917-604-7591 [email protected]

 

heavenly cakes

Suzen and I listen to satellite radio in our car. Channels 4 through 9 are for songs from the 1940’s through the 1990’s. We are considering canceling our subscription because of the sloppy work on the service. They keep playing songs that are almost brand new, and then they have the gall to claim the song is from the 60’s or 70’s. It’s so frustrating. And I must say that when it comes to those songs from the 90s, well, I never heard any of them. It’s a totally made up channel.

This Rip Van Winkle thing is getting out of hand. It is now 25 years since Rose Levy Beranbaum published The Cake Bible. And Suzen and I have not yet worked our way through every recipe. The Cake Bible deservingly won awards and fame for Rose.

Now, it’s already four more years since Rose published Rose’s Heavenly Cakes, which won the IACP dessert cookbook award when first published. What’s the difference between the two books? Well, what is the difference between a house, a very good house, and a mansion?

Each of the recipes in Heavenly Cakes is a dessert mansion, a masterpiece. There are some recipes here you can easily knock off in a fairly short time but there are many recipes that go on for five pages or more. Those longer recipes often require you work in stages, with separate recipes for a cake, a filling, a frosting, a syrup. So, in fact, some of the “mini-recipes” there are wonderful to be used on their own.

For example, Rose has an English Gingerbread Cake, made in part with orange marmalade, which she describes as being truly authentically British and hence different from the many American versions. That cake is to be served with a lemon butter syrup which is quite lovely and quite versatile.

This syrup can be used with that gingerbread cake — yes, that recipe will appear here soon — but it can be used in many other circumstances: dribbled over pound or white cake, served atop ice cream, or — I suspect — thickened with some confectioners’ sugar and used to garnish cookies or cakes.

In short, this is a multi-use recipe.

I’ve gone through Heavenly Cakes page by page, amazed and the wonderful detail and careful articulation of each recipe. A Rose recipe is done in what is described as signature style with tables and heading aplenty to guide you on journey to dessert perfection

To do some of these cakes will take time. But a Rose recipe is one you can always trust. Many of the cakes in the book are accompanied by photographs by Ben Fink, an artist with light. Suzen and I met Ben at a signing for this book, and I asked him what it was like to photo shoot this book.

“Well, we did it all in one go,” he said. “Four or five days. One cake at a time.”

“Must have been hard,” I said.

“Oh, yes,” he said. His voice was stern but the seriousness was totally belied by the grin on his face. He did photograph, but he had a camera in one hand and a fork in the other.

Try Rose’s Heavenly Cakes, which will also be around for 25 years, and you’ll smile too.

 

Lemon Butter Syrup

Yield: ½ cup

Ingredients:

  • 3 tablespoons sugar
  • 2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice
  • 2 tablespoons of unsalted butter at low room temperature [65° to 75°F]

Preparation:

In a small pan, stir together the sugar, lemon juice and butter. Heat over medium-low heat, stirring, until the butter is melted and the sugar is dissolved.

Source: Rose’s Heavenly Cakes by Rose Levy Beranbaum