Is it any wonder though? It's January, the depths of winter, who really wants to start a new exercise regime or start eating healthily when all you really want to do is watch tely under a duvet on the sofa and eat comfort food.
Well, if you are one of those many people who have told the New Year resolutions where to go then I have the recipe right here for you. It's a reasonable healthy cake which you can eat guilt-free, a term which I personally hate because cake should always be guilt-free. But if you insist on associating unnecessary emotions on an innocent piece of cake then follow the advice of the great Mary Berry: 'have a smaller slice'.
This cake is taken from HRH Delia Smith and her very lovely book: Delia's Cakes and I decided to have a go at it to do something different cake-wise instead of the Great Cake Project 2014 plus I can actually eat this one instead of just decorating it.
It is a cracking cake once cooked and cooled. It is dark, it is dense, it is sticky, it is...in a word... glorious. It's a perfect winter cake and after reading this you definitely go and make it.
Sticky Date and Prune cake
Ingredients
175g dates, stoned and chopped
125g ready-to-eat prunes, chopped
75g raisins
75g currants
200g butter
300g condensed milk
220g plain flour
pinch of salt
1/2 tsp Bicarb
1 tbsp marmalade
Glaze
1 1/2 tbsp marmalade +1/2 tbsp water
Method
Place everything apart from the dry ingredients and marmalade into a sauce pan.
Bring to the boil and simmer for 3 minutes then place into a large mixing bowl to cool for half n hour
Line a 20cm cake tin and preheat the oven to 170C (fan)
Weigh out the flour and sift with the salt and bicarb.
Once the mixture has cooled, stir in the dry ingredients and marmalade into it until fully combined.
Pour into the tin and smooth with the back of a spoon.
Bake for 1 hour and 50 minutes.
Halfway through, check on it, if the top is getting dark, cover with baking paper for the remaining time.
Remove from the oven and allow to cool in the tin for 5 minutes then turn out on a cooling rack.
Once the cake is cool, heat the marmalade and water in a small saucepan until smooth then brush over the cake to glaze it.
Serve and Enjoy
a glorious cake!... love this cake and cook it often... so sticky and gloriously chewy!... xx
ReplyDeleteIts one that I'm gonna be trying out this week. Sounds like a proper cake for grown ups.
ReplyDeleteThis recipe didn’t work for me. 170 fan is too hot and will make the cake burn and dry out. On checking Delia Smith’s recipe, she suggests ~150 if using a fan oven. Also the recipe should have 200ml of water and 50:50 plain flour and wholewheat. Otherwise it is identical including the added marmalade, baking time and glaze. I wonder whether the recipe has been transcribed correctly.
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