Our Journey in a Cake






We traveled far away from home. I came from New England. Ray journeyed from Santa Fe. We'd not seen each other for months and had the great fortune of staging a reunion in the most glorious of tropical locations accompanied by family and friends.
We ate and laughed and sunned.

And what I found, as I often do when half way around the world from home, that I can always find a culinary lodestone that can connect a glorious, tiny tropical island in the caribbean to my home in the cold, green mountains of New England.
Johnnycakes, or journey cakes, are an ancient North American staple. I like to think of them as reality's equivalent of the Ring Trilogy's Elven flatbread Lembas. It's a delicious leavened treat that travels beautifully on a long slog. It's rare to find a johnnycake on a menu these days, the rare exception is in the caribbean and New England.
local spiny lobster and crawfish!
I thank Marcia, an Anguillan chef and culinary magician, for bringing journeycakes back to my table in the north country.

North Country Johnnycakes
INGREDIENTS
2 1/2 cups AP flour1/2 cup cornmeal2 tablespoons maple sugar1 teaspoon white pepper2 teaspoons sea salt2 tablespoons baking powder3 tablespoons cold butter cut into small pieces1 1/4 cups water
Extra cornmeal for forming the cakes.

PROCEDURE
In a food processor, pulse together dry ingredients until just combined.
Add cold bits of butter, pulsing until the butter is incorporated and starts to look like cornmeal.

The dough will be sticky, sprinkle a layer of cornmeal on a plate. Scoop cornmeal into small golfball sized blobs. Cover the blog with a small amount of cornmeal and roll into a uniform ball in your hand. Flatten the dough.



Published on October 18, 2010 08:51
No comments have been added yet.
Gesine Bullock-Prado's Blog
- Gesine Bullock-Prado's profile
- 69 followers
Gesine Bullock-Prado isn't a Goodreads Author
(yet),
but they
do have a blog,
so here are some recent posts imported from
their feed.
