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A Christmas staple–and joke—for many people, fruitcakes are made with chopped candied fruit and/or dried fruit, nuts, spices and, sometimes, liquor.

For a food that has been around at least since the Middle Ages, fruitcakes certainly have their share of detractors. The long list of jokes about fruitcakes—a rich dessert containing dried or candied fruits, nuts and spices—are usually along the lines of this classic one from late-night TV host Johnny Carson, who quipped on The Tonight Show in 1985: “The worst gift is a fruitcake. There is only one fruitcake in the entire world, and people keep sending it to each other.”

That’s why I feel like I may be one of the few people on the planet who is a fan of fruitcakes. To me, they taste like the winter holidays. My ancestors are German, and having a stollen (a tapered loaf coated with melted butter and powdered sugar that’s more bread-like in consistency than fruitcake but otherwise is quite similar) on Christmas morning is a tradition in my family.

Jokes about fruitcakes, such as Carson’s, though, are based in a bit of truth. Fruitcakes do keep well. In many countries, before the invention of freezers, the top tiers of wedding cakes were fruitcakes, which made it possible for the bride and groom to enjoy a slice on their first anniversary. The custom still survives in some locales within the United Kingdom.

The Cape Adare Base served Robert Falcon Scott’s Northern Party in 1911. It’s the only example left of humanity’s first building on any continent. ©Antarctic Heritage Trust

But there’s one fruitcake that may be the most famous and long-lasting of all. It has withstood more than a century in the coldest, windiest and driest place on Earth.

Fruitcake in the far south

In August 2017, conservators with the New Zealand-based Antarctic Heritage Trust announced that they had found a 106-year-old fruitcake in Antarctica’s oldest building, a hut on Cape Adare in Victoria Land, East Antarctica. It’s a relic of Robert Falcon Scott’s Northern Party from the Terra Nova Expedition (1910–13).

Norwegian Carsten Borchgrevink’s team had constructed the hut in 1899. Scott’s Northern Party took shelter there in 1911—and left the fruitcake behind. The conservators pronounced the dessert to be in excellent condition, claiming that it was “almost edible.”

The 106-year-old fruitcake was one of nearly 1,500 artifacts that conservators recently collected at Cape Adare. ©Antarctic Heritage Trust

When it was found, the fruitcake was wrapped in paper and was still in its original tin container. It was baked by the British biscuit company Huntley & Palmers, which boasts that its “biscuits are exported all over the world” and that its tins have turned up in the most unexpected places.

So, of all the things Scott’s party needed to take to Antarctica, why include a fruitcake? It turns out that the calorie-loaded, high-fat, high-sugar concoction is an ideal high-energy food for Antarctic conditions. Scott’s team knew this fact well: in fact, they had conducted a study that suggested a high-carb, high-fat diet to be optimal for the harsh conditions. Others have speculated that the fruitcake was carried aboard because it was a popular item in English society at the time, and it went well with a cup of tea.

Unfortunately, the Terra Nova Expedition was ill-fated. Scott and his four companions made the arduous trip to the South Pole, only to find that a Norwegian team had beaten them to it by 34 days. In 1912, trekking through severe weather on their way back to their expedition base, the Terra Nova hut on Cape Evans, all five British explorers perished from exposure, frostbite and starvation.

Along with the fruitcake, a 118-year old painting of a bird, created by Dr. Edmund Wilson, was discovered in the Cape Adare hut. ©Antarctic Heritage Trust

Fruitcake in the “final frontier”

The Antarctica fruitcake that was found in August 2017 was one of about 1,500 artifacts collected from two huts since May 2016. Other recovered items included clothing, fish, jams, meat and tools. A watercolor painting of a treecreeper bird by Edward Wilson, chief of the scientific staff of Scott’s final expedition, has also survived the cold years in Antarctica. All the artifacts were flown to Christchurch, New Zealand, where they are being conserved at a lab at the Canterbury Museum.

Antarctic Heritage Trust conservators have restored the 50-foot-long Terra Nova hut, and several other portable wooden huts to look as they did a century ago. The next phase will be conservation work on the buildings on Cape Adare, the first in Antarctica and the only examples left of humanity’s first building on any continent.

After the Cape Adare hut is restored, the fruitcake—along with all the other artifacts—will be returned to their original resting places, in accordance with the site’s status as an Antarctic Specially Protected Area.

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Antarctica still holds secrets that we are just now starting to discover and understand.

The headlines about a surviving 106-year-old fruitcake are meant to get your attention and make you laugh. But the discovery holds another, deeper message: Antarctica is a wild yet fragile place, and the continent still holds many untold stories about humankind. Who knows what other amazing things are waiting for us, out there?

Because it’s close to the holidays, I want to share one more fruitcake story with you. This time, the tale comes not from the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration but from the Space Age. In an almost tongue-in-cheek exhibit at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., a package of a compressed pineapple fruitcake that was brought along on the 1969 Apollo 11 mission is displayed. Apparently, the first humans to walk on the moon, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, weren’t tempted by the sweet treat. According to a description of the item on the museum’s website, “As it was not consumed during the mission, it was returned to Earth.” 

Here’s to finding your true places and natural habitats,

Candy