Jeanni’s Red Velvet Cake-an Edible Valentine

I was in third grade at Blair SchoolBlair School 2 and looking forward to the Valentine’s Day party. Before any students arrived on that February 14th the teacher placed a cardboard box labeled “Valentines” in the cloakroom. The cloakroom was a narrow room that extended the full width of the school building with the outside entrance door in the middle and two doors spaced about a fourth of the way from each end that led into the schoolroom. There were two rows of coat hooks, a low one for little kids like me and a higher row for the big kids and parents who came for meetings and parties.

My father said it was called the cloakroom because that’s where my aunts and the other girls used to hang their cloaks when they came to school on cold mornings. My father and the other boys hung their coats in the cloakroom too, but those coats didn’t count.

The cardboard box already had valentines in it that we had made during art class the day before. With round-nosed scissors and plenty of paste we had turned red construction paper and white note paper into fanciful hearts with homemade lace doilies carefully inscribed with the names of our schoolmates. As we filed into the building, we added handfuls of valentines to the box.

Like most kids I had spent the evening before the party punching out valentines from a book I had picked out at the Five and Dime. The hardest part was figuring out which valentine to give to which girl. Mom made me send valentines to the boys too, which I thought was really stupid. After a good pout, I got her permission to omit my name from those cards.

Years later I learned that the teacher put the box in the cloakroom instead of by her desk so kids whose families couldn’t afford to exchange valentines wouldn’t be embarrassed by not having any to put into the box. Everyone got a lot of valentines including a store-bought card from the teacher who also passed out all the cards in the box. The teacher got one from nearly every student, and most of us even remembered valentines for the cook and the janitor.

After the valentine exchange we had cookies and Kool-Aid, milk or cocoa. Then there was a music lesson (singing songs from the Golden Book) before the teacher sent us outside to work off some extra energy while we waited for the school bus. Valentine’s Day at school was a good day.

The treats continued when we got home. Mom always made heart-shaped sugar cookies frosted with white icing and sprinkles so we had more cookies and cocoa or milk before we did our chores. My sister Barb remembers decorations made with a fine tip on the icing bag, but I just remember sprinkles.

I do remember Mom’s Valentine’s Day cake. She had a heart-shaped pan in which she made a yellow cake frosted with pink icing, sometimes decorated with jelly beans or valentine candies.

After we were married, Jerri baked and decorated a red velvet layer cake for our first Valentine’s Day together. She used a recipe she got from Jeanni at the recipe shower her friends at Maine Township High School gave her after our engagement. We still have the original cake pans with metal sliders that loosen the cake. A year or two later she began the tradition that she follows today. We now have a heart-shaped red velvet cake frosted with butter icing. She still uses Jeanni’s recipe, and the cake is always delicious.

INGREDIENTS:

1/2 cup shortening
1 1/2 cups sugar
2 large eggs
2 1/2 tsp. cocoa (divided)
2 oz. red food coloring
1 tsp. salt
1 tsp. vanilla
1 1/2 tsp. vinegar
1 cup buttermilk
2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour + 1 T (divided)
1 tsp. baking soda
White cake frosting

PROCEDURE:

An hour or so before you begin making the cake, put the cup of buttermilk and the eggs on the kitchen counter and allow them to come to room temperature.

Before you make the batter, grease a nine inch round pan and a nine inch square pan. Cut a piece of parchment paper to fit the bottom of the square pan and grease the paper once you have pressed it into the pan. Mix a tablespoon of flour with a half teaspoon of cocoa and flour both pans. Shake out any excess flour. Preheat the oven to 350º.

Cream the shortening and sugar in a mixing bowl. Stir in the eggs one at a time. Make a paste with two teaspoons of cocoa and the food coloring and stir it into the creamed mixture.

Mix the salt, vanilla, vinegar and buttermilk together in a small bowl. Measure the flour and baking soda into a sifter. Stir a third of the flour into the creamed mixture, then stir a third of the liquid ingredients into the creamed mixture. Repeat until all the ingredients are combined, and beat the batter thoroughly.

Spread the batter evenly in the pans and bake for thirty minutes. The cakes are done when a toothpick inserted near the center of each cake comes out clean. Let the cakes cool completely.

Assembling the cake is simple. Remove both cakes from their pans. Cut the round cake in half, put the halves on two sides of the square cake on a serving tray and frost the cake to hide the joints. Voila! A red velvet heart cake for Valentine’s Day! Yours will likely look better than mine, but we enjoyed it anyway, and I have a picture of a grandson to prove it.

NOTES: Our round cake pans are easy release types. If you are afraid that your round cake might stick in the pan, you could line the bottom with parchment paper as you do with the square pan.

Aunt Ruth’s Sour Cream Coffee Cake

Have you ever walked into a room and suddenly been reminded or something you hadn’t thought about in many years? In his novel, In Search of Lost Time, Marcel Proust tells how the narrator is transported back to his childhood by the scent and taste of a Madeleine.

If a little cake can take a man back to his childhood, think what a kerosene lamp can do.

I have a clear and detailed memory of my grandparents’ home whenever we light a kerosene lamp at the cabin. When we visited Grandpa and Grandma Rang in the evening, Grandma would light lamps at dusk. The odor of kerosene transports me back to what I remember as a huge country kitchen. There was a large dining table at the south end of the room, a small table on a side wall and a big cookstove at the north end.

The stove was white and silvery with a black top and a warming oven and water tank above the cooking surface. The stove sat about three feet from the wall, and my father told me how he spent a couple of nights as a boy on a chair between the stove and wall wrapped in a wool blanket and fortified with Grandma’s dandelion wine as he battled whooping cough.

The lamps were on the tables. The light was warm and inviting, but the corners of the room were in shadow. Mosquitos whined outside and crickets sang to each other. I remember hearing an owl call a few times, but I didn’t pay much attention to the voices of the adults.

I was more interested in exploring the mysteries of the room. There was the little table by one of the west windows with a straight-backed chair where Grandma sat and read or did needlework during the day. The sink had a pail beneath it to catch wash water, and there was a beautiful kitchen cabinet next to it. The stove, which was always warm, even on the hottest days, was about halfway between two doors on the north wall. Grandpa kept the woodbox next to the stove full so Grandma could cook breakfast, dinner and supper.

In the northeast corner of the room was the door, usually open, into Grandpa and Grandma’s bedroom. It was a large room that also served as the parlor. It had a tall wood stove with chrome fenders at the bottom where Grandpa could brace his feet while he read the paper after supper.

In the northwest corner of the kitchen was the door that led upstairs to the bedrooms where my father had shared the “bunk room” with his brothers. The second bedroom was smaller and had a door to provide privacy for the girls. I don’t remember whether the bunk room had decorative wallpaper, but I recall the floral print in the girls’ room. It had a south-facing window and was sunny and cheerful.

Both rooms had small grills set in the floor to let warm air from the stoves downstairs provide heat in the winter. The girls’ room was above the kitchen and was probably colder than the boys’ in winter, since the small firebox on the cookstove would not have held a fire through the night.

The tall wood stove in Grandpa and Grandma’s room was the main source of heat in the house. Grandpa would stoke the fire with some big logs before going to bed to make sure the fire lasted through the night. Still, my father told me that he remembered waking up in the morning with frost on the blankets. Of course, he may have only been trying to make me feel lucky that we had an oil stove that kept the whole house warm on the coldest winter nights.

Jerri doesn’t have kerosene memories, but when she steps into a walk-in freezer, she is reminded of trips to the locker plant in El Dorado, Kansas. Her family rented a storage locker to store the meat from their farm or purchased from neighbors on butchering days. “Maybe it is just because El Dorado was the big town,” she muses, “but I always remember those trips to town.”

When we stop to buy deer corn or sunflower seeds at a feed mill, the smell of cracked corn and other grains transports her back to her family’s chicken coop on the farm where she lived until she was six years old. Her parents gave the coop to Caroline, a neighbor who insisted on showing her appreciation by bringing a gift chicken from time to time. She delivered the live chicken in a gunny sack, much to Jerri’s mother’s dismay.

“If she brings me another live chicken, I don’t know what I’ll do!” she would say, as she expertly decapitated the innocent bird. Sunday dinner was assured.

Jerri associates the “closed up smell where old people lived” with her grandparents’ home where her father’s sister Ruth lived with her parents. She remembers the odor of the gas space heater in the bathroom. When we light a burner on the range, Jerri often thinks of how she asked her mother if she could have a bath in the tub. It was a memorable occasion, her first tub bath.

Jerri also remembers Aunt Ruth’s Sour Cream Coffee Cake, not because of the smell but because of how good it tasted. Here’s how to make it. Jerri doesn’t have her aunt’s recipe, but here is what Mennonite ladies were baking when Jerri was a girl.

INGREDIENTS:

1 cup lukewarm water
4 tsp. yeast
1 tsp. granulated sugar
2 cups milk
2/3 lard or shortening
3/4 cup granulated sugar
4 tsp. salt
2 large eggs
6 – 8 cups all-purpose flour
Topping:

1 1/2 – 2 cups sour cream
1/2 cup granulated sugar
About 1/2 tsp. cinnamon

PROCEDURE:

Warm a cup of water to about 100º in a small bowl and stir in the yeast and a teaspoon of sugar. Allow the yeast to proof until it begins to foam. Heat the milk until it steams and add the lard or shortening, stirring until it has melted, then pour the milk into a large bowl.

While the milk cools, stir in three-fourths cup of sugar and four teaspoons of salt. Test the temperature of the milk by shaking a drop on the inside of your wrist. If the milk feels only slightly warm, beat in the eggs followed by the yeast.

Add flour a cup at a time, beating well between additions, until you have a soft dough that just begins to come away from the sides of the bowl. You should have added between five and five and a half cups of flour.

Let the dough rest in the bowl for five minutes, then turn it out on a lightly floured surface and knead for five or six minutes until the dough is smooth and elastic. Form the dough into a ball and put it into a greased bowl, turning the dough to cover the surface with grease.

Cover the bowl with a damp kitchen towel, Put the bowl in a warm, draft-free place and allow the dough to rise until doubled in bulk. Turn it out on a lightly floured surface and knead for a minute or so, then form it once more into a ball and return it to the greased bowl, turning the ball as you did the first time. Cover it and allow it to rise until the dough has again doubled in bulk.

Once the dough is ready, divide it into four equal parts, make four balls and press them into well-buttered eight-inch cake pans to rise.

Preheat the oven to 375º.

When the dough has nearly reached the tops of the pans, dot with teaspoonfuls of sour cream, sprinkle with generous amounts of cinnamon and sugar and bake twenty to twenty-five minutes.

NOTES: You can be creative with this recipe. The dough is tender and only slightly sweet. At Jerri’s suggestion we used some poppy seed filling left over from her Christmas baking to make a delicious variation on Aunt Ruth’s coffee cake. We divided the dough for one coffee cake into two parts, rolled out one and put it in the bottom of a pie plate. We spread a generous layer of poppy seed filling on the dough and finished the cake with a second layer of dough. We let it rise and baked it for twenty-five minutes.

I’m sure that you could do the same with your favorite preserves or pie filling. How about a cherry or blueberry filled coffee cake?