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« Appalachia Through My Eyes - Turnips | Main | Appalachia Through My Eyes - Mudholes »

February 20, 2012

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I came across this post while trying to find the history behind a "Husband Cake" recipe I came across in a high altitude cookbook published in Denver in the 1950s. The cake isn't called out in the book as anything unusual, yet I haven't come across one before in my collection. Now I'll have to look closer!

No, I can't say that I have. But I am very curious and will be trying this!

This looks good! It kind of resembles a spice cake.

I remember our Aunt Ella's husband making Tomato Soup Cake and he also made one called Miracle Whip Cake. Couldn't tell you how he did either, but I do remember they were both very good.

Saw on The Chew today Carla making a No-Bake Ice Box Cake. It was a recipe devised during WWII when sugar and butter were rationed. She took Gingerbread Cookies (Nabisco's sugar and butter wasn't rationed) and alternated layers with Whipped Cream flavored with lemon zest and another with Whipped Cream flavored with Lemon Curd (guess Redi Whip's sugar wasn't rationed either). She said you put it together in a spring form pan and put it in the fridge overnight. Then when you can stick a toothpick all the way through it, it's done. It looked wonderful, and I was thinking of the many combinations one could make just using different cookies and different flavorings in the whipped cream. One that kept running through my mind was the Lemon Cream Cookies (vanilla cookies stuffed with lemon cream between) with the lemon flavored Whipped Cream. Yum!

Ever heard of a No-Bake Ice Box Cake made that way? Improvisation, the true gem within every good cook. ;o)

God bless.

RB
<><

I've never tried it but you sold me.. it looks delicious and I'm writing the recipe down..thanks Tipper..

This looks SO good! I am going to have to try it

I have seen the recipe before but was always a little skeptical. Now that I have it from a good source that it is good I will try it. My husband loves spice cakes and his birthday is coming up soon...this will make a good birthday cake!

How could I possibly forget
Dump Cake.....
Thanks....

Tipper,
I couldn't pass this opportunity to list a few oddball cake names I've heard thru the years that stick in my mind...
Hummingbird Cake...
Watergate Cake...
Cherries in the Snow...
Hawaiian Fantasy Cake...(sounds like it would be great for a snowy winter)
Pepsi-Cola Cake...
Heath Bar Cake...
Mounds Cake....
I got to stop or I'll have a coma and I don't have diabetes,Yet! LOL
Thanks Tipper,

OK, now I have to try this. For years I have been looking at the recipe. But you give me courage--and a great back story.

Tipper,
Never heard this called Husband Cake...and I never made one...My Mother made a cake with a can of tomato soup in it, so I guess this is close to the same recipe..
She was crazy about all kinds of spice cakes..as a lot of folks from the mountains are, I have found...Don't know if that's because chocolate was hard to come by or not...I know anything with spices or molasses she loved...I may just try this one..
When I resurrect Moms cookbook, the one she started housekeeping with in 1940...I will look and see if the recipe is there..that might give a time period for the recipe...
Great Post Tipper,

Now that last picture was to die for so to speak. I am going to pass that recipe along to my wife.

It does sound delicious and reminds me of a spice cake...

Your recipe for tomato cake couldn't have come at a better time. It is a cold rainy day here and I was looking for something to do tonight with my wife, Jan. I had to call her to see if she had any tomato soup. She didn't,Jan makes her own home made tomato soup. I'll have to get some on the way home from work. We have to go to a meeting Wed. night and it would be great to take one of these cakes there to see if anyone can guess what it is made out of. There are a couple of people there that think they can tell what anything is made of. I wonder if any of them will think of tomatos.

I am so laughing at this. When I was a very small child, 'bout the only thing my mom could get me to eat (without a full-fledged tussle) was grilled cheese sandwich and tomato soup. I always have at least a dozen cans of tomato soup in the house. I'm going to give this recipe a try this week!

It sounds disgusting, but it looks delicious!

Mrs. K-Mayonnaise is made from vegetable oil, eggs and citrus juice. All are ingredients in a lot of cakes. They are just preblended. So why not?

Does anyone have a cake recipe with bacon in it?

Tipper,
When I saw tomato soup added I
thought, uh oh, it's ruern't!
From the finished picture it does
look like carrot cake. I bet my
parents would have known about
this cake in those Depression
Years...Ken

Interesting recipe, I will have to give it a try. Thanks for sharing.

Another must-try recipe, thanks Ethel and Tipper!

Thank you for sharing this old recipe Tipper! Grandma, who was so proud to call herself a Pennsylvania Hillbilly, would be ticked pink to know one of her specialties is being featured on an Appalacian blog!
I had to smile when you said you had a moment of doubt after adding the tomato soup - Mom called Grandma in a panic at just that point when she made it the first time, certain she'd made a mistake!
Now I'm hungry for a nice big slab of that moist, spicy sweetness. Another plus, when I make this with my grandaughter Kate, I can let her lick the beaters, as there's no egg in the batter!

Yes, I've heard of Tomato Soup Cake - even have the recipe for it somewhere, but I've never tried it. I have had mayonnaise cake when I was a child and my husband also had it and loved it. I remember as a kid we thought it was so weird, but it didn't stop us from eating it!

I've never heard of that cake, but I'll surely try it out soon.

That sounds delicious. I think my husband should bake it this weekend for us. Then it will be a real Husband (made) Cake.

I have a very old Campbells soup cookbook that contained all kind of recipes. When I head North I will check it out. I remember making a cake with soup, probably tomato, but it has been years. I think I will try making one of these - not only a good conversation piece, but something that will taste good.

it looks great, this is a first for me, tomato soup in a cake. very interesting.

I've never had tomato soup cake before, but it sounds good. I will have to try the recipe and see if my family can guess what is in it. Thanks Tipper!

I've heard of it but never tried it. Maybe I'll have to now.

Tipper, I've never heard of that cake and I have to say it certainly sounds strange.
I will take your word that it is good.
It's interesting that the first layer was so soft it came apart. I used to make a cake called Wacky cake that had no eggs or butter. It was very soft like your cake. I guess the eggs give a cake more substance, so to speak.
That picture of the flour mixture with the tomato soup poured in sure has a strange look!

Linda-I think Ethel's family called it a Husband Cake-because the Husband (her Grandfather) loved it so much : )


Blind Pig The Acorn
Celebrating and Preserving the
Culture of Appalachia
www.blindpigandtheacorn.com

My grandma called it depression cake. ;)

Yes Tipper, I have had tomato soup cake and the folks in this cabin love it as well but I never heard it called Husband Cake---do you know why it was named that?

I have the recipe, but it's been a long time since I baked this cake. My recipe is entitled "Tomato Soup Cake." I had not heard it called Husband Cake before! But my husband liked it--when I used to make it about twice a year. Someone gave the recipe to me when he was pastor of Epworth, GA First Baptist Church back in the 1960's.

Have never heard of tomato soup cake but it sounds interesting.

mater soup cake? Hmmmmmmmm!!

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