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Gardening Recipes
 
Craft Projects Photography

Have Your Poison Cake and Eat it Too

September 13, 2010 By radmegan 20 Comments

Last Monday, my better half turned 40. We celebrated by driving home from a family camping trip in the desert, showering, and napping for almost 6 hours.  When I snapped awake from the heat and dehydration-induced slumber, I had one thing on my mind: birthday cake.


I would not let my guy’s big day creep away without the confectioner’s symbol of celebration. While I know men claim ad nauseam they don’t want gifts, cake or a fuss of any kind, this was a milestone birthday and what better way to celebrate than with his favorite type cake: lemon. 


I turned to Nigella Lawson’s How to Be A Domestic Goddess for recipe ideas. This beautiful book is chock-full of goodies like strawberry shortcake, cheese blintzes, bagels, baklava and loads of other treats that will perfume the home with smells of oven-baked love.


On page twelve of Domestic Goddess, I landed on “Damp Lemon and Almond Cake.” There was no accompanying photo, but I was feeling confident, and had all of the ingredients in my fridge and pantry, so I hopped to it while my 40-year old napped on.
Cake Time. Lets Do This.

I

 could have sworn I had more than one 2.5-oz bag of almonds in the house, but of course, during crunch time they couldn’t be found. I used one of the bags of dried almonds my friend Dick had dropped off for an Asian custard recipe. I scanned the almonds before using them. They smelled extremely sweet, almost floral, and in size they were rather runty. The recipe called for ground almonds however, so the wee little nuts were no problem. Asian-market almonds to the rescue!

Oh Look, ALMONDS

I must have been a little groggy from my mid-day snooze, because it took me an exceptionally long time to figure out which pan to use since I didn’t have an 8-inch spring-form. I chose an 8-inch Bundt pan, (the only removable bottom I had) and whipped up a mixed berry topping as I threw the thick cake batter into the oven. 
Lemon Almond Cake
Without a photo reference, I had not considered that the paste-like batter wouldn’t gain another 6 inches in the oven. So when the timer buzzed, and my cake had turned a rich golden color, but was still camped out at the bottom of the Bundt pan, I had some trouble transferring it to a plate in one piece.
Cake Fail!
I was not pleased, and my string of curses may have jostled the Mister out of bed.

I vowed that this cake would be saved. 


It was almost 7pm at this point, and I was running low on ingredients (and steam) to re-make the cake. I simply covered it with foil, and pretended like it hadn’t broken in 16 pieces. (La la la, everything’s fine!) A giant scoop of homemade ice cream would hide the disaster cake, and maybe the birthday boy wouldn’t notice that it was smashed apart, rather than cut into neat pieces.
Happy Birthday

Salvaged. Delicious. Disaster Cake.
The ice cream, berry sauce and burning candle did mask the carnage of the broken lemon cake, but by now my husband was awake and asking questions about his birthday dessert.

“What’s in this cake, it’s good, but what’s the nutty taste? …You used the almonds Dick brought us?? Those aren’t almonds! They’re apricot kernels, and unless they are cooked a certain way, they are poisonous!”


OH MY GOD. WHAT? Had I just baked an ugly, broken AND POISONOUS cake? I ran to the cupboard. Was my husband still asleep? He had to be wrong. I looked at the remaining bags, and there was no information about the almonds actually being apricot kernels, and perhaps slightly more important, no information about the toxicity level of the mysterious contents. Would this be our last meal? Arg! But it was so ugly!


Oh, Really?

After looking online, I confirmed what he had told me. Apricot kernels are toxic when eaten raw, and that’s why they are not commonly sold in America. (Thanks for the gift, Dick!) By the time all of this came up, we had both eaten our cake, ice cream, and berry sauce, and practically licked our plates clean. Worst birthday cake ever? Most likely. Thankfully though, I am not typing this from beyond the grave. We survived! So baking the kernels for 45 minutes/an hour is apparently enough to stave off the grim reaper. 

The recipe I used is below. I would make this cake again, if I had the appropriate pan, and non-poisonous almonds. But I may wait a decade or two until this birthday is a distant memory. 

Ingredients:
1 cup soft unsalted butter
¾ cup sugar
4 large eggs
1/3 cup all-purpose flour
1 1/3 cups ground almonds**
½ teaspoon almond extract
grated zest and juice from 2 lemons
8-inch spring-form pan lined with parchment or wax paper*

Preheat oven to 350 degrees

*DO NOT USE AN 8-inch BUNDT CAKE PAN. THIS WILL DESTROY YOUR CAKE.
**DO NOT USE ASIAN “ALMONDS” (Aka Apricot Kernels). THEY MAY DESTROY YOU.

Cream together the butter and sugar until almost white. Beat in the eggs, one at a time, adding a quarter of the flour after each addition. When all the eggs and flour have been incorporated, gently stir in the ground almonds, then the almond essence, lemon zest and juice.

Pour the mixture into the cake tin and bake for about 1 hour. Cover with foil after about 30 minutes, once the top is lightly browned. The cake is ready when the top is firm, and a skewer, inserted, comes out cleanish – you want dampness, but not gooey batter. Take the cake out and let it stand for 5 minutes or so in the tin. Then turn it out on a wire rack and leave till cool.

Enjoy, and good luck!
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Filed Under: Baking, Cooking, Recipe Tagged With: almonds, apricot kernels, Baking, birthday cake, cake, Cooking, craft fail, disaster cake, fail, poison, Recipe


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Comments

  1. Susan Cline - susan.cline@gmail.com says

    September 13, 2010 at 9:45 am

    Ha ha ha! This post made me smile. I also like your nail polish color.

    Reply
  2. Jessica Lynn Perkins says

    September 13, 2010 at 9:47 am

    Ha ha ha! Awesome! That is so funny! I’m glad you guys are still alive! Isn’t it the most frustrating thing when a recipe goes wrong? I hate baking sometimes! It seems like every cake I have made has come out in at least two pieces! Arhg!

    Reply
  3. MissMae says

    September 13, 2010 at 10:13 am

    omg how crazy! why does it say that they are almonds on the bag if they arent?!?!? but its really good that you didnt get sick from it!!

    Reply
  4. radmegan says

    September 13, 2010 at 11:03 am

    @ Susan, Thank you! I wish I had jotted down the name, it’s such a nice deep brown.
    @Jess, Thanks. I’m glad we are alive too! Two cakes instead of one sounds like it could be a positive thing, but I agree, it can be very frustrating!
    @ MissMae, I’m not sure why it wouldn’t say “Apricot Kernels” or “TOXIC IF EATEN RAW” Different labeling standards I suppose, at least now the four of us are safe. :)

    Reply
  5. Lauren says

    September 13, 2010 at 11:36 am

    Omg, this sounds like an awesome cake wreck. I was giggling in my cube. Made my Monday. 😀 Glad you two survived!

    Reply
  6. Anonymous says

    September 13, 2010 at 12:53 pm

    Great story, sounds like you could have been the first to go from pit poisoning…
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apricot_kernel

    Is this how bloggers go? Apricot kernels?
    Hendrix – parting/drugs
    Cobain – drugs and a gun
    Belushi – parting/drugs
    Megan – apricot kernels

    Don’t go out in your prime. You have to be so careful in the kitchen.

    Glad you can laugh about it now.

    Reply
  7. radmegan says

    September 13, 2010 at 1:28 pm

    @ Lauren, Glad to have made your Monday! :)
    @ Anonymous, Apricots are the new silent killer. Beware!

    Reply
  8. Anonymous says

    September 15, 2010 at 7:56 am

    Dear Megan:

    I enjoyed your cake and fire-making adventures. Its a pleasure to read about your life on the outside! I know sponge cakes, those made only with eggs for rising, are difficult to master, but adding that amount of even real ground almonds was bound to make the cake MUCH more obstinant! I think cakes with ground almonds are best thought of as “Italian brownies” so we won’t expect a great height.

    All the best,
    Astrid H. Nelson

    Reply
  9. radmegan says

    September 15, 2010 at 9:48 am

    Thanks for the vote of confidence Astrid H. Nelson Of Gooooodness! <3

    Reply
  10. Heather - Dollarstorecrafts.com says

    September 21, 2010 at 2:17 pm

    Aaaah! So hilariously frightening. I love how you told it. Linked up at CraftFail: http://craftfail.com/?p=1127

    Reply
  11. Jana says

    September 21, 2010 at 8:27 pm

    People used to chow down on apricot kernels all the time. You can see them a lot in old cookbooks. The problem is eating a LOT of them! http://www.ispub.com/journal/the_internet_journal_of_health/volume_9_number_2_13/article/are-apricot-kernels-toxic.html

    Reply
  12. radmegan says

    September 21, 2010 at 8:53 pm

    Thanks Heather! I Love CraftFail!! I’m honored.

    And Jana, Yea, I’m sure that baking the cup of “killer almonds” in the oven for an hour helped keep us safe, but in the heat of the moment, you never want to hear, “that was poisonous” when someone is referring to your cooking. :) A learning experience to be sure.

    Thanks for reading!

    Reply
  13. Tricky Nag says

    September 22, 2010 at 11:06 am

    Fantastic!! And I have no doubt that Nigella would still consider you a Domestic Godess. You attacked with gusto and everyone lived to talk about it.

    Reply
  14. Mod Podge Amy says

    September 25, 2010 at 2:39 pm

    Saw you at Craft Fail – this is hilarious, considering that you weren’t murdered by apricot kernels!

    Reply
  15. radmegan says

    September 25, 2010 at 3:27 pm

    Thanks Tricky Nag I do love Nigella, and will do my best to live up to my domestic goddess title again soon…

    and Mod Podge, thank you for reading! It’s good to be alive! Would have beeb far less funny if they had killed us. :^\

    Reply
  16. Lucky Girl says

    October 11, 2010 at 12:41 am

    that is really, really hilarious!! thanks for sharing!

    Reply
  17. Anonymous says

    April 4, 2011 at 7:17 pm

    Actually, I think you could still use the bundt pan, if you line it with parchment, like the recipe says to. Bottom and sides. You just need to do some creative cutting.

    Reply
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  19. Catherine @craftykaki says

    July 14, 2015 at 12:55 pm

    You tried so hard to make a delicious cake. i hate when you work hard on something and it doesn’t work out, it feels like all of that time was wasted.

    Reply
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