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Shortcake perfection: Summer and birthdays call for a more refined strawberry cream cake - Dallas County News

Strawberry shortcake will never change. Why should it? The perfectly balanced trifecta of strawberries, cream and cake make it hard to improve, and next to impossible to screw up. I should know. It’s the first cake I mastered. It’s also the official cake of my birthday season and a sharp, creamy highlight of summer.

My first strawberry shortcake recipe employed a Sara Lee All Butter Pound Cake. I sliced the rectangular loaf in half along a horizontal plane into top and bottom layers, plastered them with vanilla whipped cream and strawberry slices, and stacked them. It was a great starter recipe for a 9-year-old boy. The hardest part was waiting for the frozen Sara Lee to thaw.

My memory of that recipe has improved with age, even though I haven’t made or eaten a Sara Lee pound cake in four decades. So as part of my 50th birthday festivities, I staged a strawberry shortcake showdown: Sara Lee vs. what I’ve learned since.

Given the delicate architecture of strawberry shortcake, any adjustments must be subtle. Every addition must be in support of the existing three pillars: strawberries, cream, cake. Thus, I take a redundancy-based approach, only adding flavors similar to what is already there.

My friend Sue adds yogurt to her whipped cream, which is redundant in terms of both tartness and creaminess. Years back she used yogurt instead of whipped cream, a borderline violation for which her kids would eventually bust her.

“As the kids got older and wiser they began demanding whipped cream, so now we use 50/50 full fat yogurt and whipped cream,” she says.
Dessert after lunch is part of the daily bargain on Sue’s farm, and if dessert is strawberry shortcake that day she mixes the cake batter while the oven preheats and gets it in before starting to fix lunch. No butter or eggs and hardly any sugar, her cake is a far cry from Sara Lee’s, but the kids never corrected her on that one, Sue says. And it takes less time to bake than a Sara Lee does to thaw.

The other redundancies to my recipe include lemon, which adds a little sweetness, a lot of tang, and an aroma that dances gingerly with vanilla. I could have added the lemon to the pound cake, but decided to put it in the already sweet and tangy strawberry sauce, and put little chunks of tart rhubarb, rolled in sugar, into the cake. I also replaced the milk in Sue’s cake recipe with buttermilk, for yet another shade of acid.

The Sara Lee version looked sharp. The smooth, almost golden pound cake juxtaposed the stately whipped cream, stiffer without yogurt, keeping everything perfectly in place. Eating it was a nostalgic experience. But with a life of experience behind me now, the Sara Lee was, alas, plain Jane. It was stiff, and the flavors stayed separate when they should have mixed.

My relatively slovenly looking homemade version, with buttermilk rhubarb cake and lemon strawberry sauce, came together like a strawberry shortcake should. The flavors contrasted one another brilliantly, and the textures created a place of divine creamy sogginess that you could fall into forever, if only your belly could handle it. And while the cake took on moisture, it didn’t wilt under the creamy berry infusion. It held its shape, and even retained a measure of crumbliness.

Since my new formulation is messier and harder to contain than the original Sara Lee, I served it as parfait, in glasses. Parfait happens to mean “perfect” in French, and strawberry shortcake parfait turns out to be the perfect way to combine the three pillars of shortcake, with every component mixing perfectly in each bite. It’s the parfait solution, if you’ll excuse my French, and a reminder that with a little redundancy, you can teach an old recipe new tricks.

Buttermilk Rhubarb Cake
Serves 4-8
• 2 cups flour
• ½ teaspoon cream of tartar
• 4 teaspoons baking powder
• 2 tablespoons sugar
• ½ teaspoon salt
• 1⅓cups buttermilk
• ½ cup oil (I use a mild, fruity olive oil)
• 2 more tablespoons sugar (redundancy is my friend)
• 1-2 sticks of rhubarb, peeled, sliced into 1/4–inch thick discs (about 1/3 cup)

Combine and mix dry ingredients except the second bit of sugar. Mix buttermilk and oil and, before they separate, immediately add them to the dry ingredients. Toss the rhubarb slices in the second sugar and add it to the mix, and stir it all together. Add to a 9x5-inch loaf pan. Bake at 375 degrees F, checking periodically, for about 45 minutes or until a knife comes out clean.

Whipped Cream
• 1 pint heavy cream
• ¼ cup full fat yogurt
• 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
• 1 tablespoon sugar
Whip the cream. Add the vanilla, sugar and yogurt and gently stir.

Strawberries
• 1 pound fresh strawberries, sliced
• 3 tablespoons sugar (more to taste)
• Juice of 1 lemon (about 4 tablespoons)

Add the sugar and lemon juice to a pan and stir to dissolve the sugar. Add the strawberries and turn the heat to medium, stirring steadily once it starts simmering. Cook for about 10 minutes, or until the strawberries fully soften.

Assembling the parfait
When the cake has cooled, cut it into 1 inch cubes. Add layers to your parfait cup in this order: cream, cubes of cake, sauce. Add layers until the cups are full.

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