toria wrote:And the little lamb shaped butters seem to be a chicago or at least a midwest tradition.
sundevilpeg wrote:Lamb cakes are produced by amateur bakers from all over the US, and found in bakeries everywhere, as well (I recall seeing the pro products in the bakery department of Smitty's, a now-defunct AZ chain of grocery stores, way back in the early 70's). Regarding the homemade product, here's a fun little gallery of products from kitchens literally from coast to coast, as well as one baked in New Zealand. I did note that some are listed as being birthday cakes.
Cathy2 wrote:Their family slicing tradition was one I had never heard of, though it made a lot of sense. They eat the head and tail end last. They begin slicing at the shoulder and moving toward the tail. When stopped serving, they move the tail section up to the shoulder. This keeps the cake moist until the very end.
Rene G wrote:Cathy2 wrote:Their family slicing tradition was one I had never heard of, though it made a lot of sense. They eat the head and tail end last. They begin slicing at the shoulder and moving toward the tail. When stopped serving, they move the tail section up to the shoulder. This keeps the cake moist until the very end.
I feel sorry for the children in that family for being deprived of the highlight of Easter dinner: the beheading of the lamb cake.]
Cathy2 wrote:Rene G wrote:Cathy2 wrote:Their family slicing tradition was one I had never heard of, though it made a lot of sense. They eat the head and tail end last. They begin slicing at the shoulder and moving toward the tail. When stopped serving, they move the tail section up to the shoulder. This keeps the cake moist until the very end.
I feel sorry for the children in that family for being deprived of the highlight of Easter dinner: the beheading of the lamb cake.]
Hi,
I brought up the ceremonial beheading, which is when I learned of their method.
Until I saw it here, I never knew there was this beheading of the lamb, too. We ate the cake from the tail to the head. Tail was prized because of all the extra frosting as well as the head. Never occurred to us there was this ceremony.
Of course, I have my own twist by using red velvet cake for the interior cake instead of pure white cake. I don't know many who do what I do.![]()
Regards,
bean wrote:Nobody is able to, even remotely, do what you do, Cathy2. You are unique and we love you for it.
Rene G wrote:toria wrote:And the little lamb shaped butters seem to be a chicago or at least a midwest tradition.
Butter lambs aren't limited to Chicago or the Midwest. The Easter tradition of butter lambs (and lamb cakes) is strong in Buffalo NY. Here are a few photos from Ma Malczewski's stand, only open around Easter, at Buffalo's Broadway Market. I was there a few years ago just after Easter so I missed the lambs and Dorothy Malczewski, the butter lamb lady.
Butter lambs and lamb cakes are most commonly found in areas with a strong Eastern European (especially Polish) presence, not only in Chicago.
chicagojim wrote:The city ham was finished off on the grill due to limited over space, and was amazing. Glazed toward the end and it turned out really nicely.
Cathy2 wrote:chicagojim wrote:The city ham was finished off on the grill due to limited over space, and was amazing. Glazed toward the end and it turned out really nicely.
How did you do a large ham on the grill?
I have done lamb cake with red velvet cake. To add raspberry for a squirt, I am not that brave.
Regards,
Cathy2