Understatement of the day: the internet is incredible. A few clicks and suddenly *magically* you can be connected with thousands of others who are muddling over the same issues or interested in the same esoterica. But there is a flip side. Thousands of people are out there, just like you, waxing on about farmers market bounty or the closing of the Blue Marble on Atlantic Avenue.
My RSS feed manager is filled to the brim with brooklyn food writers. And I love many of them, enjoy their real and virtual company, and look to them for advise and inspiration. Just this weekend, while trying to get over a long dry spell of no cooking or baking, I saw this spiced applesauce cake recipe on Smitten Kitchen. I really enjoy Smitten Kitchen: great photography and a honest discussion of hits and misses. And it happens to be penned by a woman named Deb. Who lives in Brooklyn. The similarities pretty much stop there; however, to all of my dedicated readers (all 4 of you), I do have some upgrades in mind to make this a better/more interesting/more consistent side project.
Before the upgrades happen, I've been mulling over one of the more substantial questions in life: what is the difference between cake and a quick sweet bread? David Lebovitz mulls over this issue apropos of banana bread. I don't have a copy of Larousse Gastronomique but I imagine there is a complete technical discussion of rising agents and gluten somewhere in there. I think of sweet breads (like banana and pumpkin) as a more casual comestible. Cake implies some sort of formality or sense of occasion.
This cake really treads the line. It is frosted (which screams cake to me). But the fruity base, spongy consistency, the spices, and the nuts make it seem more like a sweet bread than like a cake. My office mates ate it all up, so, it seems to pass muster regardless of the label.
the difference between quick/sweet breads and cake is one of connotation only. i firmly believe that a cake is an acceptable breakfast component, that quick bread a worthy dessert can make, and that either works when served with cream!
ReplyDeletenow, what's the difference between a muffin and a cupcake?
I've struggled with the muffin-cupcake dilemma for a very long time. I think the difference is frosting. Have you ever been acquainted with an unfrosted cupcake? I have not. But then again, there are glazed muffins...
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