Today would
have been my father’s 99th birthday, had he not died in 2004. In his memory, I’m baking fruit cake, despite
the fact that everybody says they hate fruit cake.
I’m using my mother’s recipe as an inspiration. That’s her well-used recipe index card
above. She died in 1995, nine years
before my father, leaving several fruitcakes in the freezer. I inherited one of them, still wrapped in its
Christmas wrapping paper shroud, in December 2004. It came to a sad end in the Tiergarten, well, maybe not
sad. I like to think positively about
the fate of that last fruitcake. But you be the judge.
![]() |
Weeping Willow and Japanese Maples in the
Tiergarten
|
As
fruitcakes go, mine was very well-traveled.
In early 2005, it was shipped overseas in a container along with
furniture, housewares, Christmas ornaments, photographs, other emotionally-charged
memorabilia, and odd whatnot's from my parents’ house in New Jersey to our house
in Italy. I imagine the fruitcake defrosted
en route somewhere while crossing the
Atlantic. Because of this
temperature-non-controlled journey, I was always afraid to eat it, yet I
couldn’t bring myself to just throw it away.
So it remained re-frozen and untouched in our freezer in Tuscany for
five years. Then in July 2009, the last
fruitcake traveled again, this time via a moving van to Berlin, during which trip
it must have defrosted yet again, possibly somewhere outside of Leipzig. But back into a new freezer it went on its arrival
in Berlin, where it stayed until the winter of 2010.
![]() |
Tiergarten in the Fall
|
One very cold
afternoon (was it February?), while pawing through the freezer in search of
something, I saw the red, green, and gold Christmas paper-wrapped rectangular
loaf. Two options stared back at
me. One, I could throw caution to the
wind and brave death or a severe case of the runs: I could let it thaw, unwrap it, cut a slice, and
eat it.
Or, I could
chicken out, be cautious, and figure out a way to dispose of it in a dignified manner
befitting its sentimental origins, if not its longevity. I chose Door Number Two.
![]() |
Lake in the Tiergarten
|
…which led
to the Tiergarten. One of the tricks my husband used to lure me from
Tuscany to Berlin was the Tiergarten,
a vast public park criss-crossed with canals, ponds, meadows, winding paths, formal
flower gardens, imposing statuary of German cultural figures, charming stone
bridges, and stands of mature trees planted after the war. I love to walk and after we moved here, I
went into the Tiergarten often. One of my favorite spots is Am Neuen See, a small lake in the heart
of the Tiergarten frequented by
ducks, blue heron, and other assorted waterfowl.
With the
freezer door still open, I gently lifted the fruitcake out of its cryogenic home and
carefully unwrapped it as if it were an Egyptian mummy. I ceremoniously folded its
Christmas shroud only to reveal a second protective layer--an inner aluminum
foil protective wrapping. With the heavy
loaf in hand, hidden in a tote bag, I headed for Am Neuen See.
![]() |
Tiergarten in Winter Light
|
The lake
was frozen over with ice that glared back at me in a slate gray indifference.
Here and there were white scuffs on the surface where an animal had tread and
left scrapings like those from a skater’s blade. Near the
shore broken black branches and dried reeds that grew at the water’s edge
emerged from the depths. Thankfully, I
saw no bottles or cans, no evidence of human desecration. But all that was about to change.
![]() |
Blue Heron Am Neuen See
|
I solemnly
removed the aluminum foil. I stepped as
close as I dared to the edge of the frozen lake. I looked around and saw no one. Just me and the last fruitcake. Taking a deep breath and feeling a
combination of shame and cowardice, I heaved the fruitcake as far across the
lake as I could. It hit the ice, bounced,
did a triple Axel, skidded a bit, and finally slid to a resting stop about 50 meters
from where I stood. I felt ambivalent,
but at least I hadn’t just “thrown it away.”
![]() |
My Fruit Cake Ingredients
|
You see, my plan was
that hungry birds wintering in the Tiergarten or who knows, maybe even a fox or a marten, would find my mother’s last fruitcake
and consume it hungrily, adding a little meat to their bones. And it was also my fervent hope that any such
consumption would not lead to botulism or worse. I didn't return until Spring to find out, and by that time, the fruitcake was nowhere to be seen. Had it been eaten? Sunk to the bottom of the lake when it thawed? I'll never know.
That’s my
fruitcake confession.
![]() |
Before
|
In honor of my parents’
memory, at this time of the year when absence of family pierces particularly
sharply, and perhaps to expiate guilt, I’m making my mother’s fruitcake.
And I don’t care that everybody hates fruitcake. Well, I care just a little, which is why I
decided to put my own stamp on it. Truth
be told, while my mother’s fruitcake was not the least bit dry (a common
complaint among fruitcake haters), I always thought hers was a little too
sweet, so I’m substituting dried cranberries for her red and green candied
cherries, and I’m adding dates, citron, and a little candied ginger. The candied pineapple, the walnuts, and the white and red
raisins stay. And, in a rash departure from my mother's recipe, I soaked all the fruit in a little brandy! Judging by the wine (?) stains on the recipe index card, I think my mother would have approved.
![]() |
After
|
Fruitcake. You either love it or you hate it. I loved my mother('s), so I made it.
Keep it
real!
Marilyn









I love this post the most. Xo
ReplyDeleteI'm soooo glad! Merry Christmas to you, Garr, E, and Dash!
DeleteQuel coincidence?? I'm making fruitcake today, the ne plus ultra of fruitcakes. 20 kinds of fruit, 3 kinds of peel, candied angelica and ginger, all soaked overnight in brandy; 6 kinds of nuts; ginger, cinnamon, and mace. They will be anointed with Cointreau on all sides after baking and wrapped up to mature for a few days. SO glad you're doing this, but I wish we could do it together. I loved searching for fruits at the German, Polish, Middle Eastern, Mexican groceries. This year I found mystery fruit at the Cremeria and raisins as big as my thumb at the Middle Eastern place. I love this kind of shopping.
ReplyDeleteMe too! It would have been almost as much fun as baking the Ayatollah Christmas Blasphemy Cookies.
DeleteMy grandmother's recipe soaks the candied fruit and later douses the finished product with Jack Daniels. I've made it a few times and love it...but it's a lot of work, and not least is finding the black walnuts (English walnuts just don't cut it).
ReplyDeleteJack Daniels! Well, yee haw! That'll light up a smile.
DeleteI go back to the lake in the Tiergarten several times a year. But so far no fruitcake sightings. I know it will emerge, like something out of the Blue Lagoon.
ReplyDeleteWhen fruit cakes fly.
DeleteMarilyn,I went shopping today for the ingredients to "Emma's fruit cake." I have made it most Christmas's. Like you said either people love it or not and I have witnessed people taking the candied fruit and hiding it in the napkin. I think the apple sauce makes it moist . Your comments brought me to years, Christmas joy to you and Steve. We will miss spending this holiday with both of you. Love & kisses, Lynn and Hank
ReplyDeleteHiding the candied fruit in their napkins! So many citron haters out there! Guess what. I screwed up the metric conversion and used TWICE the amount of butter as called for in my mother’s recipe. Definitely not a dry fruit cake! And quite the calorie bomb. Pretty darn tasty though. How did Aunt Emma’s turn out?
DeleteWhat a wonderful blog post! I hope the wildlife enjoyed the dried fruit in the loaf! You have a knack for bringing things to life when reading!
ReplyDeleteThank you, darlin’!
DeleteHold my Egg Nog for just a second.... I love a good fruit cake, P&L used to get them from some bakery in Texas. To me that was just about the best part of Christmas....although pecan pie and ice cream was neck and neck....
ReplyDeletePecan pie!
Delete