Recipe Tin Project: Swedish Nut Cake

This recipe card came out of an old recipe tin that I’ve been cooking my way through. I call it the Recipe Tin Project. It’s chock full of old recipe cards, most of which seem to be from the ’60s and ’70s. I love food history, and the idea is to breathe new life into these recipes from the past and maybe learn a technique or two from them along the way. The recipes come from different people with different handwriting and some have sweet illustrations while others are on plain (often smudged and stained) index cards.


This card comes with a vibrant little picture of a pot, an artichoke, and some mushrooms, and the handwriting is in blue ink that’s still bright. There are a few smudges and stains but the card is still easy to read and the ingredients and instructions are thorough and laid out in a logical way. (That’s not always the case with these old cards.)


There are also some notes about how you can incorporate Butter Buds and fat-free cream cheese into the recipe, which definitely harkens back to a very different food era. I ignored them. I used real butter and regular cream cheese because if you’re going to make a cake, go ahead and have the real thing.


It’s a very simple-to-make 9×13 cake that you don’t even need a mixer for. It’s flavorful and anything but dry and while I don’t generally think of Sweden when I think of pineapple, all that really matters is that it’s delicious. It is. And it’s a vintage recipe with serious staying power.

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