The GoodHuswifes Handmaid from 1594
To make
short Cakes.
<"219">TAke
wheate flower, of the fayrest ye can get, and put it in an earthern pot, and
stop it close, and set it in an Ouen and bake it, and when it is baken, it will
be full of clods, and therefore ye must searse it through a search: the flower
will haue as long baking as a pastie of Uenison. When you haue done this, take
clowted Creame, or els sweet Butter, but Creame is better, then take Sugar,
Cloues, Mace, and Saffron, and the yolke of an Egge for one doozen of Cakes one
yolke is ynough: then put all these foresaid things together into the cream,
& temper them al together, then put them to your flower and so make your
Cakes, your paste wil be very short, therefore yee must make your Cakes very
litle: when yee bake your cakes, yee must bake them vpon papers, after the
drawing of a batch of bread.
Modern Recipe Interpretation:
3/4 cup flour
4 Tbsp unsalted butter
1/2 cup sugar
1/8 tsp ground clove
1/8 tsp ground mace
pinch saffron
1 egg yolk
Preheat oven to 350ºF. Mix ingredients together. Bake for 10 minutes Yield: 12 cakes (cookies)
For video instruction, please click here.
Other Recipes mentioned in the above video link:
To Make a Fine Sugar Cake
(A Daily Exercise for Ladies and Gentlewomen by John Murrell in 1617)
To make Shrewsbury Cakes from 1658 Take two pound of floure dryed in the Oven and weighed after it is dryed, then put to it one pound of Butter that must be layd an hour or two in Rose-water, so done poure the Water from the Butter, and put the Butter to the flowre with the yolks and whites of five Eggs, two races of Ginger, and three quarters of a pound of Sugar, a little salt, grate your spice, and it well be the better, knead all these together till you may rowle the past, then roule it forth with the top of a bowle, then prick them with a pin made of wood, or if you have a comb that hath not been used, that will do them quickly, and is best to that purpose, so bake them upon Pye plates, but not too much in the Oven, for the heat of the Plates will dry them very much, after they come forth of the Oven, you may cut them without the bowles of what bignesse or what fashion you please.
Shrewsbury Cakes from 1721
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