Jessica Wright
Baked Alaska
I attended Longwood University (Longwood College for the majority of my years there), and some of my favorite memories are based around the school’s many traditions. One of the best is the annual Thanksgiving dinner held the week before students head home for the holiday.
Students reserve a table in the dining hall with their friends and are served a real Thanksgiving meal, complete with turkey and all of the trimmings. But the best part was dessert…Baked Alaska. My freshman year, I had never had it before, but when the yummy cake and ice cream covered in meringue hit the table, my friends and I couldn’t wait to dig in. The coolest part about Baked Alaska is the fact that it’s baked. Ice cream in the oven? Yep. Apparently, the meringue serves as insulation, so while it browns in the oven for a few minutes, the ice cream doesn’t melt.
I decided to reminisce a little and make the dessert as a pre-Thanksgiving treat. I cut a few corners to make it easier (like not making the cake from scratch), but it was still as delicious as I remembered. Thanks, Longwood!
Baked Alaska
Note: I pulled from several recipes I found online to put this together and make it my own, including www.foodnetwork.com and www.justapinch.com
- 1 loaf pound cake (I used store bought)
- 1 brick of ice cream (I used Neopolitan and just cut out a brick to fit)
- 6 egg whites
- ¼ tsp. cream of tartar
- 1 cup sugar
Preheat oven to 500 degrees.
Put plastic wrap in a loaf pan. Cut a brick of ice cream a little bit smaller in width than the cake and place on bottom of loaf pan. Cut pound cake in half horizontally and place on top of ice cream. Put cake and ice cream in freezer until the ice cream is firm.
Mix egg whites and cream of tartar until foamy. Beat in sugar until soft peaks form.
Get cake and ice cream out of freezer and transfer to an oven-safe plate or cookie sheet, flipping it so the ice cream is on top. Cover the cake and ice cream with meringue, making sure it’s covered completely.
Put in lower portion of oven for 3-5 minutes, or until meringue is browned. Serve immediately.