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Good cookbooks often have one basic underlying theme:

  • New ideas from a great chef
  • Family heirlooms from one culture: Jewish, Turkish, French, …
  • Trends along one food vertical: vegetarian, poultry, …
  • Old and wonderfully classic

And sometimes, with cleverness, you will find a book that has wonderfully old and classic ideas presented to an audience that will see them as refreshingly new.

Retro Cakes and Cookies by Wendy Sweetser is another of those gem books from the publisher Ryland Peters & Small. This British book is about timeless classic from the homes of England, Scotland and Wales. There are 26 treats here. If you were reading this book in Britain, then most or even all of the recipes would be familiar and endearing.

But my eyes are American and I see these recipes very differently. Many of them I do not recognize and even the ones that have the “same name” are quite different in detail. This “small” book is big with ideas.

Retro Cakes and Cookies is a book to carefully browse and lazily sample and surely enjoy. The book has three chapters:

  • Small Cakes, Bars and Buns
  • Cookies and Other Treats
  • Large Cakes

That Small Cakes chapter begins with a recipe that is perfectly British in name and ingredients and that is perfectly unfamiliar to us here in the United States. The Maids of Honor are shells of puff pastry filled with cottage cheese flavored with lemon, milk, cream, raisins and, of course, sugar. Cottage cheese, you ask? Some patience and trust are in order here. The results will pay off.

There are Lemon Bars here, using a shortbread base that surprises: both flour and cornmeal are blended for a definitively different mouth appeal. You’ll find Coconut Pyramids here, a very simple combination of sugar, egg whites, and grated coconut. This is a perfect recipe for kids in the kitchen.

The Cookies chapter offers classics you will recognize, like Snickerdoodles and Shortbread. But you need to dig deeper beyond the recipe titles. Compared to American versions, the cookies here have far more butter, less egg, less flour. Make these and you’ll experience a new dimension in flavor. So, when you do make them, make sure you have richest butter you can find. That’s the price of perfection.

The last chapter, Large Cakes, is appealingly filled with tall treats. The British classic, Coffee and Walnut Cake, has a cake batter laced with coffee and those walnuts. The buttercream has coffee, and the cake is finished with a scattering of nuts.

The Devil’s Food Cake shows how different the “same” cake can be. In this version, bittersweet chocolate is used instead of cocoa, sour cream instead of milk or buttermilk, and brown sugar instead of white. This Devil’s version is one that Suzen and I “must” try.

This chapter offers a Dundee Cake, a Scottish fruit cake that is wonderfully light and nutty, quite unlike many of those ponderous fruit cake you may have encountered. You know them: the paving stone cakes. Fortunately for us all, British bakers have spent centuries perfecting this and the other lovely recipes here in Retro Cakes and Cookies. Don’t miss the opportunity to taste a whole new mouthful of classics.