Sunday, November 28, 2021

"LET THEM EAT CAKE!"

 

~A perfect cake to bake for any special occasion, and Linda Lee Greene’s GARDEN OF THE SPIRITS OF THE POTS: A SPIRITUAL ODYSSEY, to fill life’s open spaces~

 

“LET THEM EAT CAKE!”

 

From Linda Lee Greene, Author/Artist

 

Jill: “How are workers expected to survive on minimum wage when every dollar goes toward their rent?” Jack: “What do I care? Let them eat cake.” Jack: “Our budget shows that every one of our managers will get an end-of-year bonus.” Jill: “What about the rest of the employees?” Jack: “Such is life. Let them eat cake.”


            Marie Antoinette, queen of France in the years before and during the French Revolution, to whom the idiom is famously attributed, never said, “Let them eat cake” in response to being informed that her starving peasant subjects had no bread to eat. It got stuck to her through time because she was the epitome of indifference and insensitivity among the ruling and upper classes toward the realities of life of ordinary people. This type of obliviousness of their own advantages and numbness to the misfortunes of working-class people on the part of the privileged is a feature of all of human history, unfortunately.

While Antoinette’s head was being lopped off by the guillotine at the Place de la Concorde, a major public square in Paris, plantation slaves in the Caribbean were fermenting molasses, a by-product of the sugar refining process, into alcohol. Distillation of the by-products concentrated the alcohol and removed some impurities, which produced the first modern rums. It didn’t take long for rum to find its way to delectable French pastry and voilà—the soggy, boozy, classic French dessert, Baba au Rhum cake was born in Paris—too late for Antoinette, who would have relished it, no doubt, but just in time for us to delight our guests with it at any special get-together.©  

 

This recipe yields a dozen babas, but the beauty of it for busy cooks is that a small, unsoaked portion, or all of them, can be stored away in the freezer for up to two months. A day before their debut on your table, defrost and then keep them in an airtight container. If yours is a big and/or a really hungry crowd, bake up several batches ahead of time and freeze them. For best results, you need a tender and sticky dough, so be sparing in the amount of flour you incorporate into the mixture. Or, place the dough in the refrigerator for a while, because cold dough is easier to handle.  

                                                                                   


BABA AU RHUM

(Yield: 12 Babas)

 

2 tbsp of active dry yeast

3 tbsp granulated sugar

¼ cup of lukewarm water

4 large beaten eggs

1 pinch of sea salt

To prepare the dough: Put the yeast and sugar in a medium-size bowl, add the lukewarm water and stir until the dry ingredients are dissolved. Set aside for 10 minutes or until mixture is bubbly. And then add the eggs and sea salt to the yeast mixture and whisk together.

 

½ cup (113 grams/1 stick) softened unsalted butter

2 cups (256 grams) all-purpose flour

½ cup (80 grams) golden raisins

 

In a separate medium-size bowl, work together the butter and flour until the mixture resembles wet sand. Add the egg-yeast mixture and raisins that have been soaked and drained. Whip with a wooden spoon to a soft, sticky dough, or prepare the dough in a standing mixer. Cover bowl and set in a warm place about 1 hour or until the dough doubles in size.

 

Butter 2 mini-muffin tins or 12 mini-ramekins. Uncover dough, dust with flour, and turn it out to a clean work surface. Add flour as necessary to make dough manageable and knead lightly to a large, slightly sticky ball. Cut the dough into 12 equal pieces (about 2 ounces/55 grams). Dust the pieces with flour, roll into separate balls, and place in the muffin tins or ramekins. Cover loosely and set in a warm place for about 30 minutes or until the balls double in size.

 

Bake babas 15 to 20 minutes in a 375° oven until lightly brown on top. Turn babas out of their molds and onto a baking sheet. Return to the oven for 5 minutes to brown all over. Remove from oven and cover the babas with a clean towel to keep them soft. (Store cooled babas in an airtight container at room temperature if making in advance of imminent serving.)[1]

 

TOPPING

2 pints strawberries, setting aside 12 strawberries

3 tbsp Cointreau, 3 tbsp Cognac, 1 tbsp Grand Marnier

2 cups whipped cream

1 pint coffee ice cream

 

Meanwhile, clean and hull the strawberries, setting aside 12 of them. Place the rest of the strawberries in a bowl and pour over them all of the designated liqueurs. Stir gently and let sit for 1 hour. Then fold into the mixture with a rubber spatula the whipped cream and ice cream. For each guest, cut 1 baba in half horizontally and place on a dessert plate. Top with an additional scoop of coffee ice cream, the strawberry/liquor mixture, and crown with a whole strawberry.[2]

 

Or substitute the ice cream with a dollop of whipped cream and a strawberry on top.

 

***

                                                                                   


A blend of visionary and inspirational fiction with a touch of romance, multi-award-winning author Linda Lee Greene’s GARDEN OF THE SPIRITS OF THE POTS: A SPIRITUAL ODYSSEY is a tale of ex-pat American Nicholas Plato’s journey into parts unknown, both within himself and his adopted home of Sydney Australia, a quest that in the end leads him to his true purpose for living.

It is available in eBook and/or paperback. Just click the following link/URL and it will take you straight to the page on Amazon on which you can purchase it. https://www.amazon.com/GARDEN-SPIRITS-POTS-SPIRITUAL-ODYSSEY-ebook/dp/B09JM7YL6F/

 

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[2] Sheila Del Guercio, TROPICAL NATIVE COOKING, MARATHON GARDEN CLUB, FLORIDA KEYS, January 1971

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