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Everyone's Favorite Easy Bundt Cake

This cake is a breeze to make and is so good it requires no layering, frosting or other time-consuming tasks.

Talk about an easy cake to make or take to a gathering!  Everyone loves the moist and tangy flavor of the cranberries in this not-too-sweet cake. And because there's no frosting, it is easy to transport. If you've ever tried to place a just-frosted cake in a cake carrier, take it to your destination and remove it from the carrier without smudging the frosting, you know what I'm talking about.

Everyone’s Favorite Cranberry Bundt Cake

Makes one large Bundt-style cake

½ cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, at room temperature

1 cup sugar

2 eggs

1 tsp. vanilla extract

½ cup regular sour cream (not the light or no-fat variety)

2 cups flour

½ tsp. salt

1 tsp. baking soda

1 can (14-oz) whole berry cranberry sauce (not the jellied one)

1 orange

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Grease a Bundt pan. If desired, place a greased piece of parchment paper in the bottom of the pan.

In a large mixing bowl, cream butter and sugar with electric hand-held mixer until fluffy.  Add eggs and beat.  Add vanilla and beat.  Add sour cream and beat until well incorporated, scraping down sides of bowl. 

Add flour, salt and baking soda to batter and mix on low.

Add entire can of whole cranberry sauce and stir gently with spoon or rubber spatula.  

Zest the orange and add it to the batter and stir gently. Reserve orange for juice (see below for icing recipe).

Pour mixture into prepared Bundt pan, level top, and bake at 350 degrees for 30-35 minutes or until cake tester inserted in middle of cake comes out clean.

Optional Icing:

After letting cake cool and unmolding it from the Bundt pan, drizzle with a combination of 4 tablespoons of powdered sugar and 1 tsp. of fresh orange juice.

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Maria Giannuzzi May 24, 2013 at 07:06 pm
Politicians are not CEOs. Elected officials are not CEOs. The comparison is not appropriate, butRead More it does fit with Mr. Morici's misplaced CEO worship. The criticisms may be valid, but they must be examined as political or legal criticisms. The government as a business comparison only increases the power of the corporate state. I also note that Mr. Morici's credo which he attributes to President Obama, "We’ll do as we please, stop us if you can" is a very accurate portrayal of predatory capitalism.
MAC May 24, 2013 at 01:23 pm
Maria, your dismissive and divisive 'analysis' ignores the fact that POTUS is anRead More "executive" position, also "Commander-in-Chief" of the military! O had exactly ZERO "executive" experience, which--along with his anti-business and anti-America views--explains his failures. Mr. Morici's assessment of O's job performance is perfectly pragmatic and relevant, while your doting worship of the "Agitator-in-Chief" is rather pathetic, as well as being irrelevant.
Maria Giannuzzi May 24, 2013 at 12:40 pm
The author of the article quoted endlessly above is Peter Morici, a Professor of InternationalRead More Business at the University of Maryland. I suppose he is to be forgiven if he sees everything through a business lens, after all it has given him a very comfortable livelihood for decades. But it is still a faulty lens on this topic and he should know better.