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Searching for Mrs. Pilat’s Prune Cake Recipe

by Pat Trevino | August 17, 2025

There’s something about certain dishes—especially the ones we can’t quite find—that linger in our hearts longer than they ever did on our plates. They’re not just about ingredients or instructions. They’re about remembering. About trying to hold onto something that felt like home.

Cuero Online News recently received one of those quiet, tender emails that carries far more than a simple request. Mrs. Heidi Doreck was looking for a recipe.

She explained that her mother, Lois Senf Doreck—who would have been 95 this past April—had a dear friend named Mrs. Pilat. Mrs. Pilat lived behind KN Root Beer in Cuero, near Heidi’s Aunt Rae Stahl, and she was known for one particular tradition: she made Prune Cake for every wedding or baby shower.

“I have not had that prune cake since I was a small child, but I would love to have the recipe,” Heidi wrote.

Over the years, she’s asked—neighbors, longtime Cuero residents, anyone who might remember. But no one had the recipe or recalled Mrs. Pilat. She remembered asking her mother about it after Mrs. Pilat passed away, and her mother gently replied, “Oh honey, I doubt she had an actual recipe—she just knew herself.”

Her story reminded me that sometimes, what we’re searching for isn’t just a recipe—it’s a way to feel close to someone we’ve loved. A flavor that lives somewhere between memory and longing.

I don’t know exactly what Heidi was feeling when she wrote to us—but I know what stories like hers stir in me. After my own mother passed away, I found myself doing the same thing—chasing a memory. Looking for the scent of something familiar, the texture of a dish she used to make, the comfort of a flavor that felt like her.

It wasn’t just about food. It was about connection. About holding onto something that felt like home.

Little did Heidi know, I have a small collection of old recipe books from DeWitt County church organizations—humble, spiral-bound volumes filled with recipes submitted by church members. Some pages are stained with vanilla or dotted with flour—proof they were used, loved, and passed around more than once. These aren’t just cookbooks. They’re community heirlooms—filled with handwritten notes, family names, and dishes that showed up at every potluck, every funeral meal, every celebration.

That’s the thing about these old recipes. Sometimes they were never written down. They lived in the hearts of the women who made them, passed along through memory and repetition, not measurements and timers.

One day, I hope to digitize them and donate both the files and the books to the historical commission—if they’ll have them. Because preserving these recipes means preserving the stories behind them.

So when Heidi’s request came in, I went straight to the shelves. I combed through several cookbooks, hoping to find Mrs. Pilat’s name or a familiar prune cake tucked between the pages. But after hours of searching, I realized it might be easier to Google the recipe.

And I did. Google lead me to a few prune cake recipes —some with buttermilk, some with nuts, some with a caramel glaze.

So while I didn’t find Mrs. Pilat’s exact recipe (yet), I’d like to share a version of Prune Cake that might come close. And while we’re at it, here’s a recipe I came across that I think might belong to my friend Tom’s mother—just another reminder of how these books connect us in unexpected ways. (plus a few other submissions)

If any of our readers remember Mrs. Pilat—or especially if you have her Prune Cake recipe—please reach out. We’d love to share it, preserve it, and pass it on.
Because somewhere out there, someone else might be chasing the same memory.

Prune Cake


Prep Time15 min                               Cook Time45 min                                            Yield16 servings

Ingredients

  • 1-1/2 cups sugar
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon ground nutmeg
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup canola oil
  • 3 large eggs, beaten
  • 1/2 cup buttermilk
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 cup chopped pitted dried plums (prunes), cooked
  • 1 cup chopped nuts
  • TOPPING:
  • 1/2 cup butter, cubed
  • 1/3 cup buttermilk
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 3/4 cup sugar

Directions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°. In a large bowl, combine first 6 ingredients. Add oil, eggs, buttermilk and vanilla; mix well. Fold in prunes and nuts. Pour into an ungreased 13×9-in. baking pan. Bake until toothpick comes out clean, about 45 minutes. Meanwhile, combine all topping ingredients in a saucepan. Bring to a boil and boil 2 minutes. Pour over hot cake. Leave in pan to cool.

Nutrition Facts

1 piece: 437 calories, 25g fat (6g saturated fat), 51mg cholesterol, 351mg sodium, 48g carbohydrate (32g sugars, 2g fiber), 5g protein.

How should you serve prune cake?

You can serve this prune cake either warm or chilled. However, serving it hot out of the oven is not recommended for two reasons. First, you’ll want to be sure to allow enough time for the glaze to fully soak into the cake. Second, this cake is quite moist, so you want to give it enough cooling time so it doesn’t crumble when cut. It has its own glaze, so it doesn’t need a sauce, but a scoop of vanilla ice cream would go nicely alongside it.

How should you store prune cake?

To store prune cake, allow it to cool completely to room temperature. Cover the pan with storage wrap, or place the cake in an airtight container like a cake keeper. The cake can last for up to five days at room temperature. Because of the glaze, avoid placing storage wrap directly on the cake.

To freeze, allow the cake to cool completely to room temperature. Cover the pan with storage wrap and aluminum foil, or slice the cake and place in an airtight container. Prune cake can last in the freezer for up to two months. Thaw overnight in the fridge, or go the extra mile by gently reheating it in the oven to reawaken its sugary glaze.

One of the advertisements featured in the cookbook.
Published Author, Photographer, Genealogist, Blog Writer

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