The following excerpt is taken from The Southerner’s Cookbook: Recipes, Wisdom, and Stories by David DiBenedetto and the editors of Garden & Gun. The new cookbook, which goes on sale October 27, is by the same editors of 2013’s New York Times Bestselling The Southerner’s Handbook.
Appalachian Apple Stack Cake is communal cooking at its finest. Originally, each layer was baked at home by individual cooks, likely in cast-iron skillets, then brought together and assembled for church suppers and gatherings. Instead of the spongy cakes we’re used to today, these layers are more like cookies — firmer, so they slowly soften beneath liberal applications of apple butter and cooked apples. This recipe stays mostly true to those principles. Instead of individually baking the layers one skillet at a time, though, use a cake pan to trace a pattern on parchment paper and trim circles of rolled dough to fit. Bake two layers simultaneously (more if you have a convection oven). The edges of the cake layers won’t be as perfectly neat as if you’d baked them in skillets or cake pans, but that’s all right. This is a rustic cake.
Applejack Stack Cake

Serves 12 to 16 people
Ingredients:
For the Filling:
3 pounds assorted apples, peeled and cut into half-inch wedges
1/2 cup brown sugar
1 cup apple cider
1/4 cup applejack, apple brandy, or bourbon
1 1/2 cups apple butter
For the Cake:
5 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
1/3 cup buttermilk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
3/4 cup (1½ sticks) unsalted butter
2 cups granulated sugar
1/4 cup molasses
2 large eggs
For the Glaze:
1 cup dark brown sugar
1/4 cup reserved apple cider mixture (from the filling)
1 tablespoon molasses
2 tablespoons unsalted butter