Deconstruction
On March 21, 2006 | 8 Comments | Uncategorized |

The truth is, Oh Reader, that I am not a very resourceful person.

Well, okay, in some ways I am. I am, for example, good at books. I like thinking of books, and Ideas in books, and ideas that connect to these ideas, and finding these ideas Elsewhere. And I’m not bad at thinking of blog entries. And I’m good at salads– you know, variety and what-not. But I am not resourceful when it comes to desserts.

But when, on Sunday afternoon, I was looking about me for a dessert to serve to a pending guest (Chris Danusiar, college-friend, who was making time in his less-than-twenty-four-hour-stop-in-Raleigh-Durham to come see us), I was coming up short.

Happily for me, Lynne called. And that, really, is all you need.

“What do you have?” she asked.

“Just a lemon cake mix,” I said.

“Do you have a Bundt pan?” she asked.

I do.

“Then make the cake in the Bundt pan, and make a little lemon glaze, and there you go.”

And lo, I had a lemon, and I had powdered sugar, and there I went.

I was So Pleased.

But it is One Thing, oh Reader, to pour the cake batter into the Bundt pan. It is Another Thing Entirely to Remove It.

Rest assured, before you go commenting and criticizing me for this, that I greased the Bundt pan. I greased it Well. I greased it thoroughly, making certain to get the Crisco into all the fluted grooves of this Bundt pan.

Nonetheless.

I stuck a knife around the edges. I poked it as far down as it would go. I used a fork, easing its curved tines around the cake. I turned the cake (and pan) upside down over the plate and Tapped Gently.

The cake Would Not come out. No.

What is one to do?

You cannot serve a Bundt cake in the Bundt pan. That ruins the whole presentation. It must needs be removed.

And so I removed it. And it came away, Piece by Piece, in a manner Unfit for presentation.

The result was what you see pictured here. It is what I called a Bundt Cake Deconstructed. In its pieces, crumbles, and misshapen lumpiness, it really gave Bill, Chris, and me pause in considering the Bundt cake in a new light. It made us reconsider the Form of Bundt, and the Idea of Bundt, and, ultimately, gave us a new and deeper sense of Bundtness.

Really.

Of course, in a situation like this one, what one must do is find Yet Another Resourceful Person, and this was my dear neighbor K.C., who is gardener and cook extraordinare, who brings the pages of Southern Living to life right next door.

K.C. commiserated with me about the extraction of my Bundt cake (although it must be said– and is it any surprise?– that she herself has never had this experience before), and provided me with Everything I Needed To Know to turn this Bundtness into a Trifle (and this is the dessert trifle, not a belittling kind of trifle). She even provided me with some fresh strawberries.

So my dessert was not a disaster, although the trifle was more of a Rebecca-trifle than anything that would pass on the pages of Southern Living as a trifle. We ate, and were satisfied.

And I have cleaned my Bundt pan carefully, and have put it away, and will likely sell it at my next garage sale.

I’m sticking to pie from now on.

Comments 8
tracy Posted March 21, 2006 at4:04 am   Reply

“giggle” is not the right descriptive – no – “belly-laughing” will do! Thanks for the photo – not that YOUR descriptives didn’t fully fill the mind!! What a fabulous entry!!

Lynne Posted March 21, 2006 at5:10 am   Reply

My stomach hurts from laughing so hard… and I think I have woken up at least one of my children with the uncontrollable sounds I made while reading this post!

Scott Posted March 21, 2006 at5:22 am   Reply

I think you should like to bake it for 35 minutes next time, instead of 12-15… and please do invest in toothpicks for testing. How’s that for a bad “problem solver” answer? Truth is, I totally sympathizze with the entire scene – wish we could have been there to enjoy it.

Beth Posted March 22, 2006 at3:07 am   Reply

Wow! what a great way to score some strawberries from the neighbor.

Anonymous Posted March 22, 2006 at4:11 pm   Reply

Wonderful story, as always..but I think the recipe for cakes to be baked in Bundt pans is slightly different than regular cake batter? But I could be wrong.I’m sure the trifle tasted better than the cake would have anyway!!nudel

Anonymous Posted March 24, 2006 at12:01 am   Reply

I’m feeling more sorry for the unsuspecting yard sale shopper who purchases that pan than I am for you!

S.H. Posted March 24, 2006 at4:32 am   Reply

This is better than taking lemons and making lemonade! Taking ruined lemon bundt cake and making lemon trifle!Your neighbor may not have admitted this….but this has happened to everyone at some point in time. really. All the great cooks out there have had bundt disasters! Forget the Crisco and use the spray stuff. Works into those cracks much better. But it still happens….now and then.And now I know what to do the next time it happens to me!S.H.

Jenny Posted March 24, 2006 at2:43 pm   Reply

Rebecca, I love it. I went through a season where the entire top of the pound cake stuck in the bundt pan every time, leaving me with half a cake (but still delicious). Only one question. Did you serve the trifle in a trifle dish?

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