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The next time someone comes up to you and says, “I don’t really believe Jesus died on the cross,” you may wish to respond (in love!) in the following manner: “Let’s conduct an experiment. We’ll put you through so much stress that you actually begin to sweat drops of blood. We’ll beat you in the face. We’ll keep you awake one night due to intense sorrow and then another night due to lengthy legal trials. During this time you will receive no food or water. Then we’ll repeatedly beat you with a whip containing sharp bones and metal balls on the end of each strand. Your skin will be shredded, your muscles will be torn, your organs will be lacerated and you will experience extensive blood loss. We’ll place a crown of thorns of your head and then use the wooded sceptre we placed in your hand to beat you some more. Then we’ll place a heavy beam weighing 75-125 pounds on your back and force you to carry it to your place of execution. When at the site, we’ll drive 5-7 inch nails through your wrists and ankles. We’ll let birds of prey tear at your body as you suffocate in excruciating pain for six hours on the cross. Then, we’ll pierce you in the side with a 6-foot infantry spear, puncturing your heart, and watch the emission of both blood and water. Finally we will place you in a tomb, tightly wrap your body in pungent spices and cover your face, and permit you no medical attention. Would you like to undergo the experiment? Do you think you could survive?”
Randy Smith

Craig’s Macadamia Cake

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CATEGORY CUISINE TAG YIELD
Grains, Eggs, Dairy Cakes, Desserts 12 Servings

INGREDIENTS

1 1/4 c Macadamia nuts
1/4 c Cake flour
6 Egg yolks
3/4 c Sugar
3 dr Vanilla
1 ts Kirsch
7 Egg whites
1/8 ts Salt
1/2 ts Cream of tartar
2 c Macadamia nuts
1/2 c Sugar Water
2 tb Corn syrup
1 tb Unsalted butter
1 tb Whipping cream
2 c Flaked unsweetened coconut
1 c Whipping cream
2 tb Sugar; to taste
1 ts Vanilla extract

INSTRUCTIONS

FOR THE CAKE
FOR THE FILLING
FOR THE ICING
For the CAKE: Butter and flour a 9-inch springform pan. Toast the nuts in a
preheated 325 F oven for 5 to 7 minutes, or until they smell nutty. Cool.
Grate the nuts fine with a hand nut grater and stir in the flour, or grind
them fine with the flour in a food processor. Beat the egg yolks with half
the sugar, the vanilla, and the kirsch to a 3-second ribbon. Warm the egg
whites over hot water or swirl them over a gas flame until barely warm,
then beat them with the salt and the cream of tartar to soft peaks again.
Spread the yolk mixture over the whites and sprinkle with a quarter of the
nuts.  Fold until partially mixed, sprinkle with another quarter of the
nuts, and fold. Repeat until all the nuts have been folded in. Be careful
not to overwork the batter and deflate the eggs. Pour into the prepared pan
and bake in a preheated 325 F oven for 30 to 40 minutes, or until the sides
of the cake just begin to pull away from the sides of the pan. Cool. For
the FILLING: Toast the nuts in a preheated 325 F oven for 5 to 7 minutes,
or until they smell nutty. Cool and chop coarse. Shake the nuts in a coarse
strainer to remove any dusty particles. Put the sugar in a small
non-corroding saucepan, add the water, and cook over medium heat until
light gold.  Remove from the heat and carefully add the corn syrup, butter,
and cream.  Stir over low heat until the caramel has dissolved, then stir
the caramel into the nuts to bind them. Slice the cake into two layers and
spread the warm filling between them. For the ICING: Toast the coconut in a
preheated 325 F oven for 5 to 8 minutes, stirring often until pale golden
brown.  Cool.  Whip the cream with the sugar and vanilla until it holds
soft peaks and is just stiff enough to spread on the cake. Ice the cake
with the cream and press the coconut all over the surface of the cake.
From Gemini's MASSIVE MealMaster collection at www.synapse.com/~gemini

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