![]() ![]() No one can deny that root vegetables have found their soul mate when it comes to maple syrup. The US enormously capitalised on this delicious combination, and along the way the ‘fall brand’ of spiced pumpkin lattes, cinnamon sticks and maple syrup swept across the pond. ![]() The best kind of frostingĬream cheese frosting is an ingenious creation, a step behind Google and electricity if you will, as its salty tang deliciously complements the warmth of spices and that sticky stodgy crumb. While I cannot say if my granny ever tried war-time carrot cake, her recipe imitates the flavours from the USA, complete with this new-fangled cream cheese frosting. ![]() The 1970s-carrot cake exported from the US was as much a fashion trend as Black Forest Gateau and bell-bottom flares, and this version came with the now infamous and sugar-packed cream cheese frosting. There was even an ‘apricot tart’ made with, yes you’ve guessed it, carrots. Carrot propaganda took hold, if you can believe such a thing, and everyone loaded their plates with carrots to improve their eyesight after it was announced that the RAF had excellent night vision all thanks to carrots. Sugar was strictly rationed, yet carrots were in excess. Over the next 500 years, carrot pudding became carrot cake – a drier, sweeter dessert to serve with tea, and was famously revived with rationing during the Second World War. Migrating to Europe along with the spices now inherent to British cuisine, sweetened carrots evolved into carrot pudding which, naturally, included pig’s liver (not dissimilar to the history of mincemeat – offal can always be found somewhere). The evolution of carrot cake is not a straightforward timeline by any means – and that is without us going into the eternal debate of where did cake come from? – but sweetened carrots appear to have originated in the Middle East during the tenth century, apparently as a medieval Viagra for the elite. ![]() Introducing the concept of a cake made with a vegetable to my French boyfriend however made me stop and ponder how this vegetal delight came into being (although, I’ve just told Gaylord that there is a recipe for carrot cake in ‘The Art of French Cookery’ from 1827, so look at that, the French copying the Eengleesh! Sometimes I wonder if our relationship is a microcosm of the French-British political rivalries of the last 1000 years). Quite the whirlwind tour for a humble carrot cake.Ĭarrot cake is a staple across Britain and the US. Now, her recipe is going a step further – it’s on the internet. My mum kept it in a plastic wallet to save it from the cream cheese splatters and has now typed it up so we have a digital copy, something my granny’s generation would have never imagined. While I didn’t inherit my granny’s features, mind you these are the strongest genes across my whole extended family as my dad, aunt, sister, and two of my cousins all look like her, she did pass down this carrot cake recipe which for years was recorded on a couple of scraps of paper in faded pen. That included a tinned-fruit trifle sprinkled with hundreds and thousands and her perfect carrot cake with cream cheese topping. I don’t think cooking was ever her passion, she just did it because if she didn’t who would, but she did have a repertoire. My granny was of the generation who appreciated convenience foods – like most grandparents she would insist my sister and I take multiple biscuits, usually Hobnobs or chocolate digestives, from the biscuit tin, and I remember her plopping a third of a supermarket cheesecake onto both of our plates and refusing to listen to our half-hearted protests. In fact, my most regular activity in my granny’s kitchen was drying the dishes (can you even qualify that as a skill? – ‘oh her baking is delicious’ ‘you haven’t seen anything, just watch her dry up’). Unlike many bakers, I didn’t grow up baking at my grandmother’s knee. ![]()
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