By ELIZABETH KARMEL

Associated Press

My grandmother, who lived with us when I was growing up, had a serious sweet tooth and would bake something almost every day.

In the spring, it was coconut cream pie. In the summer, home-made ice cream and peach pie. My grandmother, who lived with us when I was growing up, had a serious sweet tooth and would bake something almost every day.

In the spring, it was coconut cream pie. In the summer, home-made ice cream and peach pie. And during fall apple season, she would bake this very simple apple cake and serve it warm with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream.

My mother and I loved this cake, it’s so simple, yet so satisfying and comforting and never thought to write it down before my grandmother died. For years, we searched her recipe cards to no avail until last summer when I was doing research for a new cookbook called “Steak and

Cake.” Happily, we came across a recipe card that looked like it might be the thing. I made the cake immediately and as my mother and I tasted it, we finally knew that we had found the one. Sometimes, the memory outshines the reality. But in this cake, it did not.

As I was testing recipes for the cookbook, I added my grandmother’s apple cake to 10 other cakes, some classic and some new-fangled, for a neighborhood tasting_the cookbook writer’s version of a “cake walk.

”Everyone gravitated toward my grandmother’s cake.

I had to stop myself from adding a pinch of salt and a teaspoon of vanilla to the batter as I rarely make a cake without it, but I decided that I should preserve this cake just the way my grandmother made it. The batter is very stiff-like cookie dough-before you add the apples, but rest assured as soon as the apples give up their juice, the batter loosens and will bake beautifully.

GRANDMOTHER ODOM’S APPLE CAKE

Start to finish: 90 minutes Servings: 8-12

• 4 generous cups raw apples, peeled and cut coarse (about 5 large Granny Smith apples)
• 2 cups granulated white sugar
• 1/2 cup vegetable oil such as Crisco
• 2 large eggs
• 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
• 2 teaspoons baking soda
• 2 cups all-purpose flour
• 1 cup chopped toasted walnuts
• Confectioner’s sugar for decorating
• Cooking spray
• Pan: 10-cup bundt or tube pan

Heat the oven to 350 F.

Peel and chop apples and set aside. Meanwhile, beat together sugar and oil and add eggs one at a time until creamy.

Whisk together flour, cinnamon and soda. Add dry mixture to sugar, oil and eggs by thirds.

Remove from stand mixer and fold in chopped apples. Let sit for 5 minutes, stir well and add walnuts. Mix well.

Pour batter into prepared pan. I prefer Baker’s Joy or an- other brand of spray coating with flour and place on a sheet pan to bake.

Bake 60-65 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Let cool in the pan 10 minutes, then invert on a cake cooling rack. Dust top with confectioner’s sugar if desired.

Nutrition information per serving: 412 calories; 147 calories from fat; 17 g fat (2 g saturated; 0 g trans fats); 36 mg cholesterol; 222 mg sodium; 63 g carbohydrate; 4 g fiber; 42 g sugar; 5 g protein.

EDITOR’S NOTE: Elizabeth Karmel is a barbecue and Southern foods expert. She is the chef and pit master at on- line retailer CarolinaCueToGo.com and the author of three books, including Taming the Flame.