RT Firefly
Enigma
Greetings,
Selling fruitcakes to fund a research center for developmental disabilities is a nasty irony.
Selling fruitcakes to fund a research center for developmental disabilities is a nasty irony.
Greetings,
Selling fruitcakes to fund a research center for developmental disabilities is a nasty irony.
I like fruit cakes also.
I'm with you Janice. I like fruit cakes also. Can't comment on the Claxton variety - never had one. (Anyone wanting to jettison one, I'll PM the address)
However, even though not liking them is the norm as child, once grown up many people appreciate them much more as a really decent example of a true cake. All the rest of the over-sweet, over-rich, sickly, chocolatty, or pale, washed out, Madeira types are mere pale imitations, which the kids all still love of course…but are really just empty calories. Any time I attend a birthday or some other occasion where they trot out a cake, and it's one of those over-sweet, sickly, mushy types my heart sinks. For a real cake, give me a fruit cake - a bit of old-fashioned almond icing on top and sides is ok too. The icing on the cake, as it were, literally. Almond icing is unique, and the only type I appreciate.
PS. The nicest kind of fruit cake I have ever had was one my auntie used to make, called a vinegar cake. It had a certain 'bite' to it from the vinegar which lifted it right up there and counterbalanced the sweetness.
Why choose? Treat yourself to a Vegemite flavored cake. Yum!This revelation has me reconsidering the Marmite/Vegemite/Promite experiment.
I often bought fruit cakes in tins to give to customers for Christmas....not the good kind, mind you, but the really cheapo 99 cent jobs back in the late 70's. I always ended up with a few extra that just sat in my trunk, maybe till the next year. After I moved on to another job, I sent the old cakes to my friends. One friend sent it back the next year and we exchanged that same fruit cake for 17 years. The last year he had used the cake to chock the wheel of his boat trailer and severely dented the old, rusty tin, exposing the 17 year old cake....causing the Post Office to decline delivery.
This revelation has me reconsidering the Marmite/Vegemite/Promite experiment.
If you take 4 or 5 Claxton fruitcakes, unwrap them, let them dry out for 2-3 weeks, then drill holes in the middle and pass a chain through, you have a good anchor for a mooring.
OK. So I bought some Marmite (UK version) and tried the "hot method" on some whole grain toast this morning. It tasted like a thickened teriyaki sauce on toast. Not what I was expecting. It wasn't disgusting, or even bad tasting. Just not very breakfasty, per se, however a beer probably would've tasted good with all of the saltiness.
I'll try the cold method tomorrow.
Didn't try the cold method this morning. No bread to make toast. No Vegimite in town. We have a complete vacancy of Aussies. The one I know works month in month out at a mine near Darwin. I'll ask him to smuggle some back for me. But the good news is that my beriberi is now in remission.
Lobster diving, followed by eating the critters at any key west water front restaurant. With a Vodka tonic and lime.
I did the "cold method" on some very hearty flax whole grain bread this morning. It was pretty good.