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Writer's picturedeborahreinhardt

Updated: Jan 17, 2021

Dorothy Reinhardt raised a son and chickens, welcomed everyone into her home, and made the best coffee cake.


Tomorrow (Aug. 31) is my grandmother’s birthday. Let me tell you about my Bubba.


Dorthea (Dorothy) Minerva Tubbesing Reinhardt was the baker in our family. She was born in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1904, the year our city celebrated its only World’s Fair. She was one of five children (middle child). I like to think the can-do attitude our city had in order to make the fair a reality somehow rubbed off on “Bubba.”


My Grandma Dorothy in the kitchen, probably around the early 1960s, after a holiday meal.

With just an elementary school education, Bubba was one of the wisest people I’ve ever known. You always knew where you stood with her because she had no shyness about telling you. A woman of action, she worked in a dry goods store and in a hotel before marrying my Grandpa, Lares (Larry) Reinhardt. He had a good side, but I sensed that Grandpa wasn’t always the easiest guy to live with.


My Dad, Robert, was born in 1927, so Bubba raised a son through the Great Depression, and in her later years, shared stories with me of how they managed not to go hungry. I’m sure that had to do with Grandpa’s work ethic and luck, but equally it’s a testament to Bubba’s ability to squeeze a nickel until the buffalo pooped.


One of her Depression stories she told was the time they raised chickens. My Grandpa didn’t think the whole plan through, so the eggs that would become chicks arrived during the winter, requiring Grandma to create an incubator hutch in the living room. When the chicks were grown enough to become stewing hens, my Grandpa built the chopping block out back, but left the incredible dirty work of killing and cleaning the chickens to his wife. And Dorothy did it.


In the early 1950s, Grandma watched her son join the Army during the Korean War. Thankfully, he returned, and in 1955, Bubba welcomed my mom, Katie, into her family, and treated her like a daughter. The struggling young couple tried living on their own in an apartment, but about a year later for financial reasons, moved in “temporarily” with Grandma and Grandpa into their old home on Randall Place in St. Louis. That temporary situation lasted for the rest of Bubba’s life.


I was born in 1959, so very blessed to have my grandparents under our roof and a great-aunt, Grandma’s sister, Edna, living across the street. But things change.


My great-aunt moved to Penrose Street. In 1968, my Grandpa died of pancreatic cancer. When we moved to a new house in 1969, I still remember sitting in the back seat of our station wagon, Bubba and I crying as we left our old neighborhood, the only one she had known all her life.


But one of my favorite memories of her was during a Thanksgiving more than 30 years ago in the “new” house. After dinner, her sister-in-law Ruth (a hell of a ragtime piano player, by the way) was at our piano banging out a jazzy tune when Bubba comes in from the kitchen, towel slung over her shoulder, cigarette dangling from her lips to entertain us with a hoochie coochie. I guess that’s not surprising because her favorite song was Cab Calloway’s “Minnie the Moocher” probably (at least in part) because her brothers used to call her Minnie, but also because she could do a naughty little dance to it. “Minnie had a heart as big as a whale” is a descriptive lyric for Bubba.


You see, hospitality was simply her way of living. She always had the coffee pot at the ready to pour a cup for a friend, whether that would be a neighbor or our milkman. And there usually would be some type of sweet treat to go with the coffee. One of her favorites was a sour cream coffee cake.


It’s so good, but I can’t remember what type of pan she baked it in. I seem to remember this cake as a Bundt; however, since I have lousy luck with a Bundt turning out well, I tried it in a springform pan (had a bit of trouble getting that out cleanly, too).


Like most of her hand-written recipes, not every step is clearly detailed because she just knew how to make it. We’d often get the ingredients listed, but the concise and often incomplete directions had a lot to be desired. She probably didn’t want to take the time to write it all down.


So, friends, here’s my best attempt to translate the recipe for Dorothy’s sour cream coffee cake. Give it a try, and then invite a friend over for coffee.


 


Sour Cream Coffee Cake


Ingredients for cake:

½ cup softened butter

1 cup sugar

2 large eggs

1 cup sour cream

2 cups sifted flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

½ teaspoon baking soda

½ teaspoon almond extract


Ingredients for filling and topping:

2 tablespoons brown sugar

1 teaspoon cinnamon


Method:

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees

2. Mix all ingredients for cake. (Here’s where Bubba leaves out detail! I think she probably creamed the butter with the sugar then added the eggs using an electric mixer. She then likely sifted the dry ingredients together and then slowly added to the wet mixture. Then fold in the sour cream and almond extract. OK, back to Bubba’s recipe.)

3. Put half the dough in pan. (Again, what pan, Bubba? Springform works pretty well. Try a square baking pan if you don’t have a springform or if you’re super brave, a bundt.)

4. Sprinkle (¾ is what I did) brown sugar mixture over dough and add rest of dough in pan. Sprinkle remaining brown sugar mixture on top of cake. (Don’t you just love her?)

5. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes. (I use the standard toothpick-comes-out-clean test, just to be sure.)

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Writer's picturedeborahreinhardt

Updated: Aug 21, 2020

These quick and tasty ground beef wraps deliver all the best Korean flavors








At this point in my life, a man's got to check all my boxes before I'd consider dating him. I guess that's why most Friday nights will find me at home streaming Netflix and eating Chinese takeout. Hey, Cashew Chicken and dumplings will never let you down.


Maybe that's why I'm loving Korean food more and more because it checks all my taste buds' boxes: tangy, salty, crunchy, silky. And those side dishes! I know I have a lot to explore and learn, but I'm having a lot of fun trying new recipes.


I found an old recipe my Mom had clipped for Korean Beef Patties and decided to play a bit with some of these flavors. Now, real Korean cuisine uses more fish and veggies than red meat, which is why I name this "Korean-inspired" Beef Wraps. And I found a handy hack in my fridge, Trader Joe's Soyaki sauce, but if you don't have it, no worries. I served these with pa jun, (Korean pancake with scallions) on the second night and brown rice with scallions and Soyaki the first night.


Ingredients:

1 pound ground beef

4 tablespoons Trader Joe’s Soyaki sauce OR 4 tablespoons soy sauce, 2 tablespoons sugar, 1 tablespoon minced garlic

1 tablespoon toasted sesame seeds (chopped peanuts will work as a substitute)

1 tablespoon sesame oil

2 ½ tablespoons chopped green onion

⅛ teaspoon black pepper

Gochujang (Sriracha is a good substitute) for garnish

1 head Boston/butter lettuce


Let’s Get Cooking

1. In a large skillet, brown off the ground beef in the sesame oil, draining excess fat

2. Return drained beef to skillet. Turn down heat to simmer and stir in the Soyaki sauce (or the soy sauce, sugar and minced garlic as the substitute). Add the black pepper and heat mixture through. Take off heat.

3. Remove 8-10 leaves of the lettuce to use as the cups/wraps. Be sure lettuce is clean and leaves are patted dry.

4.Being careful not to overstuff, fill the lettuce cups with ground beef mixture. Top each with a sprinkle of toasted sesame seeds (or peanuts as substitute), green onion and Gochujang (or Sriracha) sauce. Roll up the lettuce leaves and enjoy.


Yield: four servings


Make a meal of it: As a side, serve each person with a ½ cup of cooked brown rice. Before serving, stir in two tablespoons of additional Soyaki sauce (or soy sauce with garlic and sugar) and top with another chopped green onion and leftover sesame seeds or crushed peanuts.

Korean cuisine is noted for amazing side dishes! Try spicy cucumber salad (cucumbers, rice wine vinegar, soy sauce, pinch of chili powder and sesame seeds) or scallion pancakes, pu jan.

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