Wednesday, April 30, 2025

Molasses has been a sweet treat for centuries by Eden Monroe

 

 


Used in a variety of applications, from a simple bread and butter topping to any number of delicious recipes, molasses remains a traditional favourite. Molasses cookies and molasses cake were (are) perhaps the most popular, and both were well-loved by young Luke Kavenagh in When Shadows Stir, Book Two of The Kavenaghs (1870-1879):

“When the afternoon class was finished (he was being home schooled), Luke cleaned his slate and waited for his cookies and milk.

 ‘I want to talk to you for a moment, Luke,’ she said sitting down opposite him. ‘Do you know your birthday is tomorrow?’

He thought for a moment. ‘I’m going to be nine, aren’t I.’

‘That’s right, and to help you celebrate the big day I’m going to bake you a cake. Any special kind you’d like?’

Maggie knew what his response would be before she even asked, and of course he shouted: ‘Lally cake!’

Keeping molasses in this house with Luke around was no easy feat.”

 


 Luke’s lally (molasses) cake with whipped cream

 

Molasses has proven to have staying power, and is in as much demand today as it was when it first made its way into North American homes as early as the 17th century. On the list of natural sweeteners that includes honey and maple syrup, the versatile molasses is possibly the most complex according to howstuffworks.com:

“Depending on its strength, molasses can taste from lightly sweet to smoky-sweet to harshly bittersweet, and its history is almost as complicated as its flavor.

“Making molasses — the process of pressing sugar cane and boiling its juice until it is crystalized — was developed in India was early as 500 B.C.E. In the Middle Ages, the concept made its way to Europe when it’s believed Arab invaders brought it to Spain. From there, molasses-making took another voyage across the Atlantic when Christopher Columbus brought sugar cane to the West Indies….”

Molasses can also be made from beets, which according to www.mwagri.com/beet-molasses, is the “… syrupy by-product of the production process to extract sugar from sugar beets. The residual liquid that is left over is an excellent source of energy for livestock.”

Beet molasses is a valuable feed resource for the beef and dairy cattle industry because of its protein and essential minerals, and is an important ingredient in their growing and finishing diets. It’s also an additive for salt licks.

Additionally, both cane molasses and beet molasses are used in the fermentation industry as a sugary substrate and a key ingredient in yeast production. And surprisingly, again according to mwagri.com/beet-molasses: “… in recent years, molasses has gained popularity as an alternative or a supplement to chloride salt for de-icing roads. Not only does it cost less than rock salt, it is also less corrosive and more environmentally friendly.”

Crosby’s Molasses is a multi-generational company located in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada, and as set out in Crosbys.com: “Crosby’s Fancy Molasses is the highest-grade molasses available” made from single-origin sugarcane and considered “ideal to use in a variety of foods…. It comes from one place. The Madre Tierra sugar mill in the village of Santa Lucia, Guatemala is our sole provider. It is made from the juice of sugarcane grown in the surrounding volcanic soils.”

Founded in 1879 (in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, Canada), Crosby’s Molasses kept retailers in Atlantic Canada, Quebec and New England, USA well supplied with this popular sweetener. That included delivery to general stores in puncheons (large wooden barrels holding between 90 and 100 gallons), particularly in the 19th and early 20th centuries, as well as smaller barrels and half-barrels. Customers simply brought their own container to the store for a molasses fill-up.

Walter Akerley of The Narrows, New Brunswick, Canada, who lived to the grand age of 106 ½, had supplies for his general store delivered to him by riverboat. He would then pick them up by horse and wagon at the wharf and take them to his store. Puncheons of molasses were one of his most welcome items.

I remember during my childhood there was always a squeeze bottle of molasses on the table at mealtime, a favourite spread for our homemade bread and butter.

Blackstrap molasses also remains a popular choice for those who enjoy a “stronger, more robust flavour” compliments of this highly-concentrated, very dark molasses. It can also be used in baked beans and gingerbread, as well as in barbeque sauces, stews and marinades.

 

 


 Baked beans were another Kavenagh favourite.

 

Blending Crosby’s Fancy molasses and blackstrap molasses together yields cooking molasses, according to Crosby’s.com.

With all of this sweet talk I thought perhaps a few recipes might be in order, some new to go with more traditional choices, all found in scrumptious detail at Crosbys.com:

 

ONE-BOWL OLIVE OIL GINGERBREAD CAKE

 

·         1/2 cup olive oil

·         1 egg

·         1 cup Crosby’s Fancy Molasses (or 1 cup of Crosby’s Maple + Molasses

·         1/2 cup brown sugar

·         1.5 tsp baking soda

·         1tsp cinnamon

·         2 tsp ginger

·         1/2 tsp cloves

·         1/2 tsp salt

·         2 1/2 cup all purpose flour

·         1 cup hot water

·         Whipped cream, for serving

Instructions:

1.      Heat oven to 350°F. Grease a 9×9” square cake pan with a spray of olive oil, then dust with flour.

2.      In a large bowl, blend the olive oil and egg until smooth. Add the molasses (or the Maple + Molasses) and brown sugar, whisking vigorously until the mixture is smooth, until there are no remaining sugar lumps.

3.      Add the dry ingredients, then mix until smooth. The batter will be thick.

4.      Pour in the hot water and stir until the batter is homogenous. Be careful not to over-mix.

5.      Pour the batter into the prepared pan.

6.      Bake 25-30 minutes or until cake springs back when lightly touched or when a toothpick comes out clean.

7.      Cool the cake completely in the pan (at least 1.5 hours). Slice into squares and top with whipped cream. Enjoy!

 

 

Extra Fudgy Molasses Brownies

 

·         1 cup dark chocolate chips or coarsely chopped bittersweet chocolate

·         1/2 cup butter, cut into pieces

·         1/4 cup Crosby’s Fancy Molasses

·         2 large eggs

·         1 cup sugar

·         1 tsp. vanilla extract

·         1/2 tsp. baking powder

·         2 Tbsp. unsweetened cocoa powder

·         1/4 tsp. salt

·         1 cup flour

·         Sea salt (optional)

INSTRUCTIONS:

1.      Heat the oven to 350°F. Line an 8-by-8-inch metal baking pan with parchment paper.

2.      Combine the chocolate and butter in a medium saucepan and cook over low heat, stirring frequently, until melted and smooth.

3.      Remove from the heat, add molasses and let cool slightly, about 5 minutes.

4.      Combine the eggs, sugar, vanilla, baking powder, cocoa and salt in a large bowl and stir until just incorporated. Add the chocolate mixture and stir until combined. Add the flour and fold in until just incorporated, about 20 strokes (no white streaks should remain).

5.      Pour the batter into the prepared pan (spreading it out and smoothing the top). Bake 30 minutes (until the centre is set). Remove to a wire rack, sprinkle brownies with sea salt (optional) while still warm and let cool at least 20 minutes. Take them out of the oven a littler earlier if you want them to be chewier.

6.      Cut into bite-size pieces (1 or 2-inch squares)

 

 

DOUBLE GINGER CARAMEL SWIRL NO CHURN ICE CREAM

 

·         1 can (300 ml) sweetened condensed milk

·         2 tablespoons Crosby’s Fancy Molasses

·         2 cups heavy cream

·         ½ tsp. powdered ginger

·         ¼ cup chopped candied ginger

·         ½ cup caramel sauce

 

 

INSTRUCTIONS:

 

1.      Line a 9×5 inch loaf pan with parchment paper.

2.      In a small bowl, whisk together the sweetened condensed milk and the molasses.

3.      In a large bowl whip the heavy cream until stiff peaks form. Drizzle in the condensed milk mixture and powdered ginger and continue to whip until all the condensed milk is incorporated into the cream and the mixture is thick.

4.      Fold in the candied ginger then drizzle over most of the caramel sauce. Stir once or twice (you want thick ribbons of the sauce to remain) then scrape mixture into the prepared pan.  Even out the top then drizzle remaining caramel sauce over top. Draw a butter knife through the mixture in a figure-eight pattern to incorporate the final drizzle of sauce.

5.      Cover and freeze for at least 6 hours.

 

I hope you have enjoyed this molasses journey.

 

 


 

1 comment:

  1. Enjoyed the post and learning somethingnew about a favorite sweetener.

    ReplyDelete

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