... you start out reorganizing the freezer and somehow end up baking a cake. It was one of those “If You Give a Mouse a Cookie” kind of days, but with a very happy ending.
We have three chest freezers, mostly because we freeze a lot of garden produce, and both John and Justin hunt. Every fall, I have to clean them out and reorganize things so I can actually find (and use) what’s inside. I finished one freezer and had just started on the second when I discovered a bag of cranberries I’d frozen, probably last Thanksgiving. I moved them to the fridge to thaw, and then thought about them every time I opened the door.
At first, I considered making cranberry-orange bread, but since I didn’t have any oranges, and wasn’t in the mood for a grocery run, I started thinking about Nantucket Cranberry Pie instead. I went to look for the recipe but couldn’t find it in my box. I was pretty sure it was by Laurie Colwin, so I pulled out Home Cooking and More Home Cooking.
Of course, that led to taking all the cookbooks off the shelf, dusting, vacuuming, and then spending a lovely afternoon reading through Laurie Colwin’s essays (which, honestly, was half the fun). Eventually, I did find the recipe in More Home Cooking.
And since it made such a satisfying bake, I thought I’d share it here as both “blog fodder” and a handy place to keep the recipe for next time.
Here’s Laurie’s recipe, in case you’d like to try it, too:
Nantucket Cranberry Pie
1. Chop enough cranberries to make 2 cups and enough walnuts to make 1/2 cup.
2. In the bottom of a 10-inch pie plate or springform pan, place chopped cranberries, chopped walnuts, and 1/2 cup of sugar.
3.
Mix 2 large eggs, 3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) melted and cooled butter, 1
cup sugar, 1 cup flour, 1/4 teaspoon salt and 1 teaspoon almond
extract. Stir till smooth.
4. Pour over cranberry-walnut mixture and bake for
40 minutes at 350 F.
I didn't have any walnuts so I added an extra 1/2 cup of cranberries. I used 1 teaspoon vanilla extract and 1/4 teaspoon almond extract, just because I like vanilla better than almond. I don't know why it's called "Nantucket Cranberry Pie" when it clearly makes a cake, but it's delicious no matter what you call it. The cake does have a lot of butter and sugar, but I think I will decrease the sugar sprinkled on the cranberries to 1/3 cup or slightly less the next time I make it. After cleaning out freezers I felt like I deserved something good.
I hope your week is off to a good start and includes some kind of treat!
Oh yum, Bonny! (and I think I have some cranberries in the freezer as well! Hmmm... there might be some "cake baking" here today as well!) Happy Monday!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great post, Bonny! I think I have some cranberries in the freezer as well. I love both of those books. I got them out not too long ago so I could re-read them, but just haven't gotten around to it yet. Thanks for the reminder. Happy Monday, and I hope you enjoy some cranberry pie for breakfast this morning.
ReplyDeleteOh, YUM! I'm so glad your freezer-reorg ended up with such a delicious treat AND some happy reading, too. A total give-a-mouse-a-cookie moment! XO
ReplyDeleteMy mom used to make this pie - so good! And I'm surrounded by cranberries here so this is the perfect time to post it, thank you!
ReplyDeleteThose "give a mouse a cookie" days can be so fun at times! I made cranberry muffins on Saturday! (I added some orange zest and some pecans). I think you posted about this recipe a few years back and I got the recipe from you - thanks for the reminder...I'll be making this sometime soon!
ReplyDeletelooks super delicious! If I loved being in the kitchen I would make this!!
ReplyDeleteThat sounds delicious!
ReplyDelete