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Gooey butter cake

Gooey butter cake is a type of cake traditionally made in St. Louis, Missouri. It is a flat and dense cake made with wheat cake flour, butter, sugar, and eggs, typically near an inch tall, and dusted with powdered sugar. While sweet and rich, it is somewhat firm, and is able to be cut into pieces similarly to a brownie. Gooey butter cake is generally served as a type of coffee cake and not as a formal dessert cake. There are two distinct variants of the cake: the original St. Louis, MO Bakers' gooey butter and a cream cheese and commercial yellow cake mix variant. The original St. Louis, MO Bakers' gooey butter is believed to have originated in the 1930s. It was made with a yeast-raised sweet dough on the bottom.[1]

Gooey butter cake
A slice of Gooey butter cake, garnished with powdered sugar and raspberries.
TypeCake
Place of originUnited States
Region or stateSt. Louis, Missouri Germantown, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Main ingredientsWheat flour, butter, sugar, eggs, powdered sugar, cream cheese
  •   Media: Gooey butter cake

The St. Louis Convention & Visitors Commission includes a recipe for the cream cheese and commercial yellow cake mix variant cake on its website, calling it "one of St. Louis' popular, quirky foods". The recipe calls for a bottom layer of butter and yellow cake batter, and a top layer made from eggs, cream cheese, and, in one case, almond extract. The cake is dusted with confectioner's sugar before being served. The cake is best eaten soon after baking it. It should be served at room temperature or warm.[2]

The cream cheese variant of the gooey butter cake recipe (also known as "Ooey Gooey butter cake", occasionally "chess cake"), while close enough to the original, is an approximation designed for easier preparation at home. Bakeries in the greater St. Louis area who know how to make an original formula Gooey Butter cake, including those at local grocery chains Schnucks and Dierbergs, use a slightly different recipe based on corn syrup, sugar and powdered eggs; however, no cake mix or cream cheese is involved.[3]

Origin and popularity edit

There are several claims to the creation of the cake. The cake was supposedly first made by accident in the 1930s by a St. Louis-area German American baker who was trying to make regular cake batter but reversed the proportions of butter and flour.[4][5] John Hoffman was the owner of the bakery where the mistake was made. One story is that there were two types of butter "smears" used in his bakery: a gooey butter and a deep butter. The deep butter was used for deep butter coffee cakes. The gooey butter was used as an adhesive for things like Danish rolls and stollens. The gooey butter was smeared across the surface, then the item was placed in coconut, hazelnuts, peanuts, crumbs or whatever was desired so they would stick to the product. Hoffman hired a new baker who was supposed to make deep butter cakes, but got the butter smears mixed up. The mistake was not caught until after the cakes came out of the proof box. Rather than throw them away, Hoffman went ahead and baked them. This baking mistake was made during the Great Depression, which meant supplies for baking ingredients were low. The new cake sold so well that Hoffman kept baking and selling them and soon, so did the other bakers around St. Louis.[6]

Another St. Louis baker, Fred Heimburger, also remembers the cake coming on the scene in the 1930s, as a slip up that became a popular hit and local acquired taste. He liked it well enough that Heimburger tried to promote gooey butter cake by taking samples of it with him when he traveled out of St. Louis to visit other bakers in their shops. They liked it, but they could not get their customers to buy it. Their reactions tending to regard it as looking too much like a mistake, and "a flat gooey mess".[7] As such, so it remained as a regional favorite for many decades. Other stories surround the cake's creation; none have been historically verified.

Traditionally served as a breakfast or “coffee cake”, variations of Gooey Butter Cake have become popular, dessert offerings in many restaurants. The first known use of the confection as a dessert was at Clary’s Restaurant in Springfield, Missouri. In 1991, the restaurant first offered a Warm Blueberry Gooey Butter Cake with Vanilla Bean Ice Cream and Blueberry Coulis. It became a signature dessert at the popular eatery.

Gooey butter cake is also commonly known outside of the St. Louis area as "ooey gooey butter cake", due to its popularization by celebrity chef Paula Deen.

Availability edit

Many St. Louis area grocery stores sell fresh or boxed gooey butter cakes. Haas Baking sold a widely distributed, square and packaged version in a box that depicts a colorful, if anachronistic scene of aviator Charles Lindbergh's plane the Spirit of St. Louis flying past downtown St. Louis, the Gateway Arch and the modern cityscape in clouds. Independent or family bakeries make gooey butter cakes, from a time when there were still many neighborhood corner German and Austrian American bakeries in St. Louis, in neighborhoods like Dutchtown, Bevo Mill, and the Tower Grove area, and others. There are now several businesses that specialize in different flavors of gooey butter cake and sell them in coffee shops, or to walk in customers, or by order or shipment.

Panera Bread Company (original name: St. Louis Bread Company) makes a Danish with a gooey butter filling for the St. Louis market. More recently, Walgreens sells wrapped, individual slices of a version of St. Louis gooey butter cake as a snack alongside muffins, brownies, and cookies.

Gooey butter cake is now widely available outside of the St. Louis area, as Walmart has been marketing a version called Paula Deen Baked Goods Original Gooey Butter Cake. While Walmart still sells a gooey butter cake, they dropped the Paula Deen version.

Gooey butter cake ("butter cake") is also widely popular in German-style bakeries throughout the Philadelphia Metropolitan Area, as well as down the Jersey Shore. Wawa has started selling different flavors of individually-wrapped gooey butter cakes.

Modern versions of this confection, originally sold as a breakfast pastry or "coffee cake", have shown up on upscale restaurant menus across the Midwest and even the West coast.

In popular culture edit

On the SyFy television series Defiance, Nolan and Rafe discuss gooey butter cake while in Old St. Louis in the episode "Down In the Ground Where the Dead Men Go". It was featured on an episode of Pizza Masters titled "Leave Me in St. Louis".[8]

See also edit

  • Butter cake
  • Butterkuchen, the yeasted, German coffeecake that is topped with flecks of butter
  • Chess pie, a similar dessert in the form of a pie
  • Coffee cake
  • Kuchen, the German name for cakes, the coffee cake style which may be similar to the base cake that Gooey butter cake developed from
  • Philadelphia Butter Cake, a North Philadelphia cake similar to Gooey Butter cake
  • Smearcase, a Baltimore cheesecake served in bar form that resembles Gooey Butter Cake
  • St. Louis cuisine

References edit

  1. ^ Stradley, Linda (May 3, 2015). "Gooey Butter Cake History and Recipe". What's Cooking America.
  2. ^ "Ooey Gooey Butter Cake". The Sweet Art. Archived from the original on 4 February 2013. Retrieved 3 October 2011.
  3. ^ "Real St. Louis Gooey Butter Cake". Creative Culinary. 17 March 2012. Retrieved 25 November 2014.
  4. ^ Louis, Junior League of St (1996-07-01). Saint Louis Days . . . Saint Louis Nights. Wimmer Book Dist. ISBN 978-0-9638298-1-8.
  5. ^ "Gooey Butter Cake Recipe and History, How To Make Gooey Butter Cake, Whats Cooking America". whatscookingamerica.net. 3 May 2015. Retrieved 2016-06-21.
  6. ^ "A St. Louis Original: Ooey-Gooey Butter Cake". 18 February 2017.
  7. ^ Barry, Ann (April 19, 1989). "A Butter Cake That Sticks to the Gums". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
  8. ^ "Leave Me in St. Louis". Cooking Channel. Retrieved June 7, 2017.

External links edit

  • Ann Barry (April 19, 1989). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on 31 August 2009. (with recipe)
  • Deborah (August 27, 2008). . Slow Travel. Archived from the original on 2013-03-28. Controversy over a television cook laying claim to Gooey butter cake described

gooey, butter, cake, type, cake, traditionally, made, louis, missouri, flat, dense, cake, made, with, wheat, cake, flour, butter, sugar, eggs, typically, near, inch, tall, dusted, with, powdered, sugar, while, sweet, rich, somewhat, firm, able, into, pieces, s. Gooey butter cake is a type of cake traditionally made in St Louis Missouri It is a flat and dense cake made with wheat cake flour butter sugar and eggs typically near an inch tall and dusted with powdered sugar While sweet and rich it is somewhat firm and is able to be cut into pieces similarly to a brownie Gooey butter cake is generally served as a type of coffee cake and not as a formal dessert cake There are two distinct variants of the cake the original St Louis MO Bakers gooey butter and a cream cheese and commercial yellow cake mix variant The original St Louis MO Bakers gooey butter is believed to have originated in the 1930s It was made with a yeast raised sweet dough on the bottom 1 Gooey butter cakeA slice of Gooey butter cake garnished with powdered sugar and raspberries TypeCakePlace of originUnited StatesRegion or stateSt Louis Missouri Germantown Philadelphia PennsylvaniaMain ingredientsWheat flour butter sugar eggs powdered sugar cream cheese Media Gooey butter cakeThe St Louis Convention amp Visitors Commission includes a recipe for the cream cheese and commercial yellow cake mix variant cake on its website calling it one of St Louis popular quirky foods The recipe calls for a bottom layer of butter and yellow cake batter and a top layer made from eggs cream cheese and in one case almond extract The cake is dusted with confectioner s sugar before being served The cake is best eaten soon after baking it It should be served at room temperature or warm 2 The cream cheese variant of the gooey butter cake recipe also known as Ooey Gooey butter cake occasionally chess cake while close enough to the original is an approximation designed for easier preparation at home Bakeries in the greater St Louis area who know how to make an original formula Gooey Butter cake including those at local grocery chains Schnucks and Dierbergs use a slightly different recipe based on corn syrup sugar and powdered eggs however no cake mix or cream cheese is involved 3 Contents 1 Origin and popularity 2 Availability 3 In popular culture 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksOrigin and popularity editThere are several claims to the creation of the cake The cake was supposedly first made by accident in the 1930s by a St Louis area German American baker who was trying to make regular cake batter but reversed the proportions of butter and flour 4 5 John Hoffman was the owner of the bakery where the mistake was made One story is that there were two types of butter smears used in his bakery a gooey butter and a deep butter The deep butter was used for deep butter coffee cakes The gooey butter was used as an adhesive for things like Danish rolls and stollens The gooey butter was smeared across the surface then the item was placed in coconut hazelnuts peanuts crumbs or whatever was desired so they would stick to the product Hoffman hired a new baker who was supposed to make deep butter cakes but got the butter smears mixed up The mistake was not caught until after the cakes came out of the proof box Rather than throw them away Hoffman went ahead and baked them This baking mistake was made during the Great Depression which meant supplies for baking ingredients were low The new cake sold so well that Hoffman kept baking and selling them and soon so did the other bakers around St Louis 6 Another St Louis baker Fred Heimburger also remembers the cake coming on the scene in the 1930s as a slip up that became a popular hit and local acquired taste He liked it well enough that Heimburger tried to promote gooey butter cake by taking samples of it with him when he traveled out of St Louis to visit other bakers in their shops They liked it but they could not get their customers to buy it Their reactions tending to regard it as looking too much like a mistake and a flat gooey mess 7 As such so it remained as a regional favorite for many decades Other stories surround the cake s creation none have been historically verified Traditionally served as a breakfast or coffee cake variations of Gooey Butter Cake have become popular dessert offerings in many restaurants The first known use of the confection as a dessert was at Clary s Restaurant in Springfield Missouri In 1991 the restaurant first offered a Warm Blueberry Gooey Butter Cake with Vanilla Bean Ice Cream and Blueberry Coulis It became a signature dessert at the popular eatery Gooey butter cake is also commonly known outside of the St Louis area as ooey gooey butter cake due to its popularization by celebrity chef Paula Deen Availability editMany St Louis area grocery stores sell fresh or boxed gooey butter cakes Haas Baking sold a widely distributed square and packaged version in a box that depicts a colorful if anachronistic scene of aviator Charles Lindbergh s plane the Spirit of St Louis flying past downtown St Louis the Gateway Arch and the modern cityscape in clouds Independent or family bakeries make gooey butter cakes from a time when there were still many neighborhood corner German and Austrian American bakeries in St Louis in neighborhoods like Dutchtown Bevo Mill and the Tower Grove area and others There are now several businesses that specialize in different flavors of gooey butter cake and sell them in coffee shops or to walk in customers or by order or shipment Panera Bread Company original name St Louis Bread Company makes a Danish with a gooey butter filling for the St Louis market More recently Walgreens sells wrapped individual slices of a version of St Louis gooey butter cake as a snack alongside muffins brownies and cookies Gooey butter cake is now widely available outside of the St Louis area as Walmart has been marketing a version called Paula Deen Baked Goods Original Gooey Butter Cake While Walmart still sells a gooey butter cake they dropped the Paula Deen version Gooey butter cake butter cake is also widely popular in German style bakeries throughout the Philadelphia Metropolitan Area as well as down the Jersey Shore Wawa has started selling different flavors of individually wrapped gooey butter cakes Modern versions of this confection originally sold as a breakfast pastry or coffee cake have shown up on upscale restaurant menus across the Midwest and even the West coast In popular culture editOn the SyFy television series Defiance Nolan and Rafe discuss gooey butter cake while in Old St Louis in the episode Down In the Ground Where the Dead Men Go It was featured on an episode of Pizza Masters titled Leave Me in St Louis 8 See also editButter cake Butterkuchen the yeasted German coffeecake that is topped with flecks of butter Chess pie a similar dessert in the form of a pie Coffee cake Kuchen the German name for cakes the coffee cake style which may be similar to the base cake that Gooey butter cake developed from Philadelphia Butter Cake a North Philadelphia cake similar to Gooey Butter cake Smearcase a Baltimore cheesecake served in bar form that resembles Gooey Butter Cake St Louis cuisineReferences edit Stradley Linda May 3 2015 Gooey Butter Cake History and Recipe What s Cooking America Ooey Gooey Butter Cake The Sweet Art Archived from the original on 4 February 2013 Retrieved 3 October 2011 Real St Louis Gooey Butter Cake Creative Culinary 17 March 2012 Retrieved 25 November 2014 Louis Junior League of St 1996 07 01 Saint Louis Days Saint Louis Nights Wimmer Book Dist ISBN 978 0 9638298 1 8 Gooey Butter Cake Recipe and History How To Make Gooey Butter Cake Whats Cooking America whatscookingamerica net 3 May 2015 Retrieved 2016 06 21 A St Louis Original Ooey Gooey Butter Cake 18 February 2017 Barry Ann April 19 1989 A Butter Cake That Sticks to the Gums The New York Times Retrieved 4 January 2014 Leave Me in St Louis Cooking Channel Retrieved June 7 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gooey butter cake Ann Barry April 19 1989 A Butter Cake That Sticks to the Gums The New York Times Archived from the original on 31 August 2009 with recipe Deborah August 27 2008 Paula Deen DID NOT Create Gooey Butter Cake Slow Travel Archived from the original on 2013 03 28 Controversy over a television cook laying claim to Gooey butter cake described Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gooey butter cake amp oldid 1179520660, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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