Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Lazy Daisy Cake



I've made this recipe a couple of times now, and love it! The cake is really easy to make... and very yummy too.



Lazy Daisy Cake Cake

1 cup sifted cake flour*
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 eggs
3/4 cup sugar**
2 tablespoons butter
1/2 cup milk, scalded***
1 teaspoon vanilla

Topping
1/2 cup brown sugar, firmly packed
4 tablespoons butter
3 tablespoons cream or evaporated milk
1 cup shredded coconut

For cake:
Preheat oven to 350F. (180C)
Sift flour once, measure and resift twice with the baking powder and salt.
Beat eggs with a rotary beater until very light.
Add sugar gradually and continue to beat until thick and lemon colored.
Fold dry ingredi­ents into egg mixture, gently but thor­oughly.
Combine butter with scalded milk and vanilla and add to batter, stirring un­til blended.
Pour into a greased 9 by 9 by 2-inch pan and bake about 25 minutes, or until done.
Re­move from oven and cool.

For topping:
Combine sugar, butter and cream and cook over low heat until butter and sugar are melted.
Remove from heat, add coconut and spread on top of the cake.
Place about 2 inches under broiler heat and brown lightly, about 5 minutes.
Re­move from the broiler and serve warm or cold.

*Cake Flour: An easy way to do this is to put 2 tablespoons of the cornstarch into the bottom of a 1 cup measure, then fill to the top with flour.

**Recipe calls for 1 cup of sugar, but mom switched it to 3/4 as 1 cup is too sweet. But if you like it really sweet, by all means make it 1 cup!

***Scalding: Many older recipes called for you to scald milk, that is, to bring it nearly to a boil and stirring. Scalding served two purposes, to kill potentially harmful bacteria in the milk, and to destroy enzymes that keep the milk from thickening in recipes. Pasteurization, however, accomplishes both of those goals, and since almost all store-bought milk in Western countries is pasteurized these days, scalding is essentially an unnecessary step. Another reason some recipes continue to call for scalded milk is that they simply want you to heat the milk first, as it will speed the cooking process, help melt butter, dissolve sugar more easily, etc.

1 comment:

  1. Thank you for posting this wonderful recipe. My Mom used to make it and now she has passed and I cannot find the recipe. I knew when I saw the "old" page from the cookbook this would be the one!! Thanks again!

    ReplyDelete