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Sandy's Fruitcake for Passover

Time 2 hours
Yields Makes 12 slices.
Sandy's Fruitcake for Passover
(Beatrice de Gea / Los Angeles Times)
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Preparing breakfast is a real challenge for the home cook during Passover, since the use of flour is forbidden during this eight-day period. But I love breakfast, and over the years I have created many Passover dishes that my family enjoys at the morning meal. Passover begins at sundown on March 27.

Try starting breakfast with a bowl of cold fruit soup made with freshly squeezed orange juice. Use blood oranges, now in season; they yield a strikingly beautiful raspberry-colored juice. You may not think of serving orange juice in this manner, but it is delicious. Simply pour the juice over sliced strawberries, which are at their sweetest this time of the year.

One breakfast challenge in my house is attempting to satisfy everyone’s tastes. Our daughters and their families, who live in Oregon, stay with us during the holiday, and finding something everyone likes to eat is almost impossible. I tried buying the usual Passover dry cereals for the grandchildren, but they did not go over very well.

But they all love my Matzo Farfel Granola. It has become a popular snack, and sometimes the kids combine the granola with milk and sliced bananas. I now make it year-round and use dried fruits that vary from cranberries to chopped apricots.

One breakfast treat comes from leftovers. I always bake several different sponge cakes for our Passover Seders, and I like to use slices the next day to make Passover French Toast. A little sweeter than the traditional kind made with bread, it has a light, airy consistency. It’s delicious with fruit preserves.

For something more different yet, thin slices of fruitcake are a nice treat with your morning latte or cappuccino. This fruitcake recipe, which I adapted for Passover, came from Sandy Krusoff. She makes her fruitcakes for friends three or four times a year, and this year we were lucky to receive one. The ingredients, a combination of dried fruits and nuts, remind me of the charoset we serve at our Seder.

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1

Heat the oven to 350 degrees. Spread the almonds in a baking pan and toast until light brown, shaking the pan once or twice, about 15 minutes. Set aside.

2

Reduce the oven temperature to 300 degrees. Brush a 9x5-inch loaf pan with the melted butter and line with parchment paper.

3

Combine the dates, apricots, raisins, almonds and walnuts in a large bowl. Combine the cake meal, sugar and potato starch and mix well. Add the fruit mixture and mix evenly. Beat the eggs and vanilla to blend, then stir into the fruit mixture. Spoon the batter into the loaf pan and spread evenly, pressing the batter into the corners of the pan.

4

Bake the cake until golden brown, about 1 1/2 to 1 3/4 hours. Cool the cake in the pan on a rack for 10 minutes, then turn out of the pan. Peel off the paper and let cool on the rack.

5

Wrap in plastic wrap and foil. Refrigerate the cake at least 1 day or up to 2 months. To serve, place the cake on a wooden board and cut into thin slices with a serrated knife.