Praline Caramel Cake

For our anniversary, Av and I took the boys up to Chattanooga where we went to the Tennessee Aquarium (they loved it), had lunch at a *real* diner (more about that later), visited a gallery (that too), and brought home some Cruze Dairy milk and buttermilk from Greenlife Grocery, their answer to Whole Foods.
Cruze Dairy is a family farm in Knoxville TN where the cows are pastured 365 days a year and never given hormones. The milk isn’t homogenized, so you give the jug a good shake first. It’s good.
I think buttermilk tastes differently now even from when it was when I was a little girl. Have you noticed, too? Ah, my PawPaw used to eat cornbread in a glass with buttermilk. And dunk Saltines in buttermilk, too. I love buttermilk because he did. Do you have food memories like that? I think of my PawPaw whenever I have buttermilk or banana pudding. I think of my Nanny whenever I have tomatoes and rice. I think of my great-grandmother whenever I serve greens…or cole slaw…or have an entire table loaded down with beautiful dishes to enjoy. You too?
You can still get ‘real’ buttermilk from places like Cruze and from Wright Dairy in Alexandria.
Well, there isn’t a better cake than buttermilk cake. Even if you’re not a ‘buttermilk person’ – you don’t taste buttermilk in it, it’s just what it adds that’s so amazing. It’s so good that it’s perfect without any icing at all; but when you put caramel on top, ohmystars.
One teensy warning: this is a *real* praline icing, not the whipped consistency of something in a can in the baking aisle of the grocery store. If there’s any weather outside – raining, cloudy, just not a nice day, wait until the weather’s nice to make it.
If you’re thinking of making this mid-week, the recipe is easily halved for just one layer.

Ingredients:

3 cups all-purpose flour
2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
2 sticks butter (1 cup), softened
2 cups sugar
4 eggs
1 cup buttermilk
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 375*.
Prepare two 8″ 0r 9″ round cake pans (butter all over, place a round of parchment paper in the bottom of each pan).
In the Kitchenaid, mix together the butter and sugar until pretty and super-light (about five minutes). In a separate bowl, mix together the flour, salt, and baking soda.
Add the eggs one at a time into the Kitchaid, spinning slowly, waiting until each is incorporated until adding another.
Take turns adding the flour mixture, then the buttermilk, then again with the flour until all ingredients are used:

Caramel Cake

Pour half into each baking pan, and bake until done (start checking at 18 minutes).
Let the cakes cool a bit, then turn them out onto separate dishes to cool completely.
Now – the icing! If your idea of a caramel cake is something other than a beautiful cake encased in a giant praline, this is not the icing for you. This is a real, old-fashioned praline caramel cake.
If you’re like icing the consistency of buttercream or something else more “whipped” – or if you’re going to feel disappointed slicing the cake and the icing ‘breaking’ into so many gorgeous buttery islands – this is the part where you should look away, open a new tab in your browser, and Google for some other recipe. It’s okay.
Alright – let’s make some pralines! I mean…caramel icing.
Icing Ingredients:
1 pound light brown sugar (it’s sold in 1lb. boxes – I think it’s just almost 3 cups)
1 stick butter (1/2 cup)
1/2 cup evaporated milk
Icing Directions:
Use a bigger pot than you think you need to make this (it bubbles up). Get out the candy thermometer and a wooden spoon. Please don’t do this without a candy thermometer unless you are a pro at determining soft ball stage.
In your pot, add together all the ingredients. Slowly bring up to a boil, and continue to boil on medium-high heat until the mixture gets to 238*, stirring gently often but not constantly. What you’re doing is having the mixture reach soft ball stage, which begins at 234* and goes up to 240*. I always try to get just almost to the upper limit, because if you don’t get the mixture up to 234*, what you’ll have in the end is sauce that will never solidify.
Sadly, that’s experience speaking.
Just make sure you don’t go too high – over 240*, though, because then you’re starting to enter the world of making hard candy! Thank goodness for candy thermometers.
While the caramel is getting to 238*, make sure you have the cake layers ready to get the icing.

Caramel Cake
Anyway, at 238*, you have got yourself perfection. Bring the pot off the heat, and with your wooden spoon, beat the mixture for…forever. Okay, not forever, but for several minutes, which might seem like forever. You’ll know when to stop. At first, it will seem thin and doubt creeps in (will this ever firm up?) but never fear…just keep stirring.
It will get thicker and thicker and begin to nicely coat the wooden spoon. The icing should be nice and thick but still easily pourable. When the icing gets to be to the point that you can ‘draw a line’ through it like this pic below, you should be done pouring it over the bottom layer and get to pouring it over the top and over the sides. Really, I let it get a bit too far here, but this shows how well it will set up:

Caramel Cake
If you do wind up letting it set up a little too far, you can put it back on low heat and add a splash or two of evaporated milk until it becomes the perfect consistency for pouring again.
It’s so delicious and wonderful and every other delectable adjective you can think of.

Caramel Cake

A Dagwood?

We were in South Pittsburg, Tennessee this weekend and visited the Lodge shop.

I found this tiny doc below about how they are still making cast iron skillets at the factory there (they’re the only company still making them in the US):
http://vimeo.com/moogaloop.swf?clip_id=9848971&server=vimeo.com&show_title=1&show_byline=1&show_portrait=0&color=&fullscreen=1
Well, I knew we would be there around lunch time, so I looked on Chowhound for recommendations and found the Dixie Freeze there:

Dixie Freeze, South Pittsburg TN

They have a meat & three – type menu, so we shared that with the boys…chicken & dumplins, blackeyed peas, green beans, and cornbread.

In some parts of the country – like in the Carolinas, the dumplins in c&d are more like pasta or pastry strips than big, billowy almost-biscuits like we do in Alabama. It was more chicken & pastry here:

Dixie Freeze, South Pittsburg TN

The other thing we got was the Dagwood. I didn’t have the faintest idea what a Dagwood was/is, but their sign outside read, ‘Dagwood Sandwich is Our Specialty’ so….. Av said that a Dagwood is named after the cartoon character, who has sandwiches with *everything*:

Dagwood Sandwich at Dixie Freeze, South Pittsburg TN

Surprise! Here it is (from top to bottom) bun, lettuce/onion/tomato, cheeseburger patty, bacon, toast, cheeeseburger patty, bun. Not really for me. Av and I took it apart and he ate some and I had a little too. For whatever reason, I just wasn’t ‘feeling’ the food here. I bet they make great milkshakes, though.

Now, I would never tell you about a so-so experience without a reason, right!?
So…for some reason, I looked on Flickr for what Dagwoods are at other places, and found this!! A cake (cake!) made to look like a super-tall, super-cute sandwich. It’s made by Studio Cake Design in San Francisco, and their website shows that they won one of the Food Network cake challenges.
And if the Dagwood cake isn’t cute enough, imagine getting this for Valentine’s day. Squee! How about these, too!? Yes, yes, yes.

Again, Oxford

Oxford Stone Mound, Oxford AL

It’s happening. Or it’s about to happen.

The New York Times had an article in Sunday’s paper about the Native American stone mound in Oxford (the mound that was on top of a hill being used as fill dirt for development of land for a Sam’s Club). The article is entitled “When Scholarship and Tribal Heritage Face Off Against Commerce.”
Here are some excerpts:

The professor, Harry O. Holstein of nearby Jacksonville State University, had concluded that a stone mound at the top of the hill was constructed by American Indians more than a thousand years ago, and in 2003 he recorded it in a state archaeological registry. The possibility of its being destroyed, Dr. Holstein said, made him sick.

“I’m not against development,” he said. “But some things should just be saved.”

As it happened, the city had already commissioned a study of the stone mound by the Office of Archaeological Research at the University of Alabama, which works on a contract basis for such projects. The report, signed by the office’s director, Robert A. Clouse, found the mound to be “definitively cultural” in origin, as opposed to having been created by a natural process like erosion.

Many of the archaeologists and some of the American Indians who lobbied to keep the stone mound acknowledge that its original purpose is a matter of speculation. That, they say, is all the more reason to preserve it.

…Leon Smith, the mayor of Oxford since 1984, was not keen to discuss the issue further. “You’re not going to hear much from me,” he said. “I’m done with Indian stuff.”


But in late January, at an Oxford City Council meeting, Dr. Clouse disclosed the findings of a follow-up report.

That study, which many had not known about, was performed in July in the full heat of the controversy. In it, Dr. Clouse’s conclusions could hardly have changed more drastically.

“It does not appear,” he wrote in the second report, “that this stone mound was constructed by human activity.”

Archaeologists around the state were surprised and angered.

“The consensus of my colleagues,” said Cary Oakley, who held Dr. Clouse’s current position for 28 years, “is that this particular evaluation is seriously flawed.”

Keith Little of Tennessee Valley Archaeological Research, who has visited the mound, suggested that the word “consensus” was not strong enough.

“I’ve been an archaeologist in Alabama since the 1970s,” he said. “And I’ve never seen archaeologists so united on one subject.”

Worse, he said, the stone mound was apparently demolished during Dr. Clouse’s examination, making any further study impossible.

Dr. Clouse, in an e-mail message, declined to discuss the issue.

Its history is not over. Mr. Smith plans to take the top off to about halfway down and flatten out what remains. A restaurant could go there, or a hotel. Or maybe a health clinic.

In any case, he said, “It’s going to be real pretty.”

Oh, my.

In better news, Fresh Air Alabama is organizing a trip that includes visiting the Bottle Creek Indian mounds – you can only get to them by water. Seven hundred years ago, there were 18 mounds that stood as platforms for homes and temples; one mound is about 45 feet tall. They’re listed on the National Register.
Spanish Fort Alabama– Deep in the middle of Bottle Creek lies an ancient Native American Indian Mound. Join Fresh Air Family as we explore what history has to offer, April 10 and 11.

Over the course of two days, we will be learning Indian history and observing nature at its best. While canoeing through 7 miles of the bottomland hardwood swamps, flowing creeks, and mucky sloughs, trained experts will share their knowledge.

After an exhilerating day of hiking and canoeing, we will camp out for the night, where we will sit and relax by the blazing campfire, and hear spooky Indian ghost stories under the stars.

For just $75.00, you can enjoy an amazing opportunity to learn about Spanish Fort’s great history. The expedition will be held April 10th and 11th. Fresh Air Family will be meeting at 9:00 AM, at upper Bryant Landing. Don’t let this chance pass you by.

SXSW Sambo

The documentary about Samuel ‘Sambo’ Mockbee and the Rural Studio is premiering at SXSW this week. Here’s the trailer:

Love the part where the co-founder of Architecture for Humanity says, “where we’re spending most of our education teaching most of the architects to design some god-awful, horrible building in the middle of the desert when they should actually be designing, you know, adequate and affordable housing for 90% of the planet, you know there’s a big disconnect.”
These are just a few pics from our visits to Rural Studio projects. I made a brand-new set and more of them (I’ll be adding several others) are here.
Rural Studio Projects
Rural Studio Projects
Rural Studio Projects

PBS will be airing the documentary nationally this summer. In the meantime, the schedule for its film festival screenings is here.

Through The Looking Glass

In USA Today a couple of days ago, they had an article about the new ‘Alice in Wonderland’ movie and listed ten places that you could go ‘through the looking glass’.

Not too sure about a couple of things (the Museum of Umbrella Covers? seriously? and they got Brother Joseph’s last name wrong…) but other things on the list, oh yes.

Lynn’s Paradise Café, Louisville KY

Winchester Mystery House, San Jose CA

Carhenge, Alliance, Neb.

The House on the Rock, Spring Green, Wis.

Paradise Gardens Park & Museum, Summerville, Ga.

Pics from our last visit:
Howard Finster's Paradise Gardens, Summerville GA
Howard Finster's Paradise Gardens, Summerville GA
Howard Finster's Paradise Gardens, Summerville GA
Howard Finster's Paradise Gardens, Summerville GA

Ave Maria Grotto, Cullman, Ala.

My grotto set of pics here on Flickr.
Ave Maria Grotto, Cullman AL
Colisseum in Miniature at Ave Maria Grotto, Cullman AL
Ave Maria Grotto, Cullman AL