This cake was quite unlike anything I had made before. It comes from a book by the Scottish food writer Sue Lawrence, Fochabers being a small town in the north of Scotland, not far from Inverness. The recipe includes dried fruit, black treacle and beer. (It also includes mixed peel, which I didn't have as all of mine had gone into the Christmas cake, so I added the same quantity of chopped walnuts instead.)
It started when Nick spotted a Nordic Ware tin that was less than half price in a sale in the fancy kitchenware shop in Loches. Having bought me a lovely new tin I thought he deserved a cake and his favourite is a ginger cake so I looked through my cookbooks for a new recipe to try.
I remembered the rule not to overfill the tin with mixture and made just five little buns with the excess. Soon after they came out of the oven, we had unexpected visitors, a friend and her two granddaughters, aged thirteen and four.
I pointed out that the cake was probably a very grown up cake with beer and treacle and that the children might not be too keen but I was wrong. They both loved the little buns and there were barely a few crumbs left.
The cake had a firm texture and would be excellent for a picnic or to be handed round at a gathering as it didn’t fall into a mass of crumbs in the hand. It was somehow not too sweet, not too gingery but satisfying. We had the last two slices toasted and buttered. It was not the sort of cake you might serve at a fancy tea party but definitely worth remembering. It would be perfect for St Andrew's Day which is on 30th November.
Ingredients
170g unsalted butter, softened
170g light muscovado sugar (or light soft brown sugar)
4 rounded tablespoons black treacle
1 egg
340g plain flour
60g sultanas
60g currants
60g ground almonds
60g chopped mixed peel
1 tsp ground ginger
1 tsp mixed spice
½ tsp ground cloves
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
142ml (¼ pint) beer
Method
Preheat the oven to 150°C / 130°fan / gas mk 2. Grease and base line a 20cm square tin or a 900g loaf tin. If using a Bundt tin grease with cake release paste (see side bar for recipe).
Beat together the butter and sugar until light and creamy. Heat the treacle gently in a small pan or microwave and add to the mixture. Stir in the egg and combine well.
Mix in the flour, ground almonds, currants, sultanas, mixed peel and spices.
Dissolve the bicarb in the beer then beat into the mixture.
Spoon the mixture into the tin, level the top and bake for 75-90 minutes until it passes the skewer test. (The deeper tin will take the longest time.)
Remove the tin to a wire rack and leave the cake to cool in the tin before turning out. If using a Bundt tin, turn out after 15-20 minutes.
Cuts into 10-12 slices.
We visited the Baxters Highland Village in Lochabers. Delicious food, great products.
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