The History of Fruitcake

Published 2023-12-19
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Subtitles: Jose Mendoza | IG @worldagainstjose

PHOTO CREDITS
Stollen: By Whitney - originally posted to Flickr as Stollen, CC BY 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=10214494
Christmas Cake: By James Petts from London, England - Christmas cake, CC BY-SA 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=35000651
Observation Hill Memorial Cross: By User:Barneygumble, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=42891456
Claxton Bakery Sign: By Jud McCranie - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=74532729

#tastinghistory #fruitcake

All Comments (21)
  • @johnnyblue07
    Cheap fruitcake holds a special core memory to me. I grew up in a poor family, so anything we do get for Christmas is wholly appreciated. This meant even a very dry, dense, bland-tasting fruitcake is a blessing. I didn't always have the luxury of being able to afford my school lunches, so cutting up a fruitcake no one was eating at home and spreading it out as "lunch" throughout all of January is a core memory I will never forget. Thank you whoever invented fruit cake. 🥺
  • @lellyt2372
    I am born and raised and still living in rural Ireland for context. My mother made a christmas fruit cake every year my whole life, her whole life actually (her mother died young so my mother was the person who cooked and baked for her widowed father). She would bake it in November (any earlier and my Dad would have it eaten before christmas lol) and soak it in brandy or whiskey every couple of weeks. My eldest sister got married in 1984 and my mother baked all 4 tiers of her wedding cake (fruit cake) and made the marzipan layer and my mother's cousin (who was a cake decorating genius, not professional) did the royal icing and the sugar decorations. It looked fabulous and according to my sister, tasted fabulous too. I was only 7 at the time and couldn't have regular cake (medical issues) so I don't remember the wedding cake specifically but I know my mother also baked a version for me every christmas and birthday, using my dietary restrictions, and that was magnificent.
  • @jorenbosmans8065
    I just love how this channel is not just Max telling things, but a community helping each other out when things go wrong in a recipe
  • @saraross8396
    One cake to rule them all, One cake to greet them, One cake to bring them all, And in the kitchen, eat it.
  • I love fruitcake, most people I know who have actually tried a nice moist fruit cake has liked it.
  • @toomiepal
    My mother made a fantastic fruitcake, moist with great flavor. As time went on, she made it with friends who wanted their own fruitcakes. She would bake, house and feed the fruitcakes until Christmas and then delivered them to the friends. It was a lot of effort, mostly for her. When she discovered a recipe for fruitcake cookies, she never made the cake again. Not the same at all.... Mom died in 96. My brother recently found her lost recipe and will bake it next September for Christmas. Thanks for the great episode and best wishes for the Season and the coming year!
  • @lindacgrace2973
    My mother baked fruit cake. She used honey to temper the molasses, and never used citron (as we all loathed it) she used finely chopped dried apricots, golden currants, and raisins. Also, she made something she called "hard sauce" which was butter and brandy with sugar, so it was quite syrupy, and doused the cake after poking it with skewers every morning and night or a week. They were lovely cakes.
  • @tthappyrock368
    A fruit cake story: Mom made a fruit cake for my uncle one Christmas. She soaked it in peach brandy for months before sending it to him. My uncle set the cake on the dining table to serve after dinner. Everyone had gone out into the living room to socialize before dessert. After awhile, one of the cats came in--walking sideways. Apparently, it really enjoyed the fruitcake!
  • @hardcode57
    It's still very common as a wedding cake in the UK, though becoming less so. One of the reasons for its persistence is that its longevity permits another wedding tradition: the couple would send a piece to everyone who had sent a present but were unable to attend.
  • @revbobuk
    Haven't read all the comments, so someone else may already have said - a tradition in the UK is to eat Christmas (fruit)cake with a hunk of cheese - traditionally Wensleydale, but I've always preferred Stilton with mine. And a glass of port. I'd far rather have fruitcake than sponge cake anyday, especially those ghastly sponge cakes covered in vast quantities of sugary frosting.
  • @Helli__
    German "Stollen", especially the "Dresdner Christstollen" (variant from Dresden) is very very popular in Germany during Christmas time. It's also made with raisins, candied orange peel, almonds, several spices and lots of butter. After baking it is covered in a thick layer of powdered sugar. It's usually prepared around mid november, then wrapped in tinfoil it should sit in the fridge until Christmas days. It's delicious!
  • My grandmother always prepared the dried fruit by "pickling" it in brandy in a pickling jar for several weeks before making the cake. The liquor left in the jar was brushed onto the finished cakes. I think the double alcohol whammy is what made her cakes so popular!
  • @enlightened1ne
    Outside of the US, fruitcake still remains a standard wedding cake and is still pretty widely eaten. (Said as an Australian)
  • @ad.ke.7224
    I'm from the southwest of Germany. My grandmother made "Birnenbrot" - pear bread - every year for the holidays. Dried pears are the basic fruit of the bread along with other fruits like dates, figs, plums, plus hazelnuts and walnuts. It's baked like a bread in form of a loaf. I try to carry on the tradition
  • @lapolie
    I made this cake yesterday, i can tell you that this is the best and tastiest thing that i have ever baked. The spices give it such a deep and wintery flavor, almost reminding me of Dutch kruidkoek. The molasses makes it super caramelly and the edges of the cake that are a bit darker? Crunchy and chewy heaven. Using the brandy over the cake gives really gives it a little burn in the throat. Absolute perfection, 10/10
  • My dad, when he was stationed in Korea, was very popular with his fellow soldiers because his aunt would send him a fruitcake--commercially purchased--into which she had slowly added an entire bottle of rum and let it sit to age in a closet for six months before sending. Heh. Perhaps something to try with your own second loaf, and then feature on DRINKING History. Deborah L. Davitt
  • @omiai
    The recipe we have (which max might be interested to know is originally the recipe for the Queen of the UKs Christmas cake, I think maybe her wedding cake too) we soak all the dried fruit in booze for a day or two, so although the cake itself is still kind of dry, the fruit is nice and plump
  • @adamwee382
    0:46 the hard tack meme is your greatest contribution to humanity and I thank you for it.
  • @EricHarris2309
    I grew up off the grid, and baking the holiday fruitcakes in our wood cook stove was the highlight of the season. We did it in November and aged them. My family was religious, so no rum, but we put simple syrup on them and wrapped them up tight in plastic and put them in a cool place to sit it out until the holidays.