This is another family holiday standard and can be prepared a day or two ahead. Use a jello mold or just make and serve in a casserole 9x5 dish. This recipe is usually doubled for large family gatherings and is good with leftovers.
Ingredients
2 small boxes of orange Jello
1 can whole cranberry sauce (Mana always uses fresh cranberries and cooks them down to make her own cranberry sauce)
1 small can crushed pineapple in it's own juice
Sugar to taste (about 1/4 c)
Grated rind of 2 large naval oranges
Juice of 2 oranges
1/2 c. chopped pecans
Directions
Mix Jello in 2 c. hot water, stirring to dissolve and let this cool thoroughly but not set
Once the Jello is cook, add the other ingredients and stir together.
Pour into Jello mold or dish it will be served in. Refrigerate.
Note: This is good to prepare a couple of days before you need it. Keep covered in the frig.
These are many of Mana's favorite traditional recipes with additions from some of her kids who learned to cook by her side. I've personally added quite a few but they are tried and true delicious recipes. I learned to cook from my mom and since she worked, I cooked or at least helped with many of the family meals. I've been told I'm a good cook so I owe that to her. There are a few stories and memories interwoven.
Showing posts with label Grandma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grandma. Show all posts
Grandma Smith's Luscious Pound Cake
Grandma Smith made grandpa a pound cake every Saturday which he ate all week.
Set out 1/2 lb unsalted butter to soften
1/2 c. Oleo margerine
3 c. Plain flour (measure sifting)
1/2 t. Baking powder
3 c. Sugar with a dash of salt
5 eggs (room temperature)
1 c. Sweet milk (room temperature)
1 t. Vanilla
1 t. Lemon flavor, or zest from one lemon (not the juice) a(opt.)
Bake at 300° for 1 hr. Then turn down to 275° and cook 20-30 minutes more.
Set out 1/2 lb unsalted butter to soften
1/2 c. Oleo margerine
3 c. Plain flour (measure sifting)
1/2 t. Baking powder
3 c. Sugar with a dash of salt
5 eggs (room temperature)
1 c. Sweet milk (room temperature)
1 t. Vanilla
1 t. Lemon flavor, or zest from one lemon (not the juice) a(opt.)
- Directions: Cream butter, margarine and sugar then add eggs one at a time.
- Alternate dry with wet ingredients, beginning and ending with dry.
- Add vanilla and lemon flavor last.
- Pound cake must be cooked in a greased and floured tube pan (so it has a hole in the center).
Bake at 300° for 1 hr. Then turn down to 275° and cook 20-30 minutes more.
Don't open and close oven door or Bang around causing vibrations or cake could "fall"... but even if it does, it's still good!
Stick a skewer in it to see if it's done. Grandma would pull a long straw from hey broom to use. Remove and set on a cooler rack for 10 minutes then carefully turn over onto track to cool thoroughly. Hold your socks, because you're not going to believe how yummy this is!
Grandma Smith's Moravian Cookies


These cookies are so tantalizingly good. You have to eat them slow and enjoy the crisp, thin, spicy goodness. Great with a hot cup of tea.
Moravian Cookies
Ingredients
- 1 quart molasses
- ¾ pound brown sugar
- ¾ pound shortening
- 2 Tbsp ground cloves
- 2 Tbsp ground ginger
- 2 Tbsp ground cinnamon
- 2 Tbsp baking soda
- 3 ¼ pounds flour
Directions
1 In a heavy-bottomed saucepan, heat the molasses, brown sugar, spices, and shortening over medium heat until the shortening is melted and the mixture is uniform. Do not let it scorch!
2 Add the baking soda and mix well until it is dissolved. The mixture will be very foamy. Remove from the heat, pour into a large, heat-proof mixing bowl, and let cool to room temperature.
3 When cool, add the flour. Mix until the flour is fully incorporated, roll into a ball, wrap tightly in plastic wrap, and refrigerate overnight.
4 The next day remove the dough from the refrigerator, preheat the oven to 325 F, and prepare a large cutting board or countertop by sprinkling liberally with flour (flour your rolling pin too). Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper. Cut off a fist-sized chunk of the dough and return the rest of the dough to the refrigerator while you work. At this point it is important to work quickly while the dough is still cool. Roll the dough until it is uniformly thin – ¼ to ⅛ of inch thick; don’t be afraid to use more flour to prevent the dough from sticking to the board or the rolling pin. Cut out the cookies using whatever shape cookie cutter you wish, gently brush off any excess flour with a pastry brush, and place on the parchment-lined cookie sheet (a thin spatula will help to move the cookies). Bake at 325 F until barely browned around the edges, 7-10 minutes.
5 Repeat the process with the remaining dough until all the cookies have been baked, remembering to work quickly and keep the dough chilled. The dough keeps quite well in the freezer, so you can roll out the sheets and freeze them for up to 3 months for future use. Just remove from the freezer and let rest at room temperature for 5-10 minutes before cutting; bake as directed above.
Here I am in Leaksville as a little tyke with grandpa Smith (left),
daddy (right) and my great-grandparents on the porch. My great-grandpa was Lumbee Indian (tribe particular to North Carolina).
Grandma Smith (Mary Sue)
Grandma loved to fish!
Heirloom Grandma Smith's Pound Cake
Grandma Smith made a pound cake every week for Grandpa and he'd eat it all week. I'm not a big cake lover, more of a pie girl, but Grandma's buttery, dense pound cake makes me weak in the knees. I dare not make it because it's just that good! When she or my mom made it, we children always had to tread lightly in the house, not making jarring vibrations or slamming doors that could "make the cake fall." Still don't understand that one. You shouldn't open the door of the oven until the cake is more than halfway baked. And even then, it's problematic if you keep opening the oven door every couple of minutes to check progress. Opening the oven door, you can interrupt the reactions that are kick-started by heat, which cause a cake to rise correctly. Falling means the middle of the cake kind of collapses in the middle because the air pockets collapse and the dense batter falls in. It's a chemical reaction. As the cake cooks, air bubbles are formed and existing air bubbles expand, as any substance does when it's heated. A cake that has fallen in the middle will be dense and kind of doughy in the middle and obviously doesn't look to great. Never stopped us from eating it though. An improperly calibrated oven is another falling hazard so invest in an oven thermometer if you take your baking seriously. Temperature is important. (Are you starting to think maybe you'll just buy a cake mix? DON'T! I'm telling you, this is totally worth it!)
Ingredients:
1/2 lb. country butter (don't you dare use margarine!)
1/2 c. shortening
3 c. granulated sugar
1 t. vanilla extract
1 t. lemon extract or 2 t. Lemon zest
3 c. sifted flour (I use cake flour)
1/2 t. baking powder
pinch of salt
1 c. milk (room temp)
6 eggs (room temp)
Directions:
Cream butter, shortening, sugar until light and fluffy. Add vanilla and lemon extracts and blend well. Add eggs, one at a time, beating in between (always go one direction with the electric mixer and don't overbeat your batter. Just mix ingredients well. Sift together the dry ingredients and add slowly, alternating with the milk (wet ingredient). This is an important step so don't cheat! I'd usually alternate back and forth about 6 times, starting and ending with the dry ingredient.
Generously grease a tube cake pan with shortening, don't miss any spots, then sprinkle flour onto the greased pan and distribute but tilting back and forth until the flour is sticking to all the greased places. Don't use cooking spray or your cake won't come out of the tube pan. Pour your batter evenly into the large greased and floured tube pan and Bake at 325 degrees for 1 1/2 hrs or until you can stick a toothpick in and it comes out clean with no raw batter. Make sure when you start testing you are careful to open and shut the oven door gently. Don't laugh - you could make this sucker fall and then what would you do?! You'd eat it of course because it's insanely good whether it falls in the middle or not!!!!
My mom sometimes made a thin lemony sweet drizzle to pour over the cake, but I like it just the way it is!
Ingredients:
1/2 lb. country butter (don't you dare use margarine!)
1/2 c. shortening
3 c. granulated sugar
1 t. vanilla extract
1 t. lemon extract or 2 t. Lemon zest
3 c. sifted flour (I use cake flour)
1/2 t. baking powder
pinch of salt
1 c. milk (room temp)
6 eggs (room temp)
Directions:
Cream butter, shortening, sugar until light and fluffy. Add vanilla and lemon extracts and blend well. Add eggs, one at a time, beating in between (always go one direction with the electric mixer and don't overbeat your batter. Just mix ingredients well. Sift together the dry ingredients and add slowly, alternating with the milk (wet ingredient). This is an important step so don't cheat! I'd usually alternate back and forth about 6 times, starting and ending with the dry ingredient.
Generously grease a tube cake pan with shortening, don't miss any spots, then sprinkle flour onto the greased pan and distribute but tilting back and forth until the flour is sticking to all the greased places. Don't use cooking spray or your cake won't come out of the tube pan. Pour your batter evenly into the large greased and floured tube pan and Bake at 325 degrees for 1 1/2 hrs or until you can stick a toothpick in and it comes out clean with no raw batter. Make sure when you start testing you are careful to open and shut the oven door gently. Don't laugh - you could make this sucker fall and then what would you do?! You'd eat it of course because it's insanely good whether it falls in the middle or not!!!!
My mom sometimes made a thin lemony sweet drizzle to pour over the cake, but I like it just the way it is!

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