Li’l Sylvia’s Ashcakes with Honey Butter

Conjure Women by Afia Atakora
And Hoecakes with Honey Butter

History has always been wary of powerful women and they are often written into a story as a magical mysterious side plot or as a villain. It was refreshing to see magic and power and women at the center of this novel – and view intimately into their inner conscious which housed their doubts, insecurities, and how they mustered up their strength. This was the type of book that sucked you so completely into its world – especially since it so seamlessly floated in and out of different generations and time periods and perspectives. At the heart of the story was the mother-daughter relationship between Miss May Belle, a healer, and her daughter Rue. We see the struggle that daughters of powerful independent mothers can sympathize with – how to live up to their incredible mother? How to carry on her legacy? How to need her and not need her? 

The setting is also important here: the Civil War era in the South on a current and then former slave plantation. Atakora explores the former slaves’ tenuous and suspicious relationship with the word “freedom” and the lengths in which they must go to maintain it. The villains of the story are the same but morph only in title: from slave master to KKK mob. On the flip side you get the unlikely relationship between Rue and the master’s daughter Varina (albeit a friendship that comes along with its inevitable power structures attached). The masterful part of Atakora’s telling of this story was her ability to create such full characters. We see them at their best and most powerful and most good but we also see them making questionable decisions and making mistakes and doing harm. Overall it was a fantastic, well-written telling of the black experience during Civil War and it gobbled you up and transported you into a world of mysticism, haints, the healing power of the earth, “freedom,” and survival. 

Final Recommendation: 

Skip it! /  Put it on your list! / ((Go read it now!))

I started this blog to connect deeper into my books. I am obsessed with tasting a piece of their world and knowing fully, as much as I can, what the characters are experiencing. Its why I love to travel and it’s why I love food. Ashcakes were mentioned throughout this book. They are essentially a corncake, often wrapped in leaves, that are placed on the ashes of a fire to cook. Similar to this are hoecakes, which used to be placed on the back of a garden hoe and placed over a fire to cook. What I made was the closest I could get to this without started a fire in my Bronx neighborhood – and it was essentially fried corn cakes. I asked my friend Julia, who is living in Tennessee, and my closest connection to anything South to ask her boss who owns a bakery for a recipe for these. Mignon ended up asking her pastor, who then got the recipe from his wife and stated: “This is how my grandmother made them.” Can’t think of a better endorsement than that! 

In the book, Rue describes Ma Doe’s ashcakes as the best around, and that her secret was a little taste of honey. I didn’t want to mess with the recipe but wanted to incorporate honey, so I mixed together a honey butter to put on top. It was unreal. I also wanted to incorporate some wild edible flowers to make a nod to Rue and Mary Bell’s work as healers. 

Quotes that inspired the recipe (and also show how this book travels through generations):

“Rue knew that her mama, thin as she was, did have a love for Sylvia’s ashcakes,” (16).

Afia Atakora

“Li’l Sylvia sold ashcakes, honey sweet, a secret recipe passed down from her mama. […] They had all grown prosperous, as Bruh Abel always said they would,” (295).

Afia Atakora

Hoecakes: (makes about 8)

  • 1 ½ cups of self-rising cornmeal (can be yellow or white)
  • ⅔ cups of buttermilk (if you use regular milk it is ok – but will come out thinner)
  • 1 egg, room temperature
  • ½ teaspoon of salt
  • ½ cup – ⅔ of oil to fry (should come up to about your first knuckle 1 inch or so in the pan) Any neutral-tasting oil will work: Canola is great or vegetable.

How-To:

  1. Measure out your oil into a pan with high enough edges. Heat on medium. It’s helpful to have a thermometer here to make sure your oil isn’t too hot – a deep-frying thermometer or candy thermometer will work. Your oil should be heated to about 365-375 degrees.
  2. Mix all your ingredients into a bowl and mix well. It should hold together but be slightly liquidy – almost like the consistency of oatmeal. If your buttermilk is very thick, feel free to add a few tablespoons more to the mixture.
  3. Drop using a big serving spoon (I used a large ice cream scoop) into your heated up oil. Fry until golden brown on both sides, flipping halfway through. Remove and let cool on a wire cooling rack lined with paper towels.
  4. Serve with honey butter and maple syrup OR eat as a side to a savory meal! 

Honey Butter:

  • 1 stick of butter, softened
  • 2 tablespoons of honey
  • 1 tablespoon of powdered sugar
  • Pinch of salt

*you can adjust the honey to your tastes – feel free to add more! 🙂

How-To:

  1. Mix your butter in a mixer until creamy
  2. Throw in your honey, pinch of salt, and your powdered sugar and mix for about 1 minute until fluffy. 
  3. Spread on everything.

Heart “Cake” Tart to Say THANKS!

Wow. What a wild ride my first three weeks have been on this blog and on my instagram. On Friday I had around 300 followers and today I am at over 600. I am so thankful and excited to have so many following along on my reading and baking journey! The “bookstagram” community is one that I knew very little about before this year and now I feel so welcomed into a dope and supportive group of wonderful humans.

I started this page to combine two major passions of mine. I’m a full time high school English teacher and am currently attending graduate school for my (second) master’s degree in Educational Leadership. So, I never thought I’d have the time to truly dedicate to a blog and instagram page like this to truly be “proud” of it – or whatever other superficial pressure I decided to put on myself. With the quarantine in New York State and my busy city coming to a stand still I decided to say, “What the heck?!” and went for it. When things get hectic now, or when I feel down, I am finding the happiness here and in really honoring the things that make me happy. It’s been a pretty powerful experience so far.

SO, to express my gratitude I need to do it in the only way I know how – baking you all something!! (I know I know that I’m technically going to be the one eating it but it’s for YOU, I assure you). here is an easy cake to say thank you!!! The base is essentially a big sugar cookie that you can cut into any shape, letter, or number that you’d like to – the key is to just have it open in the middle so you can admire the layers. The frosting is a very subtly sweet mascarpone frosting that is surprisingly sturdy enough to hold it all up!

Heart Shaped Tart Cake

Cookie Base Recipe

  • 4 sticks (two cups) of Salted Butter, softened
  • 2 cups of granulated sugar
  • 2 eggs, room temperature
  • 2 tablespoons of vanilla extract
  • 4 teaspoons of baking powder
  • 6 cups of flour

Cookies How-To:

  1. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. (Again, I forgot to do this. I don’t think I’ll ever remember!)
  2. Cream together your butter and sugar until completely integrated and fluffy, about 3 minutes at medium speed. ***Note – like I’ve mentioned before butter is a drama queen that demands to be respected. Softened butter should indent a bit when you touch it but shouldn’t be melted or liquidy. I just incorporate this step into my routine in the morning – put on the tea kettle, take out the butter from the fridge, do whatever else and then wait an hour or so until it’s ready for me.
  3. Scrape down your bowl and add your vanilla and your eggs, mix for about 30 seconds until combined.
  4. In a separate bowl measure out your six cups of flour, then add your baking soda and whisk to integrate.
  5. Mix in the flour into the butter mixture pulsating your mixer to juuust combine it to avoid over mixing. If you pour in all your flour at once you’ll have a mess on your hands, so do it in batches! 😉 Mix until you see the dough starts to come together. It should feel buttery and should stick together. If it’s a sandy texture continue to mix it a bit.
  6. Take your dough and separate it into double the amount of characters you want to create! For example, I did 3 hearts, so I separated my dough into SIX portions.
  7. Roll out each portion with your rolling pin on parchment paper, put whatever stencil your using over it and cut out your shape! I found my image on the internet doing a quick google search for printable stencils – a teacher’s secret trick for pretty bulletin boards :D.
  8. Use the parchment paper to help you transfer the cookie to a cookie sheet and back for 10-14 minutes (this will depend on how thick you rolled out your cookies). The edges should be golden brown.

Mascarpone Whipped Frosting

  • 16 ounces of Mascarpone Cheese
  • 2 cups of heavy cream
  • 1/2 cup to 1 cup of powdered sugar (I used 1/2 a cup but this depends on how sweet you like your frosting!)
  • 2 teaspoons of vanilla extract

Frosting How-To

  1. Through it all in the bowl of stand mixer with the whisk attachment. Whisk until it firms up and holds its peaks! This took about 2 minutes for me on high.
  2. Put into a piping bag and that’s it!

Assemble:

  1. Wait for your cookies to completely cool – this will happen quick!
  2. Take your base layer and pipe small swirls of your frosting onto the cookie.
  3. Top this with your second cookie and pipe on top again.
  4. Top with any fruits or edible flowers you wish! I used blackberries, strawberries, grapes. I recommend mint leaves as well!