A couple of days ago, I stopped in the Starbucks up near my office for a late afternoon caffeine pick me up. While standing by the pastry case, I noticed some mini-Blackout Cakes.
For those who aren't privy to the culinary legends of old Brooklyn, the Blackout cake is a thing of great legendary status in New York City. It was originally produced by Ebinger's Bakery in Brooklyn and sold only in their company owned bakeries throughout the borough. It was sold in a cardboard Entenemen's type box tied with red and white twine.
When I moved to New York almost 15 years ago, the Blackout cake was getting its rebirth. 20 years prior, Ebingers had gone out of business. Probably a victiom of the changing ethncity of the Briooklyn neighborhoods in which it operated.
Another local bakery, after some urging by the local food press took up the manufacture of these cakes again which were sold in groceries throughout the five boroughs. Natives said that the new cake was good, but that it wasn't an Ebinger's Blackout cake. I liked it.
Suddenly, there were blackout cakes everywhere. Ben Benson's even had one on its dessert menu. If Daniel Bolud had been in New York at the time, he probably would have had a blackout cake stuffed with black truffles, foie gras, and a short rib. But, it probably would have cost a hundred bucks.
The reborn Blackout Cake was a medium dark chocolate cake that was apparently enriched by the addition of some chocolate chips and filled with a chocolate pudding. The result was a dense moist cake that was iced with a chocolate fondant to preserve freshness, I imagine, more than for taste.
Anyway, the point is this: the Starbuck's mini-Blackout was darned good. A rich little hockey puck sized cake, rich, dense and moist. A great afternoon pick me up.
Does anyone know of a bakery in Chicago that does something along the lines of a blackout cake. My trip to Tony's Finer Foods the other night found lots of boxed cakes. But, no Blackout.
Last edited by
YourPalWill on February 20th, 2005, 11:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.