Author Notes
This was my grandmother Ruthie's recipe, a technique that Irish immigrants apparently relied on when short on money and fresh ingredients. It tastes nothing like tomato soup, I assure you; but rather like a nice spice cake, spotted with raisins, best with a cream cheese frosting.
This recipe was originally printed, sans raisins, in Linda Bassett's From Apple Pie to Pad Thai: Neighborhood Cooking North of Boston (Commonwealth Editions, 2002). —Marian Bull
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Ingredients
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2 cups
all-purpose flour
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1 1/3 cups
sugar
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4 teaspoons
baking powder
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1 teaspoon
baking soda
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1 1/2 teaspoons
ground allspice
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1 teaspoon
ground cinnamon
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1/2 teaspoon
ground cloves
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one
10 3/4-ounce can condensed tomato soup (Campbell's is most traditional)
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1/2 cup
shortening (or butter)
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2
large eggs
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1/4 cup
water
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1 cup
raisins
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Cream cheese frosting
Directions
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Preheat oven to 350° F. Grease and flour two 8-inch round cake pans, shaking out any excess flour.
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In a large mixing bowl, combine the dry ingredients. Add the soup, shortening, eggs, and water. Beat together until everything forms a smooth (pink!) batter. Fold in raisins. Pour the batter into the cake pans, doing your best to get the same amount in each.
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Bake for 35 to 40 minutes; when the cake is done, the tines of a fork should come out clean.
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Let cake cool completely before frosting; my mother says that Ruthie would likely frost each layer, and leave the sides bare, which I've done here.
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