A chocolate Guinness cake was the star of the show and of course Guinness was served for those brave enough to drink it so early in the day.
The cake stand had dainty sandwiches including egg and cress, always very popular, on the bottom tier. The eggs were true free range, a gift from one of the ladies in our watercolour painting class and the yolks are an astonishingly bright orange. She has a number of hens that lay lots of eggs and she brings everyone a box of half a dozen every week! We also used some home grown cress grown on our windowsill from a packet of seeds smuggled in from our trip back to the UK at Christmas. (I have never found either cress or packets of seeds other than watercress in France.)
There were also ham and tomato sandwiches, smoked salmon, cream cheese and cucumber sandwiches, all with the crusts removed! I also made a plate of mini sausage rolls using cocktail frankfurters which were very tasty and well received.
The middle tier had home made scones (made by Nick) and some cream horns. I wrote about them here. The top layer had little iced and decorated squares of lemon cake. I fancied doing French fancies but chickened out when I spotted this Irish recipe by Donal Skehan.
However, they very nearly didn't happen. The recipe is an all-in-one method and said to use butter "at room temperature". Well, I ended up with little flecks of butter in the mixture. I knew that too much beating could make the cake tough not soft and had used up all my lemons so couldn't start again. I looked for solutions on the internet. Most said "just cook, it will be fine", a couple said beat harder and several said to sieve the mixture! I tried that - what a palaver and I soon gave up and went with the "just cook" theory!
I baked it as a shallow tray bake, cut it into little squares and decorated with everything I had to make them look pretty. I made a thin icing using lemon juice and coloured half with yellow food colouring. They looked perfect and tasted very lemony. The texture was slightly firm, a bit like a madeira cake and there were occasional little holes, presumably due to the tiny lumps of unblended butter.
I would use this recipe again but make sure the butter was very well softened, not just "at room temperature" next time. I suppose that it very much depends on the temperature of the room! The creaming method would have worked better to ensure the butter was properly blended on this occasion!
I could imagine my mum saying "you're never too old to make mistakes" and the swish of Mrs Stafford's broomstick as she swooped by!
Ingredients
225g caster sugar
250g self raising flour
1 tsp baking powder
4 large eggs
225g butter at room temperature (well softened would be better)
3 tblsp milk
Zest of 3 lemons
For the icing:
200g icing sugar
Juice of 1 lemon
Sprinkles of your choice
Method
Preheat the oven to 160°C / 140° fan / gas mk 3. Line a large rectangular baking tin, 30 x 23cm, with baking paper.
Put all the cake ingredients into a large bowl and beat with a hand held electric whisk until well blended.
Transfer the mixture to the tin and level the top. Bake for 35 minutes until done. Remove from the oven and after a few minutes carefully lift the cake in its paper out of the tin and onto a wire rack to cool.
To make the icing sift the icing sugar into a large bowl and beat in enough lemon juice to make it runny but not too thin.
Divide your cake into half if you are using two colours or thirds if you are using three. Cut into squares of the size you want, very small and dainty or larger. Separate slightly on the paper or by removing onto the rack.
Coat one section of cake with white icing, allowing it to drip down the sides of the squares.
Transfer half of the remaining icing into a separate bowl if you are using three colours or colour the remainder with just one colour if you are using two colours.
Decorate with sprinkles.
Cuts into at least 20 squares depending on how dainty you want them!
It all looks delicious. Cheers Diane
ReplyDeleteThank you, it was all yummy and a lovely birthday tea!
DeleteIced squares are a truly nostalgic treat and ideal as part of that fine afternoon tea spread. Back in the very, very distant past I loved to buy them from a local bakery, although most had a pink icing with a slightly odd taste that I can only describe as "pink". I've fallen foul of the "room temperature" butter issue in the past and, if anything, I'm probably guilty of over-softening it in recipes these days.
ReplyDeleteI've often hankered after making those Mr Kipling style French Fancies that have a blob of buttercream in the top and an even coat of vivid coloured icing all over. I remember extracting the blob first as a kid. However, they seemed a bit too fiddly to make so these were my nod to them and very delicious too.
DeleteI might weaken and try this recipe by Odlums one rainy day when I haven’t got a number of other things to make as well:
https://odlums.ie/recipes/french-fancies/
Softening butter is a black art. Getting it just right is not easy. I haven't the patience to stand by the microwave and keep watch which is why the "soften butter" function on my most recent model is very useful. I never noticed it was there for the first year or so, than having lost the instruction booklet (which was in numerous languages but not English) I only ever used the basic function so had to do an internet search to print out something that I could use. Even so, it can take the butter a little too far but I have found that a smidge of melted butter in the mix is less of a problem than flecks of hard butter.