Pumpkin Bread Stuffed with Chai Cheesecake
It always feels like when I have the most stories to tell, I find myself silent under their weight. When Mike and I broke up years ago, I just lost all my words for awhile. My thoughts were traveling a million miles a minute, making all the connections, tying the hum of a rusty refrigerator in Missouri to a gauze of silence in Denver. I have those threads sewn up in my heart but the stories take too much work to form. Not too much, but more than I’m ready for each week.
Moving to California has been the same way.
I expected I’d tell you all about it. But I feel like I can’t start without telling you about the 5-day drive that felt like a 5-day free fall off a cliff, and I can’t tell you that without telling you about trauma and safety. And I can’t tell that story.
I want to launch in and tell you about V, a student I work with right now who for weeks could not have cared less that I existed — but who confided in me yesterday that she ran my relay race not for a popsicle, but for A, a younger student who looks up to her and absolutely beamed to be included. Y’all.
I want to tell you about how rain here is like snow in Carolina: all the kids jump up and run outside, twirling around like it’s magic.
I want to tell you about the giant rug I scored on Craigslist that was too small in that sprawling house I snagged it from, but looks regal in our studio apartment.
I want to tell you about the poem I wrote: the whole script with annotations: methyl groups / that slipped through my mother’s fingers…
I want to explain the canyons and the hills here, how a cross at the apex against the sunset hits me in a way I wasn’t prepared for, how one of these crosses shares the name of my niece, how the earth is warped here in ways that sometimes feel Jurassic.
I want to tell you about my tiny poky garden of succulents that are all still alive so far (one looks iffy).
I want to tell you how for some reason this move dredged up things I wasn’t expecting (and how wild it is that I wasn’t expecting it). How learning about refugees made me sob before I was ready because I realized I had to leave my family years ago, that every now and then there would be pumpkin pancakes and I could pretend but there are walls and walls and walls and waves and waves.
This is why it hurt so much when my grandmother died, and I might have explained all that,
if I had the energy. But for now I can’t. So suffice it to say this is the transformation I wanted, the new world — and I’m still baking nice things in it, figuring things out here and there.
One year ago: 4-Ingredient Slow Cooker Coconut Cake
Two years ago: Cheesecake-Stuffed Pumpkin Bread
Three years ago: Baked Caramel Apple Cheesecake Dumplings
Four years ago: “Magic” Chocolate, Coconut, and Pecan Pastry Braid
Five years ago: Pumpkin Pecan Streusel Breakfast Braid with Maple Brown Sugar Glaze
Six years ago: Homemade Croissant Phototutorial
Seven years ago: Jack-o’-Lantern Whoopie Pies
- 3 cups sugar
- 3 1/3 cups flour
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- 1 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 2 teaspoons nutmeg
- 1 teaspoon ground cloves
- 2 teaspoons cinnamon
- 4 whole eggs
- 1 (15-ounce) can pureed pumpkin
- 1 cup oil
- 1 cup water
- heaping 1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- heaping 1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom
- 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
- 1/4 teaspoon ground allspice
- 1/4 teaspoon ground pepper (white or black)
- dash cayenne pepper
- 4 (8-ounce) packages cream cheese, room temperature
- 1 cup granulated white sugar
- 2 large eggs
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F and grease 3 (9 x 4-inch) loaf pans. I also place a greased square of parchment in each to encourage the bread to come out after baking.
- In a small bowl, whisk together chai spices (cinnamon, cardamom, nutmeg, allspice, ginger, pepper, cayenne) in a small bowl. In a medium bowl, beat together cream cheese, sugar, egg, and vanilla extract. Beat in the spice mixture. Place the chai cream cheese filling into a zip-top bag with a big corner cut off for easy piping. Set aside.
- In a large bowl, whisk together the sugar, flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, nutmeg, cloves, and cinnamon. In a separate medium bowl, beat together the eggs, pumpkin, oil, and water. Add the wet ingredients to the dry ingredients and combine. Pour a very thin layer of pumpkin batter into each pan and pipe thick ribbons of the cream cheese mixture over top, separating it evenly between the three loaves (the cream cheese layer will rise as the bread bakes, so you want to start it out almost at the bottom of the pan). Be sure to use it all. Pour the rest of the pumpkin batter on top, distributing it evenly between the 3 pans. Bake the loaves for 45 minutes to an hour, or until a wooden skewer inserted into the center of the cake comes out with just a few moist crumbs. Don't overbake!
- Set the bread out to cool for just 5 minutes before inverting each pan onto a long sheet of aluminum foil. Immediately fold the foil over the bread and secure very tightly to trap steam in. Let the loaves cool inside the foil. Serve just warm with a schmear of softened butter.
allie
October 25, 2016 at 9:04 am (8 years ago)I loved this poignant post Julie. Thanks for sharing snippets of your new life. And your old life. Life is beautiful and painful and real. Thanks for the real. The stuffed pumpkin bread looks delicious!
Julie Ruble
October 25, 2016 at 2:55 pm (8 years ago)Thanks Allie <3
Anton
October 25, 2016 at 8:45 pm (8 years ago)I hear you. I felt that way a lot when I moved far away.
I want to make chai flavored everything right now.
Julie Ruble
October 26, 2016 at 12:53 am (8 years ago)Glad to know I’m not alone!
Stephanie Miller
October 26, 2016 at 12:01 am (8 years ago)Julie, this is a wonderful sharing of your heart and soul without details. Details can be too private, too primal in their connection to the chain of events that leads us to the fork in the road, to the huge changes, to the moment in the past where things shattered and dissolved while you were helpless to stop it.
Life is chock full of this stuff. Full of this grit that works out the pearls of our lives. You are beautiful in your process and in your completion.
Thank you for always being amazing you!
<3
Julie Ruble
October 26, 2016 at 12:53 am (8 years ago)Beautifully put, Stephanie. Thank you for always being so supportive!
Jane S
October 26, 2016 at 11:21 pm (8 years ago)Transitions can be exciting, scary, stressful, fun, sad, overwhelming… and obviously, so much more. It’s important to allow yourself time to adjust to all the feelings. Thanks for sharing, Julie!
LYanke
November 23, 2016 at 4:26 pm (8 years ago)Public references to private matters leaves a few people nostalgic but most readers only frustrated at not being let in on the secret, Lovely recipe.
Julie Ruble
November 23, 2016 at 5:28 pm (8 years ago)Please don’t pretend you speak for most or even some of my readers, many of whom have supported me on my move. This comment is presumptuous and strange; I think you must be confused about where you are, which is on my personal blog. This might help: http://willowbirdbaking.com/2015/06/09/hot-strawberry-cake-with-ice-cream/