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Desserts

Sherry Cake | The Secret Family Recipe

Every family has that secret family recipe. The one that has been passed down through the generations, a priceless commodity that requires some secret ingredient or technique that only Mom knows about. For me, it’s my sherry wine cake. I first got the recipe from my mom, who got it from her father’s mom, and so on and so forth. As soon as the recipe was passed to me and I was told it was a “family recipe,” I accepted this fact without question and knew I had a familial duty to uphold the privacy of its sacred contents. (I’d like to add that this was entirely my melodramatic perception, and my mom has shared this recipe with numerous people…)

Fast forward years later, and your girl here decides she wants to impress Matt one evening and bake him the Stubbs — or more accurately Fox — family wine cake. To no surprise, the kid was hooked and thought it was unbelievably light and fluffy. That inquisitive baker — whose curiosity is on par with Alton Brown — wanted to deconstruct my cake to an elemental level so he could make it himself. Since I knew he was a keeper, I assumed that it was safe for me to share the recipe with him.

I mean, it does call for both instant vanilla pudding and yellow cake mix. I guess I secretly knew he may have had a point, but my denial was about as full-fledged as my 10-year-old self who woke to my father putting Christmas presents downstairs near the tree. Duh, Santa Claus is real; I don’t care what I just saw or what anyone else has to say about that… (add Link to the article about family recipes and potato salad)

We all have that one baking dish that looks gloriously intricate as a finished product but in reality took a sneakingly small amount effort. The entire process to bake this little guy, from start to finish, is less than an hour. And if you’re like me and use a proper bundt pan, you’re cake is sure to be a showstopper. Honestly, I have NEVER made this cake and not received a compliment on way it looks — and tastes — when I use my Williams Sonoma spiral bundt pan. (Insider tip: You can also find our specific Nordic Ware Platinum Collection Heritage Bundt Pan on Amazon Prime, or check out the dozens of other Amazon Prime bundt pan options.) I feel like I’m almost cheating when I use it because I’m far from a master baker — which is definitely more Matt’s thing than mine — but it makes that cake look absolutely elegant.

Now, if you don’t have a snazzy bundt pan, don’t fret —  all is not a loss! This cake recipe may be deceptively simple, but its taste alone will still have people talking.

Lemon Poppy Seed Muffins

Pile Lemon Poppyseed Muffins

Why are lemon poppy seed muffins a thing? I mean honestly, what do poppy seeds actually add to anything? Have you ever taken a teaspoon or so of poppy seeds and tasted them just to test the flavor? It isn’t really a pleasant experience.

Aside from just being a mouthful of unpleasantly-textured desiccated seeds, they lack a distinct flavor. The bottle they come in classifies them as nutty, which makes sense as most nuts and seeds have an earthy flavor, but I can confidently say I have no interest in reaching for poppy seeds as a pumpkin seed alternative to snack on.

That all being said, if you take the poppy seeds out of lemon poppy seed muffins, you just have lemon muffins… and that just sounds like blasphemy to me (note to self: try new lemon muffin recipe soon!). These flecked golden muffin tops are, bar-none, my favorite product that is baked in some form of cake tin. Chocolate cake, blueberry muffins, salted caramel cupcakes – get in line – these lemon poppy seed muffins are all I need on my desert (or maybe it should be dessert?) island.

Lemon poppy seed muffins do require a couple of atypical ingredients and techniques, but that really should scare you off, because both the ingredients and techniques are AMAZING to put right to use in other places around the stove.

Learning to properly whip egg whites into peaks can allow you to make meringues or the fluffiest pancakes you’ve ever eaten. Having buttermilk on hand means you can make anything from fried chicken to buttermilk pancakes (I think I may be in the mood for some pancakes to compliment my muffins).

So, in short, don’t be intimidated by the extra steps and ingredients – they will all be put to good use and are well worth the time and monetary investment (which, by the way, is about 10 minutes and $3, respectively)!

Okay, now prepare yourself for the mystically delicious nature of the lemon poppy seed muffin, because they will be fresh out of your oven in less than an hour!

NOTE ON THE BAKING METHOD BELOW: I know, I know, 425 seems insane for muffins and baked goods, but trust us! This will help them rise better in the oven due to the extra-hot air pockets that will form inside the muffin while baking – giving you a nice round top instead of a flat sad muffin.

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