Skip to main content

Christmas Countdown Local 2022 #16 - Memories of Cake




Here is a flashback .... I wrote the following in 2015 ... 

Each year, I try to blog a visual advent calendar . This year, my mother turned 90 and I am dedicating this series of blog posts to her because this year, it's all about Christmas Cake, and of course I am starting off with my mother's much loved Christmas Cake - moist, delicious and  intoxicatingly rich. 

For more years than I can remember ( probably about 40 years) , my mother has been sending me Christmas cakes, so I don't remember ever making a cake for Christmas! You might think that this is not such a significant gesture, but my mother lives  interstate 1593 km ( 990 miles) away, so she has had to depend on Australia Post or adding to the luggage allowance of visiting relatives.The longest distance Christmas cakes have had to be sent is when we were living in Bombala, NSW  which is 2393 km (1486 miles) away from Townsville, Queensland. Throughout the years, it has never been just one cake - there is always one for my husband's family Christmas celebration as well , and usually another spare!

Many people have asked my mother for this recipe, but many many years ago, she promised a friend that she would not  distribute this cake recipe to others and she has kept her word.  This has its drawbacks, as Mum then has to make many cakes as we dare not try to replicate this  recipe although I think some of us have tried to watch and remember the ingredients and method. It is a dried fruit laden boiled cake.  I personally think the secret of this beautiful cake is the "feeding" of the cake - the process of adding alcohol regularly to the cooked cake over a month or so.  Nothing like some good quality brandy to add that extra  flavour! Perhaps rum or even sherry would also suffice, but whatever the alcohol, it seems to add another dimension of  richness.

You may be wondering why I have  revisited a blog post from 2015 and why I  have missed a few days in my Christmas Countdown series ... the reason is my dear mum passed away last Friday, 16 December 2022.  My mother was an independent,  hard working, generous, resilient , and thoughtful woman who at the age of 97 enjoyed a full life and merely slipped away in her sleep. Of course, I am very sad but I am also grateful for all that she did and achieved. She was a successful business woman, talented craftswoman, loyal friend and loving and  caring parent, grandparent and great grandparent.  One of Mum's favourite times of the year was Christmas . She loved decorating, making handmade ornaments and gifts and baking Christmas cakes. 

This year is the first year for as long as I can remember that Mum did not bake... earlier this year, she moved to a full time care facility. In honour of my mother, I baked Christmas cakes.... she finally gave me an outline of a recipe. I made the cakes last month - one was cut for  my husband's family Christmas a couple of weeks ago  and served at a family event in local Lambton Park. It wasn't exactly the same , but was very close - one of the last conversations I had with her was about Christmas cake - I said mine was good but not as good as hers, and she reassured me that it would be fine and everyone would enjoy it. 

It will be a special but poignant moment when we cut the second cake on Christmas Day and toast my mother and her wonderful life well-lived. 



 

Comments

  1. Sincere condolences, Wilma. What a wonderful long life your mother lived. Thinking of you.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. thank you Val - yes Mum enjoyed a full productive life and her strong independent nature was an example for us all.

      Delete

Post a Comment

Thanks for reading my blog and please share your thoughts about my blog post by leaving a comment.Your comment won't appear immediately as comments are verified before publication in an effort to reduce the amount of spam appearing. Anonymous comments will not be published.

Popular posts from this blog

Fish and Sticks : Art Dolls

This week I've been working on fish and sticks ....  The sticks are the message stick art dolls which were very popular, attracting some attention and a few orders at the Wise Women exhibition. Each of the message stick dolls are from the Wise Women series, each with her own personality and  message of wisdom, handwritten on a handmade timber tag. I gather the sticks during my walks around my neighbourhood and the tags are made from special bits of timber, some collected by me or  my husband or from off cuts gifted to us  from another doll making friend whose husband makes bagpipes. These dolls start off very simply with a wrap around a stick, in the general shape of a body. 'Naked" message stick dolls - strips of wadding wrapped around found sticks.   Then I usually wrap other layers of fabric, wool, and/or fibres, over which I do some simple embroidery. I sculpt  or mould small face masks for these dolls. I really like using "sari ribbon" as wrapping str

May I Present Mrs Chalumeau...

Finally Mrs Chalumeau takes a bow …She is a Pearly Queen … 695 buttons on the doll and 10 on the journal.(I think – could be more). I would like to thank Paula from Antiques and Collectables here in Hamilton, Newcastle and Raku Buttons ETSY seller for supplying me with about 500 of the vintage mother of pearl buttons, and the rest I had in my stash. I think they look great on my pearly queen, but I am truly tired of sewing on buttons. It made me think however, how many buttons must be on the elaborate clothes of the real pearly Kings and Queens! I drew my inspiration from the lovely lady pictured here, and the following description from Wikipedia. ... A Pearly King ( feminine form Pearly Queen) is a person dressed in a traditional Cockney costume covered in mother-of-pearl buttons. These costumes were treasured heirlooms, hand made and sometimes representing much of a family's wealth. .... This doll is all cloth – a little different from most of my other dolls which generally h

Countdown to Christmas 20 - Fruitcake song!

There are many songs about fruit cakes  - not all of them referring to the Christmas cake we know and love.It is really surprising to learn via Google that there are 89 listed songs with references to Christmas cake or fruit cake - not all of them complimentary.   Probably one of the most famous folk songs about Christmas cake is Miss Fogarty's  Christmas Cake (a favourite sung by The Irish Rovers).  This first recorded comical Christmas song was written by C Frank Horn in 1883 in Pennsylania, as a variation of an Irish folk song, 'Miss Mulligan's Christmas Cake' . The chorus might give you the hint that Miss Fogarty's cake was not for the faint hearted or those who suffered from a weak stomach.    Chorus : There were plums and prunes and cherries, There were citrons and raisins and cinnamon, too There was nutmeg, cloves and berries And a crust that was nailed on with glue There were caraway seeds in abundance Such that work up