Brought to you by Victoria Abbott
aka
Mary Jane and Victoria Maffini
Congrats to our lucky winner of 'the pug in the mug' from our last post: Lynda MacDonald, please email us at detect@rogers.com to claim your pugly mug. Yippee!
Speaking of luck: Are you lucky enough to have rhubarb? Whether you pick your own, buy it or use frozen, this tea cake is a delicious treat to celebrate whatever needs celebrating. We fell totally in love with its rich, tangy taste. We have a nice patch of it and are reaping the rewards.
Speaking of luck: Are you lucky enough to have rhubarb? Whether you pick your own, buy it or use frozen, this tea cake is a delicious treat to celebrate whatever needs celebrating. We fell totally in love with its rich, tangy taste. We have a nice patch of it and are reaping the rewards.
Many of you know that we moved into our renovated
ranch house two years ago. The house suited
us perfectly but the garden lay in ruins. All that survived years of abuse was
a lone peony, some wandering hostas and a vigorous rhubarb plant. We have been very happy with that rhubarb
plant and have tried a number of recipes with our harvest. Yes, we know that
rhubarb is really a vegetable, but we’ll pretend it’s a fruit and put it in
this yummy cake. We understand the cake freezes well, but haven’t had any left
over to test that. Oh well. The tea cake
is an adaptation of a recipe from Chatelaine, a Canadian magazine with
super recipes and more. Chatelaine has been the source of
many a great meal here.
Rhubarb tea-cake
Assemble your ingredients!
1/2 cup chopped pecans
Then all you have to do is:
Whisk egg with brown sugar, buttermilk, oil and vanilla in large bowl, then stir in flour mixture. Add rhubarb and pecans and stir just until combined. Scrape batter into prepared pan.
Bake in centre of oven until a cake tester inserted in centre of loaf comes out clean, 70 to 75 min. Transfer to a rack to cool in pan for 10 min.
Drizzle glaze over warm loaf, letting it run down the sides.
Enjoy with or without ice cream. Yum.
Here’s a dandy tip: Are you tired of wasting buttermilk or passing up recipes with buttermilk?
We know that there are many substitutes for buttermilk, but we love the real thing and now we'll always have it at our fingertips, because we've learned you can freeze buttermilk in half-cup measures by filling a muffin tin and freezing it. Repackage into freezer bag after 24 hours. It even looks cute!
Here’s a dandy tip: Are you tired of wasting buttermilk or passing up recipes with buttermilk?
We know that there are many substitutes for buttermilk, but we love the real thing and now we'll always have it at our fingertips, because we've learned you can freeze buttermilk in half-cup measures by filling a muffin tin and freezing it. Repackage into freezer bag after 24 hours. It even looks cute!
But wait! What else is new? Is there something else we should be celebrating?

Of course! We want to celebrate that The Wolfe Widow, third in our book collector series, will be out in less than three months, Less than 90 sleeps! It will hit the shelves and e-readers on September 2, 2014.
Beautiful tea cake for summer, Victoria/MJ, thanks for sharing this, and the brilliant tip on freezing buttermilk. The recipe and tip are keepers, just like your terrific books. Enjoy your summer weekend, may it be delicious! ~ Cleo
ReplyDeleteThanks, Cleo! I hope you have a wonderful and delicious weekend too!
DeleteI have two of your recipes on my To Make list this week.
XO
MJ
You girls are just too cute:)!! Yes, thank you for another yummy rhubarb recipe--we have an enormous plant and how many pies can I foist off on my family??
ReplyDeleteThanks, Lucy, I loved your recipe for the rhubarb pie. As I also have an enormous plant. I passed yours on to my friend as well,
DeleteHave a great day.
XOX
MJ
I just bought some rhubarb at the farmer's market yesterday---now I need to figure out how to print this recipe.
ReplyDeleteI hope the printing works. I always copy the whole recipe, paste into WORD, then delete the photos. I am always printing recipes from MLK, because they are soooo good!
DeleteHugs.
MJ
What a brilliant idea for freezing the buttermilk. I do that with tomato paste. I also did it with freshly squeezed lemon juice when i needed to peel a lot of lemons to make lemoncello.
ReplyDeleteHi Libby - we have also tried it with chicken stock (the 1/2 cups are great) and lemon, I hear you can do it with leftover white wine too (if such a thing is possible.) You make lemoncello? Look at you go!
DeleteXO
MJ
What does one do with left over evaporated milk? Can it be frozen?
DeleteI made butterscotch pudding for Father's Day (a favorite of my husband's) but the recipe only called for 1/2 cup. Now I have the rest of the can left.
I don't know, Libby, but I will ask on Facebook!
DeleteXO
MJ