Tomorrow, at sundown, starts Rosh Hashanah for the Jewish people. a day that commemorates the creation of the world.
In many Jewish families, it is traditional to eat apples and honey. For the past several years, I have made an apple honey cake from Tori Avery.
I make some modifications that work for me (as someone who has been following Weight Watchers for nearly 10 years) and these work for me:
White whole wheat flour rather than white flour
instead of 1/2 cup of granulated sugar, 1/4 cup of raw sugar/stevia blend
half as much oil (although you might not want to do this).
The 2022 cake, baked ahead of time |
Also, I don't put on the glaze, which I would leave off even if I wasn't on Weight Watchers. Even as a child, I didn't like glaze.
Finally, my preference, I use local buckwheat honey, which is about the darkest honey that is sold locally. I also use local apples instead of the Granny Smiths she calls for - this year, I chose Cortlands.
On Tori Avery's website there is also a discussion on making this cake gluten free.
However you do it, I highly recommend this cake.
I can't wait to eat it!
L’Shana Tovah. Have a sweet new year.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Songbird.
Delete...everyone has their own take on things.
ReplyDeleteLooks good.
ReplyDeleteOh, it is!
DeleteL'Shana Tova! The cake looks yummy!
ReplyDeleteThank you, John!
DeleteLooks delish to me
ReplyDeleteIt is a nice recipe and can be modified easily.
Delete