EXHIBITS
Student Activities - College of Family Life: The Fruitcake Bake
Finally, there was fruitcake.
The annual Fruitcake Bake was a service project that first took place in the 1930s; it became a tradition spanning four decades or more.[1] The members of Phi Upsilon Omicron used the proceeds to help in various ways; most commonly the money assisted a promising home economics student pay for her education.[2]
The Utah State University Student Newspaper summarized the Fruitcake Bake as follows: “Each year the girls of the [Phi Upsilon Omicron] organization take a recipe, make improvements on it, then begin to mix and bag.” Below is an example of a fruitcake recipe which members of Phi Upsilon Omicron might have used and improved in the 1970s:
Walnut Jewel Fruitcake
¾ cup dried apricots
¾ cup water
1 ½ cups granulated sugar
¾ cup sifted all-purpose flour
½ teaspoon baking powder
½ teaspoon salt
¾ cup sifted pitted read-to-eat prunes
¾ cup pitted dates
¾ cup candied cherries
3 cups Diamond Walnut halves and large pieces
3 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
Simmer apricots in water five minutes. Add ¾ cup sugar and cook slowly 10 minutes longer, until apricots are transparent and glazed. Lift out of syrup with a fork: drain well on wire rack. Resift flour with remaining ¾ cup sugar, baking powder and salt. Combine prunes, dates, cherries, walnuts and apricots. Add to fruit mixture and mix carefully to avoid breaking up fruit. Turn into greased 9-inch square pan. Bake at 300 degrees F. about 1½ hours, or until cake is set in center. Cool in pan. Serve plain or glazed. Makes one 9-inch cake.