sovay: (Claude Rains)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2023-02-04 11:02 pm

Each other's plans, each other's dreams

The wind chill has reduced to above zero, but it is still so bitterly cold that we inagurated the cast-iron skillet in its new home with a spider cake. A particularly delicious example of the species, too.



I do not actually wish to purchase the shooting script for The Mind Benders (1963), although I think it's neat that it's available, but I would like very much to read it. I wish this sort of thing were easier to track down. I have been wanting the screenplay for The Long Voyage Home (1940) for years.
radiantfracture: Beadwork bunny head (Default)

[personal profile] radiantfracture 2023-02-05 05:29 am (UTC)(link)

I was thinking I might thin down some chevre or spring for actual goat's milk, which is okay in spidery quantities.

I hope to make this my sanity recipe for family call tomorrow.

[personal profile] thomasyan 2023-02-05 05:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Ooh, I'd never heard of spider cake before, but I like sweet cornbread, and the addition of cream sounds delicious. I'll have to try it sometime. The NYT link is behind a paywall for me, but while looking up what this cake is, many recipes came up, such as https://www.thekitchn.com/new-england-spider-cake-22948875

Also, YouTube earlier suggested a cooking video to me, and it also looks intriguing, but might take a fair amount of trial and error -- what counts as "(very) low heat"? https://youtu.be/18jZuQO-OJw

[personal profile] thomasyan 2023-02-06 01:52 am (UTC)(link)
I didn't see a temperature. The description is thankfully in English (instead of German) and has the recipe, and specifies only very low heat. Things that caught my attention:
* Use of condensed milk and butter heated until it looks kind off like melted cheese.
* Halved tangerines placed atop, while still bubbling hot in the pan.
* Condensed milk in the batter, poured on top.
* Cooked stovetop, including flipping near the end.
* It LOOKS amazing.

Wonder if canned peach halves would work, too, but I suspect the water ratio is different. Maybe blood oranges would be closer.