recreate cakes from tea rooms of yore (or just read about them), check out American Cake.
Also, there is this great chart about cakes different presidents favored. John Adams? He liked pie.
Save Our Souls is a shipwreck survival book. It has all the elements of a thrilling adventure--being lost at sea, foraging on a deserted island (in this case one of the Midway Islands), and faction-based mutiny. But there is a twist. Someone is already on the island that makes things far more complicated--he knows the island, but why is he there by himself? And there is also the context of the late-19th century. Pearl deftly explains the economics and politics of a European shark fishing boat in the middle of the Pacific.It is a fascinating read. -Anne M