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FRUITCAKE: Seasonal Delicacy or Worst Dessert Ever?

 

I suddenly realized that while I’ve been writing about holiday traditions: the cookies, the presents, the magic, the colors, and of course, the stress, I neglected to mention that December is also National Fruitcake Month – with a special commemorative day December 27th.

Holiday fruitcake aka Christmas Cake aka the best or the worst food concoction ever. People who enjoy fruitcake put up with lots of bad jokes about their favorite food. So many that one of them founded the Society for the Protection and Preservation of Fruitcake.

Let’s start with the basics. What exactly is a fruitcake, anyway?

The short answer is that it’s a cake with fruit, nuts, and spices. Sometimes there’s rum or brandy. Other times, it’s teetotal — which makes it a lot less festive.

Banananutbread

Ancient Romans get credit for creating the first fruit cake, a mixture of pomegranate seeds, pine nuts and raisins combined in a barley mash. Fruitcake detractors might comment that those cakes are still in circulation.

It’s a fact: 38 percent of people who receive fruitcakes regift them without even opening the package.

Fruitcake is a massive, heavy cake that comes in a tin. Detractors remark this is what makes the product such an excellent doorstop.

Fruit_cake_(12687031114)

A recipe from 1947 features:

4 cups of flour
3 pounds of currants (a type of raisin)
2 pounds of actual raisins

1 pound of citron (a fruit similar to a lemon)

2 cups of almonds, 1 pound of butter, 2 cups of brown sugar, 9 separated eggs

1 cup of Rum or Brandy … or less festive liquid.

Christmas_Postcard_circa_1900

Santa says, This is not a cake for children

To Continue: Many bakers substitute candied fruit for the raisins. Candied fruit brightens the dark cake. In fact, it has been noted that if you hold a slice of fruitcake with candied fruit to the light, it looks like a stained glass window. In other words, it’s a cake with Christmas lights. An image that puts me off.

But seriously, there’s lots of healthy ingredients combined with butter. And who doesn’t like butter?

It’s a Fact: Claxton, Georgia calls itself the Fruitcake Capital of America, a title it maintains despite stiff competition from Corsicana, Texas.

Edwards_Tourist_Court,_Claxton,_Ga._(8367046649)

Two bakeries in Claxton produce four million pounds of fruitcake annually, with batter so thick the bakers have to level it by hand before putting the pans in the oven. Paradoxically, Claxton’s other tourist attraction is an annual rattlesnake festival.

Considering how much teasing fruitcakes get, it seems only fair to let three fruitcakes have the last word.

Featured Image: Trappist Abbey Fruitcake from Our Lady of Guadalupe Trappist Abbey in Lafayette OR by Katr67. Creative Commons Attribution. Wikimedia Commons.

Pictures:

Banana Nut Bread. Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons.
Raisin Fruitcake by James Petts. Creative Commons Attribution. Wikimedia Commons

Postcard of Edwards Tourist Court in Claxton GA. Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons.

Christmas Postcard, c. 1900. US Public Domain. Wikimedia Commons.

Recipe Inspiration Source:

Ruth Berolzheimer, ed. “Delicious Fruitcake.” American Woman’s Cookbook. 1947. P465. [I wonder if Ruth was trying to overcome fruitcake’s image.]

Around the Web:

“Fruitcake Song.” From the musical “That Time of the Year.” Lyrics by Laurence Holzman & Felicia Needleman. Music by Mark Wherry. Performed by Kerri Jill Garbis, Erin Maguiare, & Briget Beirne.

Fruitcake: Why It Tastes so Bad. Huffington Post. Dec. 14, 2012.

Society for the Protection and Preservation of Fruitcake. 

Today’s Reason to Celebrate. Punchbowl.

Kathy Lohr. “Georgia Town Makes Claim for Fruitcake Capital of the World.” Dec. 12, 2012. NPR.

Jane Touzalin. “Seven Ways to Fix Fruitcake’s Image Problem.” Washington Post. Dec. 12, 2012.

WYSK. “National Fruitcake Day.” Women You Should Know. Dec. 26, 2014.

Author Sandra Wagner Wright

Sandra Wagner-Wright holds the doctoral degree in history and taught women’s and global history at the University of Hawai`i. Sandra travels for her research, most recently to Salem, Massachusetts, the setting of her new Salem Stories series. She also enjoys traveling for new experiences. Recent trips include Antarctica and a river cruise on the Rhine from Amsterdam to Basel.


 Sandra particularly likes writing about strong women who make a difference. She lives in Hilo, Hawai`i with her family and writes a blog relating to history, travel, and the idiosyncrasies of life.


6 thoughts on “FRUITCAKE: Seasonal Delicacy or Worst Dessert Ever?

  1. Hilarious!!! Mahalo for sharing your creativity and humor. BEST wishes for 2016 and beyond dear Sandra!

  2. Ah…Fruitcakes! The first time I ever had an actual fruitcake was one from Claxton, GA…I would not eat another one for years after that. Definitely doorstop candidate. Dry. Tasteless. Loaded with citron, which I don’t care for. Several years later, a woman named Alice who cooked for us when I lived in Anderson, SC, taught me how to make fruitcakes…What a difference! I have been a fruitcake lover ever since, but it has to be the ‘right’ kind of fruitcake. I have collected recipes from near and far and have loads of different fruit cake recipes…but my most favorite of all is one I developed a couple of years ago for an article I wrote for Ke Ola Magazine…An Island Tropical Fruitcake… I used a combination of recipes and a bit of creativity to come up with this one…and must admit, it is not too dense, quite tasty and has just the right amount of fruit (a combination of dried pineapple, mango, papaya, candied ginger and Buddha Hand pieces cooked in simple syrup and chopped macadamia nuts) in a light spice cake batter to which I added a dollop of sour cream which gave it the perfect balance and moistness…(Ke Ola Nov-Dec 2013 issue)

  3. I just looked up your recipe — I’m definitely going to try it next year. Thanks for the reference.

  4. I dislike fruitcake – always have, and probably will never try one again. I also dislike plum pudding but I love the butter and brandy sauce – when my mother served plum pudding at Christmas dinner – I was given a small dish of the sauce!

  5. Nice to hear from you Mary — My preferred holiday treat is mince pies with light flaky crusts. This year I had to make gluten free crusts — Light they are not.

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