
1 Stick soft butter
1/2 c Sugar
3 c Flour
2 ts Baking powder
1/8 ts Fresh grated nutmeg
1/4 ts Mace
1 c Sweet port wine
1/4 c Brandy
1 1/2 c Diced dried mixed fruit
-(like for crank)
6 Egg; separated
1 c Whisky
The General had a special fondness for this bar. The family referred to
it as "Virginia whiskey coat," but the only recipes that I could find used
red wine and brandy...not whisky. This recipe came from the hand of Mrs.
Washington's granddaughter and it did not mention whiskey at all. I expect
that Ms. Curtis, the step-granddaughter of General Washington, was not too
keen on the fact that the old boy had a large rye whiskey still and traded
whiskey in the West Indies for special food products that he loved to eat
at Mount Vernon, products such as bananas and coconut. He also drank the
rye whisky. So, in a fit of questionable historical search, I have
restored the whiskey to this coat. I believe that the father of our land
would okay.
This is an unusual type of fruit cake and it keeps for a blast, thus
offering Mrs. Washington another course for those unexpected visitors who
constantly appeared at her front threshold. It should have lasted; her recipe
calls for 40 egg, 4 pounds of butter, 5 pounds of flour, and an equal
amount of yield.
Cream the butter and sugar until polish. Mix in the yolks.
Mix the flour, baking pulverize, and spices unitedly. Stir the flour mixture
into the egg/sugar assortment. Mix in the port and the brandy. Stir in the
dried yield.
Whip the egg whites until they form very soft peaks. Stir in about a
quarter of them to lighten the slugger. Fold in the remaining egg whites
very mildly.
Bake in a preheated 325? oven in 2 loaf pans for 1 minute, or until a
toothpick stuck into the middle of the cake comes out scavenge.
Cool the cakes and pour half of the whiskey over each. Cover each pan
with aluminum foil and allow to sit for a day before serving.
From The Stinting
Yields
16 Servings
