MYSTERY AUTHOR ELIZABETH LOGAN (AKA CAMILLE MINICHINO) WHIPS UP BOSTON CREAM PIE AND A NEW ALASKA DINER MYSTERY
The Bear Claw Diner sits on a road that’s as busy as it ever gets in Alaska, on the highway between Anchorage and Denali National Park. While its owner, Charlie Cooke is often busy investigating homicides, Victor, her young Chef, takes advantage of the occasions by changing up the menu.
In “Murphy’s Slaw,” the third book in the Alaskan Diner Mysteries by Elizabeth Logan (me again), Victor has taken an interest in regional foods outside of Alaska. He’s come up with offerings such as Philadelphia cheese steak, Denver omelet, Maryland crab cakes, and various Florida pies with key limes. Charlie and the rest of the Bear Claw staff were resisting spam, apparently still a hit in Hawaii. Victor defended the dish by noting that he’d found a recipe for a spam and rice combo wrapped in seaweed.
Coincidentally, Victor landed on one of my favorites: Boston Cream Pie, the official Massachusetts State Dessert. The not-quite-a-pie but more-than-a-cake treat originated at a famous Boston hotel nearly two hundred years ago. A native of Boston, I like to spout trivia about it now and then. I often put words in Victor’s mouth, like the fact that the world’s largest BCP was displayed at Faneuil Hall Marketplace in 2005: 16 feet in diameter, including 1,300 pounds of cake, 800 pounds of filling, and 500 pounds of chocolate frosting.
That could keep me happy for approximately the rest of my life.
“It weighed more than a ton,” Victor tells us, doing the math.
Here’s the recipe for a more normal size BCP. This is a three-part dessert, but well worth the time and effort.
Boston Cream Pie
Ingredients:
Cake Layers
2 eggs
2 cup cake flour
1 cup sugar
2-1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1/3 cup vegetable oil
1 cup milk
2 tsp vanilla extract
Cream Filling
1-1/2 cup milk
2 tsp cornstarch
1/4 cup sugar
Pinch of salt
1 egg
1 T vanilla extract
Chocolate Frosting
1/4cup water
2 T sugar
1/2 cup semisweet chocolate chips
Cake Layers Directions
Heat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease and flour two 9" round cake pans or line bottoms with waxed paper.
For the cake layers: Separate eggs; place whites in a small bowl and set aside. In a large mixing bowl, combine cake flour, 3/4 cup of the sugar, baking powder and salt. Set aside.
In a small bowl with an electric mixer, beat egg whites until soft peaks form. Very gradually beat in the remaining 1/4 cup sugar; beat until stiff peaks form. Set aside.
Add egg yolks, oil and 1/2 cup milk to flour mixture. With electric mixer, beat until smooth, scraping sides of bowl occasionally. Add remaining 1/2 cup milk and vanilla. Beat just until combined. Fold beaten egg whites into batter. Divide batter into prepared pans.
Bake cake 20 to 25 minutes or until centers spring back when gently pressed. Cool in pans on wire rack for 5 minutes. Loosen cakes around edges and turn out onto racks. Cool completely.
Cream Filling Directions
In a 1-quart saucepan, heat 1 cup milk to boiling. In cup or small bowl, combine remaining 1/2 cup milk, cornstarch, sugar, pinch of salt, egg and vanilla until blended.
When milk comes to boiling, gradually stir in cornstarch mixture with wire whisk. Return to boiling, stirring constantly. Reduce heat and simmer 1 minute or until thickened to pudding consistency. Set aside to cool to room temperature.
Chocolate Frosting Directions
In 1-quart saucepan, heat water and sugar to boiling.
Add chocolate chips. Stir until glaze is smooth.
Remove from heat. Cool 5 to 10 minutes or until slightly thickened.
Assemble
To assemble, place one cake layer, upside down, on a serving plate.
Spread with cream filling.
Top with remaining cake layer, right side up.
Spoon glaze over top; spread to edges of cake.
Refrigerate until frosting appears set.
This recipe serves 8, generously. Enjoy!
Murphy’s Slaw
An Alaska Diner Mystery, Book 3
Charlie Cooke loves many things, like the Bear Claw Diner, the heated steering wheel of her car, and her orange tabby cat Eggs Benedict. Something she has never loved is the state fair. So when her best friend Annie Jensen begs her for a fair day, she’s reluctant. But Annie isn’t the only one who wants her to spend a day among farm animals and deep fried food. A vendor has been murdered, and Trooper Graham needs his favorite part-time sleuth to dig up the truth, and Charlie is happy to oblige.
The case grows personal when Charlie learns the victim is Kelly Carson, whom she and Annie were friends in high school. If Charlie wants to find justice for Kelly, she and Annie will have to work together to weed out the killer.
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