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For my grandmotherโ€™s 80th birthday, her best and oldest friend in the world, Midge โ€” fellow bridge clubber, golf partner, drinking buddy, all-around Golden Girl โ€” hosted a dinner party, on the Wedgwood china, in her big brick house on Forest Avenue. Jenny and I were in attendance, as were my father, two widows โ€” Mary and Shep, both in their mid-eighties โ€” and a couple of cranky daschunds named Maxi and Mini. These ladies were as old-school as they come, and though the most basic motions of life had grown difficult and their social universe had pretty muchย been reducedย to the people at this table, they all had that twinkle in their eyes that said: We might be past our prime, but donโ€™t be fooled, sonny. We could crush you in our day.ย Every woman there had raised kids, spoiled grandchildren, and all but one had lost husbands; all, including my grandmother, have since passed away. But that night, Midge turned back the clock. At 5 pm sharp, out came the Scotch. (These women couldnโ€™t be bothered with wine โ€” unless the Scotch ran dry, at which point: watch the f*ck out.) Then came the little bowls of mixed nuts, cheese waffles, and Bugles. By 6, we were feeling good, seated at the long, formal dining room table, and my dad was toasting my grandmother, whose chair was decorated with balloons. I donโ€™t remember exactly what Midge made for the main course, but letโ€™s say it was a foil-tipped crown roast with cooked-to-oblivion asparagus and instant mashed potatoes โ€” and if it wasnโ€™t, it might as well have been. For dessert, one of my grandmotherโ€™s all-time favorites: angel food cake.

My grandmother, it should be noted, was the daughter of German bakers. The woman knew from dessert. I donโ€™t think she had a tooth in her head that hadnโ€™t been violated by a dentist over the years, but that didnโ€™t hold her back. She actually had a little silver dish by her front door that was filled, year round, as if by a benevolent god โ€” I never did figure out where she kept her stash โ€” with York mints and peanut M&Ms, jelly beans and mini-Almond Joys. When I think of her kitchen in the house my dad grew up in on Lincoln Street โ€” before she moved into a one-story place later in life, as my grandfather grew frail โ€” I picture two things clearly: the side-by-side freezer with two or three white-and-blue gallons of Schrafftโ€™s ice cream, and an angel food cake, cooling upside down in its pan on the counter, impaled on the neck of a Dewarโ€™s bottle. Sheโ€™d serve this to me with vanilla ice cream and a drizzle of Hersheyโ€™s chocolate sauce, and god, the way that slab of cake absorbed the ice cream, and held it there until fully saturated, kind of like a sponge? Please. Let me rephrase that: Please.

It made sense, then, that weโ€™d have angel food cake for her 80th. The cake, this night, had been supplied by Mary who, at 84 or 85, still knew how to make some noise in the baking department, still knew the value of cake and ice cream on a birthday. This had just the right amount of toasty crunch on the outside, and just the right fluffiness on the inside. Jenny, who also loves a dessert, was impressed.

โ€œMmmmmmmmmmmmm,โ€ she said. Maybe this was just the Scotch talking. โ€œOh my god, Mary. This cake is a-mazing.โ€

โ€œIsnโ€™t she just the best cook?โ€ my grandmother said.

โ€œShe really is,โ€ said Midge.

โ€œTruly,โ€ said Shep, who was wearing an awful lot of gold. โ€œAlways was.โ€

โ€œOh, stop,โ€ said Mary, waving them away. These women were not limelight-seekers. โ€œBut Jenny, if you give me your address, Iโ€™d be happy to send you my recipe.โ€

About a week later, a letter from Mary arrived at our apartment in Brooklyn, addressed โ€” of course โ€” not to Jenny, but to Mrs. Andrew Ward. Inside was written, in slightly shaky hand, the secret recipe for this angel food cake. โ€œTake one box Duncan Hines angel food cake mix,โ€ it beganโ€ฆ

For women of my grandmotherโ€™s generation โ€” or, I should say, the women of my grandmotherโ€™s generation that hung around with my grandmother โ€” from scratch meant something very different from what it means today. It meant: I didnโ€™t buy this in a store. It meant: I cooked this in my own oven. It did not mean: I defied convenience and combined several real ingredients together to make this cake. Was it worse? Better? They didnโ€™t care. To be honest, I didnโ€™t get any of this โ€œfrom scratchโ€ stuff until pretty late in life, either, and Iโ€™m not going to sit here and pretend Duncan Hines doesnโ€™t make a solid angel food cake mix. But there is a from-scratch version of this that we make for the kids that even I โ€” a terrible baker โ€” can pull off. It, too, goes great with ice cream. We never tried it out on Doris, Mary, or Shep, but something tells me they would have been impressed. โ€” Andy

Angel Food Cake, from Scratch
Fromย Cakewalk, by Kate Moses

1 1/2 cups sifted confectionersโ€™s sugar
1 cup sifted cake flour (or unbleached all-purpose flour)
1 1/2 cups egg whites, at room temperature (about 12 large egg whites)
1 1/2 teaspoons cream of tartar
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup granulated sugar

Move the oven rack to the lowest setting, and preheat the oven to 350ยฐF. Bring the egg whites to room temperature about an hour before baking.

Combine the sifted confectionersโ€™ sugar and flour and sift three times. Set aside.

In the bowl of an electric mixer, using the whip attachment, beat the egg whites on low until foamy, then add the cream of tartar, salt, and vanilla and increase the speed to medium. Whip just until soft peaks form, then, beating on medium speed, gradually add the granulated sugar a tablespoon at a time, beating until the whites form soft peaks but are not stiff.

Sift one quarter of the flour mixture over the whites and fold in lightly by hand using a rubber spatula, and repeat with the remaining flour in quarters. Turn the batter gently into an ungreased 10-inch tube pan.

Bake about 40 to 45 minutes, until a toothpick inserted at the center comes out clean and the top springs back when touched lightly. Invert the cake onto the neck of a bottle of Dewarโ€™s (or a wine bottle) and allow to cool completely, 2 or 3 hours, before moving from the pan.

Serve with spring strawberriesย or with chocolate sauce and ice cream.

Photos courtesy of family archivists Earl Johnson and Douglas Ward.

30 Comments

  • Avatar Cecilia says:

    classic!
    what gorgeous photos of your grandmother. and i love what you say about her love of sweets. i am a dessert-a-day person, and i feel like i can run enough to mitigate the weight gain but thereโ€™s nothing i can do about the teeth. sigh.

  • Zane says:

    Such a fantastic story, so well told. My grandmother made an angel food cake that I remember so well. . . and I always believed it was โ€œfrom scratch.โ€ But reading your narrative makes me wonder!

  • Avatar chris says:

    omg those photos! I love this post!

  • Avatar cheka says:

    Love this story! And canโ€™t wait to try the cake recipe.

    So, for those of us who are saddled with a mysterious guilt about wasting any food item, do tellโ€ฆ what do you do with all those yolks?!

  • Avatar Gretchen SB says:

    Wonderful story and lovely photos โ€” Great post! My grandparents are first generation German-Americans and your description of the birthday meal could have been one my grandma served, especially the boxed angel-food cake! She likes to mix cake decorating sprinkles in the batter so it has little polka dots of color throughout.

  • Avatar Jen says:

    I find myself a little choked up more often than one would expect for โ€œjustโ€ a food blogโ€ฆ
    Loved this post.

  • Avatar Nancy says:

    Chekaโ€“make lemon curd with those yolks!

  • Avatar Amanda says:

    What a beautifully told story, I felt like I was at the party! The photos are amazing, too. I never understood the allure of angel food cake, but the idea of having it soak in ice cream sounds pretty genius.

  • Avatar Steph says:

    My favorite saying โ€œyes itโ€™s homemade, I made it in my homeโ€. Sweet story.

  • Avatar Jenny Keith says:

    How do you always seem to know what Iโ€™m looking for??!?
    I spent the morning yesterday searching for a yummy โ€œfrom scratchโ€ angel food cake, for my maiden angel food baking voyage. And I found one, but Iโ€™m going to forge ahead with your recipe. Thank you!
    P.S. Love the photos of your grandmother. We spent last year living with my husbandโ€™s 87 year old grandparents while our house was remodeled. What a gift! The greatest generation!

  • Avatar Sara says:

    Extra yolks? How about a vanilla bean creme anglaise to go with the cake for those who prefer vanilla over the chocolate sauceโ€ฆ

  • Avatar KristenRvF says:

    Iโ€™m with Jen.

    How is it that I find myself wiping away a tear more often than not when I read this blog.

    This was an absolutely beautiful story. My mother always says that food is the biggest contributer to family memories and if you feed people, it will fill more than their sotmachs. We lived this growing up and she didnโ€™t always have time and money for fancy ingredients.

  • Avatar Lori says:

    Well, this was just lovely. Left me a little choked up and thatโ€™s not a regular occurrence. Such a perfectly told little capsule of a huge chunk of life. Okay, Iโ€™m going to stop now, but really, thanks.

  • Avatar Kendra says:

    What a sweet, sweet, sweet post.

  • Avatar Melissa@Julia's Bookbag says:

    This is AWESOME. The story. The pix. The recipe, canโ€™t wait to try!

  • Avatar KimP says:

    love love loveโ€ฆthe story, the photographs, the memories ~ thank you so much for sharing! and anytime you want to post more images of your beautiful grandmother, please do so ๐Ÿ™‚

  • Avatar sharon says:

    Beautiful story!
    For every birthday in my family, I make a fabulous chocolate cake that was passed down from my great-grandmother (she was a very young mom, grandma. great-grandma). Without fail, every time I make it, someone asks for the recipe and it begins just like your grandmotherโ€™s recipe, with a box of Duncan Hines cake mix. In a pinch Iโ€™ve tried making it with other brands of mix and it doesnโ€™t work.
    I think what you say about the meaning of โ€œfrom scratchโ€ is so true and I wholeheartedly agree with those wonderful women. Youโ€™re still putting in time and love to the recipe, it comes from your kitchen and there is no shame in that.

  • Lori@ In My Kitchen, In My Life says:

    Thank you for acknowledging the cake mix. It is a valuable part of my pantry, and Iโ€™m a scratch cook for most things. My favorite cakes, though, the cakes of my childhood, generally involve doctored up cake mixes. Nothing wrong with that.

  • Avatar Stacy says:

    This is perfect. I love so much about it: your description of these ladies (when young, when old), the perfectly captured conversation, those differing definitions of โ€œfrom scratchโ€ that various generations have. Thank you for a story that truly brightened my day!

  • Avatar cheka says:

    Oh, lemon curd! That would be just lovely over the pound cake too!! And the creme anglaise sounds delicious and elegant. Thank you!

  • Avatar Leah says:

    My wonderful grandmotherโ€™s rum cake, beloved by four generations, began with a box of Duncan Hines yellow cake mix. My mother, a great student of baking (she read Shirley Corriher for fun! in bed!), tried to vary things but ultimately assured me that nothing else would work. In memory of them both I may have to make rum cake today. Thanks for another great post, Andy.

  • Avatar Uncle Doug says:

    In Defense of the Greatest Generation Women:

    Hey, as usual a really wonderful post, (and all the family members particularly enjoyed it).
    I know youโ€™re not necessarily impugning the culinary talents of these ladies, but remember: your grandmother and her friends started their families during the Depression, and then supported them during World War II with rationing (except Mary who actually served in Europe during the war)โ€ฆthey were good cooks and could whip up a cake from scratch without blinking an eye. When the mixes came along (interesting historical questionโ€ฆwhen was โ€œDuncan Hinesโ€ born?) it took a lot of the work out of having dessert, and was still a damn good angel food cake (as evidenced by Jennyโ€™s comment at Midgeโ€™s dinner). Iโ€™ve always loved them.

    And, by the way, angel food cake has no caloriesโ€ฆitโ€™s all air.

    Itโ€™s interesting how that upside-down-cake-cooling on-the-bottle image is universal: Earl who grew up at the same time as I but 1000 miles away has the same memories.

    Correction: As family historian I need to point out that it was Dorisโ€™ grandfather who was the professional baker. I donโ€™t think her father could bake a cake (even with a mix) to save his life.

  • Avatar Nicole says:

    Make this almond cake, originally from Amanda Hesser, with the some of the yolks. It is delicious with strawberries. And, it freezes beautifully!

    http://orangette.blogspot.com/2011/04/how-it-is.html

  • Avatar ellen patton says:

    I loved this post. And I love making angel food cakes from scratch (I use the recipe from the red/white checked Better Homes & Gardens New Cook Book. YUM!

  • A Life From Scratch says:

    We just enjoyed โ€˜homemadeโ€™ angel food cake for my grandmas 96th birthday and yep, she made it. Rockstar!

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