CHERRY-O CREAM CHEESE PIE

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I found this vintage wooden box at a local estate sale.  Although I liked the box enough by itself, its contents were even more interesting to me:

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It was a collection of handwritten recipe cards and yellowed recipe clippings.  I’ve been asking for my Mom’s recipe collection since she passed away last year, but my Dad is not quite ready to part with it.  There’s something about her recipes — in her distinctive cramped hand, with her personal notes about the recipes (Delish! Use nonfat milk!) — that provides a glimpse of her personality.  They tell a story about her — the way she loved to entertain, the way she was always watching her weight, the friends who shared their recipes and good times with her.  In a New York Times article entitled “Between the Recipes, Scribbles Speak Volumes,” the author mused that cookbooks are “possibly the most annotated form of literature.”  As she describes, “[w]hether practical, historical, sentimental or smudged with chocolate ganache, marginalia in cookbooks can tell the story of a life and be a lasting memorial to the scribbler.”  I want my Mom’s recipes, not so much to make them, but to channel my Mom.  A stranger’s recipes will have to do for now.

My personal recipe collection is more OCD than my Mom’s or this woman’s.  Years ago I started printing my recipes on the fancy papers that started showing up in stationery stores.  It was fun to fit the papers to the recipes.  There are no handwritten notes on my recipes, but my cookbook is pretty to flip through.  Here are a few examples:

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As I was going through the recipes in the old box, I came across this one for Cherry-O Cream Cheese Pie:

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My Mom used to make this pie all the time.  This clipping must date back to the 1960s.  Looking around the interwebs, I see that this recipe is still popular today.

Today happens to be George Washington‘s birthday.  The Father of Our Country, he is consistently ranked among the top three presidents of the United States (no idea who the other two are).  In 1968 Congress passed the “Monday Holiday Law” to “provide uniform annual observances of certain legal public holidays on Mondays.”  By creating more 3-day weekends, Congress hoped to “bring substantial benefits to both the spiritual and economic life of the Nation.”  So today, instead of celebrating Washington’s birthday on February 22, his actual birthday, we celebrate it as a federal holiday, unofficially known as President’s Day, on the third Monday in February.  Interestingly, this guarantees that his birthday will never be celebrated on his actual birthday, because the third Monday in February can never fall any later than February 21.  (In other words, the latest the first Monday could be is the 7th, which would mean that the third Monday would be the 21st.)  I think George gets ripped off having to share his birthday on a random date with every other president — like having a birthday in December and getting combined birthday and Christmas presents.  On the other hand, I think the idea of moving a birthday around can be good.  For example, I might have liked to have moved my kids’ birthdays to the summer, when you don’t have to send cupcakes to school, and don’t really even have to have a party because no one is around.

Anyway, to many kids, George Washington is best remembered for chopping down a cherry tree.  As the fabricated story goes, little George used his hatchet to chop down his father’s cherry tree.  When his angry father asked who did it, George said, “I cannot tell a lie — I chopped down the cherry tree.”  His father was supposedly so pleased that George told the truth, that he considered it payment for the tree.  I don’t know about you, but lying always worked better for me.

Inspired by the decades-old clipping in the recipe box, memories of Mom, and in celebration of George Washington’s birthday, I made a Cherry-O Cream Cheese Pie.  It’s quick, it’s easy, and it’s pretty darn tasty.

 
Ingredients
  • 9-inch prepared graham cracker crumb crust*
  • 8-ounce package cream cheese, softened
  • 14-ounce can sweetened condensed milk
  • ⅓ cup lemon juice
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 1 lb. 6.oz. can prepared cherry pie filling
Instructions
  1. Place cream cheese in a medium bowl and using an electric mixer, beat until fluffy. Gradually add sweetened condensed milk, mixing until well blended. Mix in lemon juice and vanilla. Pour into prepared crust. Chill 2 to 3 hours before covering top of pie with cherry pie filling.
  2. *To make your own graham cracker crust: Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In a small bowl, mix together 1-1/2 cups graham cracker crumbs (approximately 12 whole graham crackers), 6 tablespoons melted butter, and ⅓ cup sugar. Press into a 9-inch pie plate using the back of a spoon, being sure to press it up the sides of the pan. Bake for 8-10 minutes, until edges are lightly browned. Cool completely before filling.

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Baked graham cracker crust, waiting for its filling
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Happy 281st birthday George Washington!
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I cannot tell a lie — this pie is really good

MACE CAKE

 

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I found this decorative weapon at an estate sale.  My son told me it was a mace, but my research revealed that it is actually a morning star, the difference being that a mace does not have spikes.  Personally, when it comes to medieval weaponry, I think I’m gonna stick with spikes.

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Ooohh — spikey!

I spotted it on top of a cabinet from across a room.  I think someone probably stuck it up there out of sight, hoping to come back for it the next day when the seller would start discounting.  That is not proper estate sale etiquette.

Yesterday I witnessed another example of bad estate sale manners.  As my friend and I entered the house, the seller was saying rather loudly to a departing customer, “I cannot believe how much you lie.”  What a great line — I wish I could use it in a deposition.  It turns out the customer had placed a number of items on the “I’m buying these table,” shooed other customers away when they wanted to look at them, and then after about an hour or so, decided not to buy them after all.  As a general rule, if you declare you are buying something at an estate sale, you have pretty much committed yourself to buying it.

Back to my fancy weapon.  Even though it wasn’t a mace, it got me thinking about the spice mace.  I couldn’t remember if I had ever used mace, or if I even had any.  Mace is the dried, lacy reddish covering of the nutmeg seed.  Nutmeg is not a nut, but the kernel of a fruit, much like an apricot.  Mace’s taste is similar to that of nutmeg, with a distinct pepper note, and maybe some steroids.

Turns out, I did not have mace, which was reason enough for me to run to the grocery store and get a bottle to add to the spices in the M section in my pantry.

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Enjoying its new neighbors Mustard and Mint

maceSo now that I own mace, what do I do with it?  I found a recipe, originally published in Gourmet in 2005, for Mace Cake.  Inspired by the morning star, and intrigued by the spice, I gave it a try.  This was an interesting cake.  The directions call for beating the eggs and sugar together for approximately 15 minutes with a hand held mixer (or 7-8 minutes in a stand mixer).  If you are using a hand held mixer, I suggest painting the wall in front of you right before you start mixing — that way you can at least watch the paint dry while you stand there for what seems like an eternity beating eggs and sugar.  Another unusual technique the cake called for was boiling the milk and butter together before adding them to the cake.  The 1/2 cup of mace sugar sprinkled over the top, which forms a delicious crackly sugar crust, is also a little unusual.  Then, of course, there’s the mace.

I loved this cake.  Tasty on its own, it is even better with some sweetened strawberries and whipped cream.  But I have to admit, it is a sophisticated cake, and despite the nice texture of the case, the strong taste of mace did not appeal to my kids.

MACE CAKE
Author: 
Recipe type: Cakes and Pies
 
Ingredients
  • 4 eggs
  • 2-1/2 cups sugar, divided use
  • 2 cups flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 1 tablespoon plus ½ teaspoon ground mace, divided use
  • 1 cup whole milk
  • ½ cup butter
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Butter and flour a 9 x 13" baking pan.
  2. Using an electric mixer, beat eggs with 2 cups sugar in a large bowl. Beat at high speed until tripled in volume and thick enough to form a ribbon when beater is lifted, 7 to 8 minutes in a stand mixer, or 14 to 16 minutes with a hand held mixer.
  3. In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, salt, and 1 tablespoon mace.
  4. Bring milk and butter to a boil in a small heavy saucepan over medium high heat. Remove from heat and set aside.
  5. Add flour mixture to egg mixture, stirring until just combined. Stir in hot milk mixture until combined. Batter will be thin (like pancake batter).
  6. Stir together remaining ½ cup sugar and ½ teaspoon mace in a small bowl.
  7. Pour batter into prepared baking pan and sprinkle evenly with mace sugar. Bake until lightly golden, and a tester inserted in the center comes out clean, 25 to 30 minutes. Cool cake in pan on a rack at least 30 minutes. Cut into squares and serve warm or at room temperature.

 

mace cake  Ready to go in the oven

mace cake

Hot from the oven with its crackly sugar crust

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 A-mace-ing cake