Recipe

This Heavenly Bourbon Cake Anchored the Best Boat Lunch I’ve Ever Had

A ripple of pistachio cream and glaze of bourbon level up a box of yellow cake mix

A cake

Photo: courtesy of Harry’s Continental Kitchen


The fishing was slow, the redfish dour and uninterested, the result, most likely, of a cold front that the Tampa-Sarasota area just could not shake.

The company, however, was stellar. I was with Captain Greg Peterson, the excellent tarpon and redfish guide, and Rusty Chinnis, the indefatigable warrior of these waters in his capacity as the chairman of Suncoast Waterkeeper. We talked as we tossed flies at the few redfish we spotted on the white sand and seagrass flats, watching in bemusement as yet another one turned away from our offering with snobby insouciance.

The redfish might not have been hungry. But we were.

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Luckily, Chinnis had stopped by Harry’s Continental Kitchen on Longboat Key that morning and picked up supplies. 

On the way back to the launch after our half-day on the water (I had to get on the road), Peterson cut the engine and we floated as Chinnis laid out our feast. We started with cups of beautifully sweet corn salad and then moved on, with gusto, to the sandwiches—roast turkey with cranberry sauce on a croissant, roast sirloin on French bread doused with hollandaise, and my favorite, the Longboat Key, a ham-salami-provolone masterpiece spritzed with just the right amount of vinaigrette.

Two men hold bites of cake in a boat
Photo: courtesy of monte burke
The author (left) and captain Greg Peterson with bites of Harry’s bourbon cake.

As we ate, the warm sun emerged from the bank of fog—of course, just as we were leaving—and a squabble of gulls eyed us greedily. And then, just as were administering last rites to our sandwiches, Chinnis produced the coup de grâce. Harry’s is famous for its brownies—for good reason, they’re among the best I’ve tasted—but it was the bourbon cake that stayed with me. It was perfectly soaked in bourbon, not too gooey, with a line of lime-green pistachio cream striped through the middle. I am not usually a dessert person, but I was that day, hoarding one of the slices of the cake to myself.

A slice of cake
Photo: courtesy of Harry’s Continental Kitchen

I felt as full as Henry VIII as Peterson cranked up the motor and idled us to the launch. Fishing trips are not always about the catching, though that end does give purpose to the journey. Our trip had been as enjoyable as any I could remember, with great company and the best boat lunch I’ve ever had.


Harry’s Heaven’s Door Bourbon Cake

Yield: 1 cake

For the cake

    • 1 (13.25-oz.) package yellow cake mix

    • 2 (3.4-oz.) packages Jell-O instant pistachio pudding mix

    • ½ cup cold water

    • 4 large eggs

    • ½ cup Heaven’s Door bourbon

    • 1 cup chopped pistachio nuts, for topping

For the sugar glaze

    • ½ lb. butter

    • 1 cup sugar

    • ¼ cup water

    • ½ cup Heaven’s Door bourbon

For the pistachio pudding filling

    • 2 (3.4-oz.) packages Jell-O instant pistachio pudding mix

    • 2 cups cold milk

    • 2 cups half and half

    • 3 oz. Heaven’s Door bourbon

Preparation

  1. Bake the cake: Preheat oven to 325ºF. Grease and flour a 9-inch springform pan. Thoroughly mix yellow cake mix, pistachio pudding mix, cold water, eggs, and bourbon. Pour batter into pan. Bake for approximately one hour.

  2. Make the sugar glaze: While the cake is baking, melt butter in a small saucepan, then blend in sugar and water. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly for 5 minutes. Remove and stir in Heaven’s Door bourbon.

  3. Make the pistachio pudding filling: Whisk together pudding ingredients together. Set aside.

  4. Assemble the cake: Remove cake from oven. While it’s still hot and in the pan, prick lots of holes in the top of the cake with a toothpick. Pour the hot sugar glaze over the cake so that the cake absorbs it. Repeat until all glaze is used.

    When cake is cooled, cut it in half horizontally and layer the pistachio pudding filling in the center. Sprinkle the top of the assembled layer cake with chopped pistachios.


Monte Burke is a Garden & Gun contributing editor and the New York Times best-selling author of SabanLords of the Fly and Men of Troy, among other books. He is also a contributing editor at The Drake. He grew up primarily in Alabama and North Carolina and now lives in Brooklyn with his wife and daughters.


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