Dalai Mama Dishes
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Right?
The photo the unbaked batter submitted to the Dog-Doo Look-Alike contest.
One of the fantastic set of dishes I got at the Salvation Army. Also, gingerbread.
A very pink child enjoying her afterschool snack.
Talk to the hair.
- November 10, 2008
- Gingerbread
- This is just the kind of gingerbread you crave when dinnertime has suddenly become pitch-black and cold, as it now has, and you feel like it’s midnight all the time and like you’re up in Scotland drinking whiskey from the bottle and waiting for spring. It’s big, soft, and comforting, like the down comforter of the cake world, and it fills your house with the spicy, delicious smell of holiday baking, even on a regular old school night. Plus, it will take you no more than 10 minutes to get it into the oven, I promise. Or, as we say to the kids when we are quite sure about something but don’t want to get into it later, if there is, say, a surprise hurricane or earthquake, I almost promise.
The recipe is hand-written in my recipe binder, and when I was trying to figure out how properly to credit it, I naturally consulted my mother. "Is this your gingerbread?" I asked, and she said, "Oh, is it this?" and pulled out a recipe card titled "Mummy’s Gingerbread" that calls for, among other things, treacle, and the mystifying measurements ½ egg and also 1 gill milk. "I don’t think it’s that," I said, "seeing as how my gill has been, er, missing since the middle of the nineteenth century." Hmm. "Is it this?" And strangely, there it was-an ancient clipping from the Times, called "Edna’s Blueberry Gingerbread." I have never in my life added blueberries (I didn’t even write that part when I copied the recipe), but I suppose you could. But then it would go from a big, comforting cake to a more challenging cake studded with hot, puckery berries, which is not what I’m going for at all. Still, if you want to try adding "1 cup blueberries, lightly floured," be my guest.
I was going to make a note here about how this is a great way to get more iron into your diet, what with the legendary iron-containing properties of molasses, but when I looked at my molasses bottle, I noticed that, to achieve your daily requirement, you’d need to swallow 25 tablespoons of it. If you’re anemic, try eating the whole pan of gingerbread all by yourself, and let me know if you feel a burst of energy afterwards (I’m being ironic. Ha ha.). But I will tell you that Ben and I were talking over dinner about how your body actually needs small quantities of various metals, which surprised and delighted him. "Wow," he said. "If I died and you melted me down, would there be enough copper in me to make even, like, a tiny, tiny dollhouse spoon?" Kill me.
Gingerbread
I like to grate the nutmeg fresh-not because I’m fancy or because I think it makes such a big difference flavorwise, but because it’s such a pleasant thing to do, and it’s a little job I can give the kids. If you’ve never tried this, do: it involves buying whole nutmegs and a tiny grater, and it’s a small and worthwhile investment.
½ cup sugar
½ cup room-temperature butter
2 eggs
1 cup molasses
2 cups flour
½ teaspoon salt (I use one scant teaspoon of kosher salt)
¼ teaspoon cloves
½ teaspoon cinnamon
¼ teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon ginger (the powdered spice)
1 cup boiling water
2 teaspoons baking soda
Heat the oven to 350, and butter and flour a lasagna-sized (10 by 14 inch) baking pan. Now, in the bowl of an electric mixer, cream together the butter and sugar until it’s light and fluffy, then add the eggs one at a time, followed by the molasses. Take a moment to stop the mixer and scrape the bottom of the bowl with a rubber spatula to make sure there’s no butter hiding out down there. Meanwhile, sift together the flour, spices, and salt (and by "sift together" I mean, of course, whisk together, because I’m lazy like that), then mix them into the batter until they just disappear. Now measure the boiling water (I do this right in the dirty molasses cup), add the baking soda to it, call your kids over to see the amazingly foaming mixture, explain the science of it (each crystal of baking soda actually contains a tiny, burping angel), and beat it gently into the batter, which will now seem incredibly runny, which is fine. Pour it into your prepared pan and bake for about 30 minutes, until the cake is starting to pull away from the sides of the pan and a toothpick comes out clean or with crumbs on it, rather than ooky batter still. Serve with whipped cream, if you like, or plain. Yum. -
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- JeanCarolynWill says
- I made this tonight, the day after Christmas, and it made the house smell so lovely and tasted great. We ate it hot out of the oven (we couldn't wait), so hot that it made the whipped cream melt. Very holidayish!
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- tbonesmother says
- Wow -- this gingerbread is awesome! I'm so excited to have this recipe. I made it with my 3 year old to bring to a caroling party tonight. It's so moist and sweet -- just perfect. Thanks so much!
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- Dale_in_Denver says
- I signed up to take bread to the school's potluck today. What was I thinking? I don't have time to make bread on a weeknight! Until now in the form of Gingerbread. My husband found the smell almost overwhelming, but one taste of the cutting crumbs (I couldn't give him a PIECE - it was for the potluck) and he was bummed he wouldn't be there. Recipe was simple, delish and a life saver.
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My Recent Posts
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About Catherine Newman
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- Catherine Newman is the author of the memoir, Waiting for Birdy: A Year of Frantic Tedium, Neurotic Angst, and the Wild Magic of Growing a Family, available online and in bookstores nationwide.


