The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 107

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1967, Side 107
THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN 105 filled with whipped cream. These were all good with coffee, which is the na- tional Icelandic and Icelandic-Can- adian beverage. I’m sure thalt it must have been an Icelander who invented the coffee break, though I have no proof. But the greatest delicacy of all is also what is probably the best known Icelandic specialty—vinarterta. This cake is, of course, based on the Torte principle. In fact, the name vinar does not mean wine but a cor- ruption of the word Vienna. It is a Viennese Torte, but the use of dried fruit makes it peculiarly Icelandic. Vinarterta (Icelandic Cake) Cream together 1 cup butter and 1 Ys cups sugar. Beat in 3 eggs, % cup miilk, 1 teaspoon each of almond and vanilla extract, 3 (teaspoons baking powder, and just enough sifted flour to make a dough that can be handled, almost like a cooky dough. Be careful not to use too much flour. Roll the dough out thin and cut it in 8-inch circles. Fit the rounds into 8-inch cake pans. Bake the rounds in a moderate oven (350° F.) for 10 to 15 minutes. Watch care- fully. The cake should be light in color. You should be able to make 11 layers, enough to make a 5-layer and a 6-layer cake. Cool the layers before filling them. Prune Filling Cook 2 pounds prunes in water to cover until they are soft and the wa- ter is almost absorbed and let them cool. Remove the stones and put the prunes through a meat grinder. Put the prunes in a pan, add 2Yz cups sugar and 1 teaspoon finely ground carda- mom seed, and heat gently, striring oc- casionally and being careful not to let the mixlture burn. Cool the filling and spread the cake layers, making, as suggested, 2 cakes. Frosting is optional, but a plain vanilla icing does paint the lily nicely. Gramma used to cut a circle the size of a tumbler out of the center of all her cakes and slice the wheel. My brother always got (the circle while the rest of us ate the spokes. But she used to save the turnovers for me: bits of leftover pastry turned over sugared blueberries or apples. Ponnukokkur, cold waferlike pancakes sprinkled with brown sugar and rolled up; rosettes, flower-shaped delicacies made with a timbale iron, covered with whipped cream and maybe a dab of strawberry jam: these I remember too, along with more common treats like the crumbly rich date bar that I learned, when I grew up, to call matrimonial cake. Here are the pancakes of my mem- ory. Ponnukokur (Icelandic Pancakes) Beat 2 eggs, add 3 tablespoon sugar. Yz teaspoon each of salt and grated nujtmeg, and % cup milk. Beat well. Sift together 2 cups sifted flour, 14 tea- spoon baking soda, and 1 teaspoon baking powder and add alternately with 1% cups milk. Rub a small amount of butter on the bottom of a frying pan or, better yet, use a griddle Ithat requires no fat. Make the pan- cakes the diameter desired; if they are 4 or 5 inches across they roll up nicely. Serve cold, sprinkled with brown sugar. My grandmother used to do a baked
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The Icelandic Canadian

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