All hail the queen of cake
Maida Heatter鈥檚 cookbook is a keeper thanks to the decadent recipes, including zingy聽gingerful biscotti and聽ethereal orange puff cake.
Maida Heatter鈥檚 cookbook is a keeper thanks to the decadent recipes, including zingy聽gingerful biscotti and聽ethereal orange puff cake.
I鈥檓 an avid home baker, self-taught 鈥 though not really: Maida Heatter was my teacher. Beginning in the mid-1970s and into the 1990s, she was to baking what Craig Claiborne was to cooking: first stop on a recipe search.聽
My mother didn鈥檛 bake (too fattening) and my grandmother was pretty much a one-trick pony (amazingly dainty crescent-shaped rugelach). I, on the other hand, derive a perhaps deluded sense of well-being from having fresh home-baked cookies on hand at all times.聽
Heatter鈥檚 prolific output of classic titles 鈥 鈥淕reat Desserts,鈥 鈥淕reat Cookies,鈥 鈥淕reat Chocolate Desserts,鈥 鈥淣ew Greats,鈥 鈥淕reat American Desserts,鈥 and 鈥淏est Dessert Book Ever鈥 鈥 assured that our taste buds would never atrophy from boredom.
Most of these books have been out of print for years, which makes 鈥淗appiness Is Baking,鈥 a greatest hits collection of more than 100 favorite recipes, cause for celebration. It鈥檚 high time to introduce the queen of cake, as Saveur magazine dubbed her, to a new generation of bakers. Heatter, now a centenarian, reminds us in her introduction that baking cookies is a great way to relax. 聽
Before there were food blogs and online comments, my friends and I greeted each new Maida Heatter book of treats with an avidity usually reserved for shoe sales.聽
We baked and baked and then compared notes over phones that were still tethered to kitchen walls. Heatter extols us to mark up cookbooks like textbooks. My original editions are adorned with penciled comments like 鈥淧eggy鈥檚 favorite鈥 (Budapest coffee cake) and 鈥淪uperb!鈥 (spicy sponge roll, still one of my holiday staples).
Heatter鈥檚 instructions are meticulous and fool-proof, down to how to line a pan with aluminum foil. But it鈥檚 her enthusiastic, texture-specific descriptions of the results you can expect if you follow her recipes to a T that inspired a whole generation of bakers to pull out their measuring cups.聽
Who can resist yet another brownie recipe (Palm Beach brownies) when they鈥檙e introduced as 鈥渢he biggest, thickest, gooiest, chewiest, darkest, sweetest, mostest-of-the-most chocolate bars with an almost wet middle and crisp-crunchy top鈥?聽
I鈥檓 happy to report that many of my go-to recipes, including gingerful biscotti and chocolate mousse torte, have made the cut for her new collection.聽
The book is prefaced by a brief tribute by Dorie Greenspan, a Heatter prot茅g茅e. It has an updated, contemporary look, with bold, bright illustrations by Alice Oehr. But rest assured that none of the recipes have been tampered with 鈥 not even to translate measurements into weights (which would have been nice), or to increase the salt to accommodate modern tastes.
You won鈥檛 want to change a thing about gingerful biscotti, which zing with an inspired combination of crystallized ginger, ground ginger, white pepper, mustard powder, cinnamon, and cloves. But you may quibble with her call to mix dry and wet ingredients with a spatula. I can assure you that a stand mixer produces excellent results with greater ease 鈥 although I wonder whether the physical exertion plays a role in Heatter鈥檚 longevity.聽
The publication of this retrospective inspired me to try a recipe I鈥檝e eyed over the years but always considered too time-consuming: orange puff cake. 聽
Heatter writes that she made it at least once a week for her father. Nice daughter. To prepare this orange-zested chiffon cake as instructed 鈥 hand-whisking 10 egg whites in a wide shallow platter or bowl 鈥 is a labor of love. I did it, though it required my husband鈥檚 help, especially with the step that calls for dribbling a thin stream of scalding sugar syrup into the beaten whites while continuing to hand-whisk.聽
Was it worth the trouble? The cake was ethereal. Like most of the recipes in this book, it鈥檚 a keeper. Though next time, I鈥檒l be using a stand mixer.
鈥 Heller McAlpin reviewed fiction and nonfiction for former Books Editor Marjorie Kehe for years before they discovered a shared passion for baking. With Marjorie鈥檚 encouragement, she began writing cookbook roundups in 2011.聽