CCJ Logo
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Chicago Concerned Jamaicans Newsletter
Newsletter
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
in this issue
Happy Holidays From the Chicago Concerned Jamaicans
Our Valued Sponsors
Join the CCJ Family/Make a Donation
Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Jamaica Santa In the spirit of the Season, the Chicago Concerned Jamaicans would like to wish you and your family a wonderful holiday season. 

The tradition in Jamaica is for people to come together at Christmas Markets to celebrate the story of Christmas with outdoor concerts and plays and to shop for Christmas ornaments and presents at the market found in all major towns and cities on the island.  The costumed Joonkonoo Dancers also come out to perform for children, scaring the ones who have been naughty and rewarding the ones who have been nice with candy and treats.
 
For those of us missing a taste of home this season, here is something that might help:
 
Spiced Dark Fruitcake With Brandy Recipe
This fruitcake is all fruit and spices, and delicious. A little brandy and orange juice add flavor, and you can adjust the amount of fruit and add some nuts to this, if you like.

Ingredients:
·                        8 ounces diced candied orange peel
·                        8 ounces diced citron
·                        8 ounces diced pineapple
·                        8 ounces diced fruitcake mixed fruit
·                        4 ounces whole red candied cherries
·                        4 ounces whole green candied cherries
·                        1 cup currants
·                        1 cup golden or dark raisins
·                        1 cup chopped dates
·                        1/2 cup orange juice
·                        1/2 cup brandy or good bourbon
·                        3 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
·                        1 1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
·                        2 teaspoons ground nutmeg
·                        1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
·                        1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
·                        1/2 teaspoon ground mace
·                        1 teaspoon baking powder
·                        1/2 teaspoon salt
·                        1 cup plus 6 tablespoons butter, room temperature
·                        2 cups brown sugar, firmly packed
·                        5 eggs, separated
·                        1/2 cup molasses

Preparation:
This batter is quite heavy, but a heavy-duty stand mixer can handle it.
Mix the fruit in a large bowl with the orange juice and brandy. Stir gently and set aside to marinate for a few hours.

Generously butter bottom and sides of two 9 x 5 x 3-inch loaf pans and line them with parchment paper. Butter the paper thoroughly. You can use brown paper for this if you don't have parchment paper.
Sift the flour with the spices twice. Add the baking powder and salt and sift again.

Put the butter into a large mixing bowl and cream until smooth. Add sugar; using an electric mixer, cream until light and fluffy. Beat the egg yolks slightly and then add them to the bowl. Mix the batter well before you start to add the flour and spice mixture. Stir the batter as you add the flour, a little at a time, stirring well after each addition. When the flour is thoroughly incorporated, add the molasses and stir. Finally, stir in the fruit, along with any soaking liquid left in the bowl.

Put the egg whites in a stainless steel or glass bowl and beat with a clean beater to stiff peaks. Fold them into the batter thoroughly and then spoon the batter into the prepared pans. Cover loosely with a clean cloth and let the batter sit overnight in a cool place to mellow.

On the next day, heat the oven to 250°. Place the fruitcake on the middle rack of the oven and bake for 3 1/2 to 4 hours. After 1 1/2 hours, cover the pan with a piece of brown paper (do not use foil) or set the pan in a paper bag and return it to the oven.

When the cake has baked for 3 1/2 hours, test the with a toothpick or cake tester. If the tester comes out of the center of the cake clean, the cake is done. Leave the cake in the pan and set on wire rack to cool.
When the cakes are completely cooled, turn out of the pans, leaving the paper lining on the cake. Wrap the cake with parchment, then foil, and pack the cake in a tin. Homemade fruitcakes need air, so punch a few holes in the lid of the tin or set the cover loosely on the tin.

Set the tin in a cool, undisturbed place, and every 3 or 4 days before Christmas, open the foil and drizzle a small amount of bourbon or brandy over the cake. The liquor will keep the cake most and flavorful and help preserve it as well.
Please Support Our Sponsors 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CCJ wishes to thank the many contributors that have made our events successful.  Their gifts have the power to change many lives in Jamaica and we are proud to be associated with these companies whose generosity is greatly appreciated.  We encourage you to patronize these wonderful companies.
 
Join The CCJ Family/Make a Donation 
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

CCJ has developed a well deserved reputation for sponsoring successful fundraising events, something we could not do without the valued help of supporters such as yourself.  With your help, we will be able to continue our efforts to improve the economic and social conditions for children by providing much needed funds in the areas of education, technology, basic food and living needs, disaster relief and economic opportunities.  We are a small; all-volunteer organization with no paid staff or traditional office space, just a tightly-knit and influential membership bonded by a strong common identity and commitment to improving the lives for those of our native and adopted homelands.
 
 


 
Contact Information
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Chicago Concerned Jamaicans
1507 E 53rd Street #610
Hyde Park, IL 60615
PHONE: (312) 602-4548

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Join Our Mailing List