I asked my mom if she would send me some of our beloved aunt's recipes. A few days later, a treasure arrived in the mail: stacks of them. I reverently sorted through the pile of faded, dog-eared recipe cards, some typed, some hand-written in dainty cursive, and searched for something I could bring for dessert. From "Screwball Chocolate Cake" to "Million Dollar Pie," the options went on and on. In the end, I settled on "Lazy Daisy Cake" -- mainly because I had most of the ingredients and we had 10 inches of snow, so I didn't really want to leave the house just yet. Also, the recipe, an old-fashioned hot-milk yellow cake topped with brown sugar, butter, cream and coconut flakes, sounded amazing.
I didn't have cake flour, so I adapted that a bit and I used heavy cream instead of canned milk and added a 1/2 tsp of vanilla to the icing. So, it's Ellen's recipe, but with a couple of my tweaks -- an old, but new family recipe that I will make again for sure.
Lazy Daisy Cake
Ingredients:
Cake:
4 eggs
2 cups white sugar
2 tsp vanilla
2 cups cake flour (if you only have all-purpose flour, use 1 3/4 cups of it)
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 cup milk
2 TBS butter
Icing:
6 TBS butter
10 TBS brown sugar
3 TBS heavy cream
1/2 tsp vanilla
To Do:
- For the cake:
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees (the recipe says to bake in a moderate oven, so I figured 350 was a good place to start).
- Beat the eggs gradually (her words), then stir in the sugar and vanilla.
- Sift together the flour, baking powder, and salt. Add to sugar and egg mixture.
- Bring the milk and butter to a boil, let cool slightly. Add, a little bit of a time, stirring nonstop (so eggs don't scramble) until incorporated.
- Bake in greased pan (I used a greased springform pan since I hate the suspense of whether the cake is going to come out of the cake pan in one piece) about 45-60 minutes, until a knife inserted in the middle comes out clean.
- For the icing:
- Melt the butter and stir in the brown sugar, cream and vanilla.
- Pour over warm cake and cover with coconut. (I covered the whole cake with the icing and the coconut, focusing on the top -- it made a huge mess, but it was so fun! And yes, I did it on the stove because the rest of the kitchen was a mess, too.)
- Brown coconut under flame. (You can see the flame in the photo below.)
I think Aunt Ellen would have been proud.
xoxo