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Last minute Christmas cake recipe

angel decorationOver the years we have tried various Christmas cake recipes but the best by far was the one that we made last year, a week before Christmas. We wanted a cake packed with fruit but not a dark heavy traditional type of Christmas cake. We’d had to force down too many slices of these in the past.

My Mother used to make us these and bring one each Christmas. Then she decided to buy them. These were worse and not disguised by being fed with lashings of brandy. We’d cut a few slices at Christmas, give her half the cake to take home at the end of her stay and the rest would linger in the larder for weeks and eventually been tossed out with the rubbish. We tried feeding one particularly disappointing one to the birds one year, and even they turned their beaks up at it.

“Make a Christmas cake if you want. But I won’t be eating it,” said Danny, settling in a large armchair to watch the rugby. Faced with this challenge I was determined to bake a cake that even D couldn’t resist.

I skimmed though all our books and found a recipe for a Christmas cake that sounded lighter than usual and tinkered with the ingredients. I replaced the darker ingredients, molasses, stout and muscavado sugar with lighter alternatives. We didn’t cut it until Boxing Day, when I spotted Danny sneaking into the kitchen for a second slice. Slightly paler than a traditional cake, it was packed with fruit, tasted wonderful and kept well. The last slice was tucked into my lunchbox at the end of January.

If you fancy trying a more traditional recipe, here are two links to sites with Christmas cake recipes that look good:
There is a Mary Berry recipe here http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/database/apricotandbrandychri_77766.shtml
Delia Smith has a range of recipes here http://www.deliaonline.com/search/?qx=christmas+cake

Last minute Christmas cake recipe:

Equipment:

8″ round cake tin (4″ deep), baking parchment.

Ingredients:

  • 450g raisins
  • 285g sultanas
  • 110g currants
  • 180g glacé cherries (halved)
  • 110g ground almonds
  • 225g unsalted butter (room temperature)
  • 225g soft brown sugar (pale)
  • 285g plain flour (sieved)
  • zest of a lemon
  • 5 eggs
  • 2 tsp of mixed spice
  • 2 tbsp of pale runny honey
  • 200 ml of beer (I used Speckled Hen)
  • 4 tbsp of Irish Whiskey/Whisky/ Brandy – when the baked cake has cooled

Method:

  1. Preheat oven to 160c (140 fan)
  2. Line the base and sides of the 8″ cake tin with a double thickness of baking parchment. Cut the paper an inch deeper than the tin so that it is sticking above the top rim.
  3. Cream the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy (I use an electric mixer for this).
  4. Beat the eggs well and add them gradually to the mixture, a little at a time, beating them well. If the mixture curdles beat in a teaspoon of the flour before continuing.
  5. Using a tablespoon, gently fold in the flour, lemon zest and spices.
  6. Fold in the beer and honey and stir gently.
  7. Add the fruit and ground almonds and stir gently.
  8. Transfer the mixture to the cake tin and make a hollow in the centre of the mixture (roughly 2″ wide and 1″ deep).
  9. Bake in the centre of a preheated oven for about 2.5 hours depending on your oven, it may need a little longer. Check that it is cooked by inserting a skewer into the middle – this should be clean when removed. The centre should feel firm and springy if touched.
  10. Turn out onto a wire rack. When it is cold, make a few holes in the top and bottom of the cake (using a skewer) and feed the cake with the Irish whiskey (brandy would be fine as an alternative).
  11. Wrap the cake in baking parchment and store in a tin or cover with foil until you need it.
  12. If you would like to make your own marzipan – it’s very easy and so much better than bought. My recipe is here

Tips and tricks:

  • If you are going to cover the cake with marzipan and ice it, put the marzipan on a few days before it is iced so the surface of the marzipan can dry. Otherwise the marzipan can bleed through and stain the icing.
  • I sliced off the top of my cake before putting on the marzipan so the top would be flat. Or use the base as the top.

  Leave a reply

297 Comments

  1. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Crystal

    Any pale ale will do. I used Duchy Originals ‘Bottle conditioned Summer Ale’ this year.

    Newcastle brown would probably do the job. If you want a pale colour avoid the dark beer i.e. Guinness.

  2. Help!

    I can’t get Speckled Hen…what’s a suitable, widely available alternative?

    I take it Newcastle Brown wouldn’t do the job…

    Thanks in advance for any advice anyone can offer!

  3. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Lorraine,

    Thanks for leaving a comment. I’m sure that the marmalade will work.

    I made our cake at the weekend. The Christmas pud is being made tonight – how last minute is that!

  4. Hi, I always leave it until the last minute to make a cake, so when I saw this recipe I knew it was for me !
    I am planning to make two cakes, one for me and one for my boss. I have substituted the honey for homemade marmalde (with whisky), I hope it works out ok? the cake is in the oven now so fingers crossed.
    Thank you for the recipe, Loraine

  5. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Mildred

    Thanks for the tip!

  6. Yes, we put blanched almonds over the tops of some of our cakes (closely in ever decreasing circles), and cook them without covering for an hour then with a round piece of tinfoil for the rest of the time. The nuts are nicely browned then, just right!

  7. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Jo

    I don’t see why not but I’d cover the top with some baking parchment (a square over the top of the baking parchment on the sides) for the last half of baking so that the nuts don’t burn.

    I’d love to hear how you get on.

  8. I cannot find the Christmas cake recipe I have used for over 20 years. Must have got lost when we moved house! We don’t like marizpan and icing so I usually cover the cake with rows of different nuts before I put it in the oven and glaze the nuts when the cake is cooked. Is it OK to do this with this recipe?
    Thanks for your help. Jo

  9. Fiona Nevile

    Hi Susan

    Feeding the cake makes it last longer. That’s how people can make a Christmas cake in June and eat them on Christmas day. We bought one of these “ handmade and award winning and hated it. To me it tasted as if it had been made six months earlier. That’s why we developed our own recipe. Forget vintage cake, I wanted to eat a cake full of life and freshness.

    If you make this cake now it will not wither at the edges before Christmas if you don’t feed it. Just store it carefully (wrapped in baking parchment in an airtight tin). It should last a good month. Our cake does not taste of alcohol to me. But we don’t soak the fruit in alcohol and the feeding is minimal.

  10. Hi

    Is feeding this cake essential? I’m not too keen on the taste of alcohol in cakes. Is there an alternative method/ingredient?

    Thanks Susan

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