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TUNBRIDGE [a cup cake]
4 1/2 c. flour
3 c. sugar
1 c. butter
1 c. cream
1 tsp. baking powder
6 eggs
Spices to taste
Currants
Citron
Wine
The cup used as a measure for the receipts in this book is not the
tea-table china cup, but the common large earthen teacup, except
where a small one is specified; and the teaspoon used is neither the
largest or smallest, but the medium sized.
The Young Housekeeper's Friend by Mrs. [M. H.] Cornelius, 1865.
Comment: Mrs. Cornelius added the above note before her overall
section on Cup Cakes. Other than that, the recipe for each
individual variant was precisely as you see here: a list of
ingredients. Other than that, bupkis. No specific mixing
instructions, no baking temperature of even the "moderate" vs.
"quick" oven variety common in the books of the day. Nothing. Nit.
Nil. Nada. Zip.
So put the things into a bowl in the order given, add such spices as
the spirit moves you to include, likewise the quantities of
currants, citron and wine. (Yes, it does make a difference if you
put the wine into the batter first, versus cutting out a step and
just putting it into the cook directly.) Make it as thick as you
think cake batter should be, put it into muffin tins and bake until
it appears to be done. This is 19th century cooking at its finest,
folks.
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