May 10, 2014

Secret Life of Bloggers Blog Party: Post 17

This week had beautiful weather and I was lucky enough to get to enjoy a lot of it. I had time to take lots of photos since the weather was cooperating. I hope everyone is spending a lot of time outdoors. 


5-2-2014



5-3-2014


Andy and I took his new car out for the first time and saw this awesome rainbow!

5-4-2014


Some of the millions of Pineapple Upside Down Cakes that I helped make.

5-5-2014


Still one more baby yet to be born.

5-6-2014

Tadpoles swimming in all of the newly formed ponds thanks to last week's rainstorms.

5-7-2014 



The trees are raining flower petals.


5-8-2014



Helped out at the Art4MS Art show. This takes two photos so you can see what was going on a few minutes before the event began.

5-9-2014

The pigs are getting big but are still running around with their ears flapping in the wind.

5-10-14


Bizarre bubbles in my dish water today.

May 5, 2014

The Mysteries of Pineapple Upside Down Cake and Recipe

I made a million Pineapple Upside Down Cakes at work today. Okay, maybe it wasn't a million, but it certainly felt like a million. During baking I realized that I really had very little experience with the cake. I don't think I ever had it before and I hadn't ever seen anyone make it.

I asked one of the other girls in the bakery how old they thought the recipe was.

"It's old, old because I mother made it since before i can remember and my grandma made it too."

It was really a curious cake as the concept of baking something and flipping it out once it was finished is a very old concept, as is putting fruit in such confectioneries. Another girl mentioned that she would guess it originated around WWII because of the canned goods. I agreed and thought it might even be earlier than that. Probably around WWI as I had read a lot of recipes that included canned pineapple around that time period.  After a lot of conjecture we (read: my coworker) decided that I should "Go home and google it. You're giving me a headache. You ask too many questions."

So I asked her what they did before google, but I digress.

It turns out that there are many recipes for cakes baked and flipped upside down, as you would do with any cake or pudding baked in a mold. Elizabeth Smith Miller includes a recipe for a similarly baked "Orange Cake" with fruit icing in her 1875 book, In the Kitchen. 

By the 1890s, there were many recipes for apple cakes that were served flipped upside down but many of these had the fruit toppings added after the cake had been flipped out of the pan, and therefore not exactly the same as a modern upside down cake.

Upside down cakes in their modern form seem to have become very popular in the 1920s. In 1925, The Hawaiian Pineapple Company (now Dole) held a recipe contest to help popularize their pineapple. 2,500 people entered recipes for pineapple upside down cakes. This indicates that it was already a popular dish or at least similar enough to dishes already made that numerous cooks made the connection. So, Pineapple Upside Down Cake became immensely popular all at once and historians have yet to find the missing link.


Here's a post WWII recipe for Pinapple Upside Down Cake which is almost identical to the recipe we were using. 


It's surprisingly tasty for being so simple. I am thinking of trying to make one that has pineapple and walnut flavored cake with  the pineapple and cherries on top. 

Sources:

Miller, Elizabeth Smith. In the kitchen ... Boston: Lee and Shepard;, 1875.

Olver, Lynn. "The Food Timeline: cake history notes." The Food Timeline: cake history notes. http://www.foodtimeline.org/foodcakes.html#pineapple (accessed May 5, 2014).

Schlosser, Georgia. Recipes for quantity service. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, 1953.

May 2, 2014

Secret Life of Bloggers Blog Party: Post 16

What a crazy week. Hot, cold, torrential rains. Those of you not living here, might think we've become very picky about our weather. It's not true. We have had the most bizarre weather this year. This week had a little bit of everything, except snow. But we have had enough of that for a lifetime.

4-25-14

4-26-14

4-27-14



It was so nice out, I had to find a little patch of grass and eat my lunch outside. Being inside all day drives me nuts. I love the outdoors.


4-28-14



The newest baby lamb at work takes a nap with its mum. The mother wasn't doing too well after the birth but seems to have recovered. I hear there is one more little baby on the way.


4-29-14


4-30-14


Went to visit Jodi at curiousacorn.blogspot.com but met with this newly formed river crossing the road.

5-1-14 


At some point soon, I'm hoping to attempt sourdough breads using this nice starter that Jodi gave me.

5-2-14


Dried veggies from last year.

Hopefully everyone kept out of the rain and wind.

April 25, 2014

Secret Life of Bloggers Blog Party: Super Huge Post


“Speak little, do much.”  
- Poor Richard's Almanack

Please forgive me for such a huge post. This past month was hectic. I was still taking daily photos but found myself with very little time because I was, as Ben Franklin says, "doing much."

Spring is finally here! Don't waste it. Enjoy the new life.


3-29-14


I can't wait for ducklings to start swimming around.

3-30-14


3-31-14


Went for a walk with a coworker after work to a neat old abandoned house in the woods.

4-1-14



Lots of rain at work created quagmire where a small stream normally is.

4-2-14



Cakes, cakes and more cakes. Cakes and animals might be a theme in this post.

4-3-14


4-4-14


Taking a class on digital media marketing.

4-5-14


4-6-14


I went to Neshaminy today but was more excited to see that the Philadelphia Zoo Balloon got fixed after it was damaged this winter. I've never been up in it. It's never been flying when I've been there. 


4-7-14


Pre-making icing flowers for the spring cakes. 


4-8-14


My sister made me make her a Doctor Who cake for her birthday. Then didn't let anyone eat it. 

4-9-14


Caught a shooting star while trying to shoot photos of Mars while it was very bright.

4-10-14


I like funny labels. :)

4-11-14



Mars is the bright spot behind the branches of the center tree.

4-12-14


Was second shooter at the wedding of a very fun couple. 

4-13-14


Decorated cakes and cookies for Easter.

4-14-14


The 3 little pigs who aren't so little anymore. When pigs are born, they are the size of a soda can.

4-15-14


Bread baking. 

4-16-14


Saw Andy's kitty for the first time in about a year. The kitty still loves me.

4-17-14



Andy was in a bad car accident. He is okay but unable to do a lot due to soreness and head pain. We spent the day tracking his car down and filling out paperwork.

4-18-14


4-19-14





 A feral kitten showed up at work very scarred. One of the guys tried to see if it could be socialized but it is probably too old.

4-20-14


Went for a walk then edited wedding photos.


4-21-14



4-22-14


New lamb at work, born on Saturday. It's so cute we follow it around and "Awwww" every time it bahs. We have 3 new baby pigs and a calf on the way.

4-23-14


Storm clouds coming.

4-24-14


Harvest so far.


This post way way too long! but at least I posted it on a Friday. :) I'm hoping everything is well with everyone and that you are making the best of spring.

April 21, 2014

Interview with Deborah Hill, Author of This is the House



I was extremely lucky to get to interview Deborah Hill,  author of the Kingsland series. Her journey is a dream come true for many historical fiction writers. In 1975 her book, This is the House, sold 700,000 copies! It was inspired by a memoir that an ancestor of her husband's family left behind about his experiences in Cape Cod during the 18th and 19th centuries. The interview is below.  












Can you tell us a little about your new book and the series? Who are they for, etc.?
My latest book brings the Kingsland Series into the present. It began just after the Revolution, with This is the House, went on through the Clipper ship and Victorian Era with The House of Kingsley Merrick, and concludes with The Heir, which has just been released. They are historical novels, written for discerning readers who don’t mind a little spice along the way.
 How did you first get into genealogy? 
I’d have to say that genealogy got into me! My husband’s family was quite reticent about their background, perhaps because they were surrounded by it. Portraits, sizeable ones, lined the living room walls. Considering that the family home was a Cape (not too far from the house in my book), they were wedged in pretty tightly. My in-laws were using a lot of the old furnishings that may be glimpsed in The House of Kingsley Merrick; the rest was in the attic of the carriage barn. The local summer drama company often hauled this piece and that away as props. Once the four-poster bed that Mr. and Mrs. Allen used was taken. I never learned where they slept while the play was going on!

What was it about your husband’s family that inspired you so much?
The leading male character of This is the House, set off to trade with Europe at a time when no one had ever seen the American flag. Conveniently for me, he wrote a memoir for his grandchildren, describing his adventures, and did a rather fine job of it, so there it was – I could see for myself what was going on 200+ years ago. The next ancestor of interest started a coach line in Australia when their gold rush began. Public transportation still carries his name. As for The Heir – well, suffice it to say I did meet my husband on a windjammer cruise in Nantucket Sound, the details of which are recounted.  35 years ago I didn’t consider that as being “historical”, but now, apparently, it is.
Why did you choose to write historical fiction instead of a historical narrative?
In the first place, I’d always wanted to be an author. To write “the great American novel” had been my goal since childhood. Elijah’s diary was historical narrative, when you get right down to it, and very valuable to me. But writing such a document is just not my métier.
How much of your books are fiction and how much is fact?
I pride myself on the accuracy of the history in my books. All my characters are fictional, but some are based on actual people. I didn’t invent any of the history (I repeat, any!) though I moved the dates around as far as “Rockford” and “Waterford” are concerned, because I didn’t want to be seeing as writing the history of the real town on Cape Cod that they represent.
Did you have any problems while writing? 
Writing on a deadline was intimidating. I didn’t know how long it would take to develop the plotlines; it isn’t something I can specify ahead of time. This always seemed to confound the editors! But the characters would sometimes do something unexpected that was much more interesting than I had planned, and I always went where they led even if it slowed me down.
The house your ancestors lived in still stands and is now a museum. Did you know about the house prior to writing? Did it change how you portrayed your characters or the house itself?  
I’m afraid your information is incorrect. Elijah’s house isn’t a museum yet, though the Historical Society would like nothing better than to buy it to store (and, I suppose, show) their collection. It’s for sale –
Yes, I knew all about the house. I didn’t have a chance to go into it until a few years ago, but friend of the family had one just like it, and I used that as a template, sticking as close to its design as I could. It made a difference in the story line, so I was careful about that. When I did have a chance to explore it, I was satisfied that I’d done OK.
What advice do you have for people trying to research their ancestry?
I’m afraid I don’t have any advice. All the work had been done for me 100 years ago, when genealogy became important to the women in my husband’s family and their friends. Of course, the whole town was interwoven, so the genealogy of one family filled in a section (or two) of the genealogy of others. They intermarried a lot, which made things much easier.
You have been quite successful as an author. What do you think contributed to your success and what advice would you give to people writing about their family trees?
Timing. This is the House first appeared in 1975, right in time for the bi-centennial. As far as advising people who want to write about their family’s past, I would remind you that this family was not my own, so I could take liberties that directly related people probably wouldn’t do. The joy of fiction!

Thanks Deborah!

Check out her books! 

In addition to the Kingsland Series, she has also made the memoir of her husband's ancestor, Cape Cod mariner, Elijah Cobb, available. 

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