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Cake: 200 fabulous foolproof baking recipes
Cake: 200 fabulous foolproof baking recipes
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Cake: 200 fabulous foolproof baking recipes

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Macadamia nut and lemon cakes

Lemongrass coconut cake

Fast cinnamon yoghurt cake

Raspberry and blueberry friands

Marzipan cake

Marzipan

Apple, oat and pecan bars

Raspberry and coconut squares

Crunchy peanut butter banana muffins

Upside-down peach and saffron cake

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Muscovado Madeira cake (#ulink_4c3063f0-6ac3-5d2e-b285-075dd732afe4)

This classic English cake got its name from the sweet Madeira wine that it was traditionally served with back in the eighteenth century. Nowadays it’s more often eaten with tea, although if you do have a bottle of Madeira or dessert wine, it would go perfectly with either of those. This version is flavoured with the deep molasses sweetness of muscovado (soft brown) sugar. It’s a versatile recipe and you could include a handful of glace cherries, the finely grated zest of an orange or even a teaspoon of ground cinnamon if you like, adding these at the same time as the flour. (See also the additional variations (#ulink_8b2e5d75-713f-5e59-84c4-63fc8f061e1a).)

Prep time: 10 minutes

Baking time: 40–45 minutes

Ready in: 1 hour 15 minutes

Serves: 6–8

175g (6oz) butter, softened

175g (6oz) dark soft brown sugar

5 eggs

275g (10oz) self-raising flour

900g (2lb) loaf tin

Preheat the oven to 180°C (350°F), Gas mark 4, then line the base and sides of the loaf tin with baking parchment, with the paper coming above the sides of the tin to enable the cake to be lifted out easily.

Cream the butter until soft in a large bowl or in an electric food mixer. Add the sugar and beat until the mixture is light and fluffy.

Whisk the eggs together in a small bowl for just a few seconds until mixed, then gradually add them to the creamed butter mixture, beating all the time. Sift in the flour and fold in gently to combine. Tip the batter into the prepared tin and bake for 40–45 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the centre of the cake comes out clean.

Remove from the oven and allow to cool for 5 minutes. Carefully lift the cake out of the tin using the baking parchment, then peel away the paper and leave on a wire rack to finish cooling down.

Lemon Madeira cake

Make the cake as above, substituting caster sugar for the brown sugar and adding the finely grated zest of 1 lemon to the mixture with the eggs.

Coffee Madeira cake

Replace the brown sugar with caster sugar and mix in 3 tablespoons of coffee essence (Camp or Irel) with the eggs before adding to the batter.

Tip If any of this cake is left over, you could use it for making Cake pops.

Winter breakfast muffins (#ulink_4618327e-4715-53c7-b0e6-d634c23440f2)

A hint of spice and a little ginger is sometimes all I need to perk me up on a frosty winter’s morning. Well, that and ten minutes standing by the Aga with a big cup of coffee! I like the plump juiciness of sultanas, but if you’d prefer you could use currants or raisins instead.

Prep time: 15 minutes

Baking time: 30 minutes

Ready in: 1 hour 15 minutes

Makes: 12 muffins

300g (11oz) plain flour

½ tsp bicarbonate of soda

½ tsp salt

2 tsp mixed spice

100g (3½oz) caster sugar

125g (4½oz) butter, cut into 1cm (½in) cubes

2 eggs

175ml (6fl oz) buttermilk

100g (3½oz) golden syrup

25g (1oz) stem ginger in syrup (drained weight), finely chopped

50g (2oz) sultanas

12-cup muffin tray and 12 muffin cases

Preheat the oven to 180°C (350°F), Gas mark 4, and line the muffin tray with the paper cases.

Sift the flour, bicarbonate of soda, salt and spice into a large bowl, then add the sugar and mix together. Add the butter and rub together with your fingertips until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs.

In another bowl, whisk together the eggs, buttermilk and golden syrup. Tip this into the flour mixture along with the chopped stem ginger and the sultanas, and beat until well mixed.

Divide the batter between the muffin cases, filling each about three-quarters full.

Bake the muffins for about 30 minutes or until well risen and springy to the touch. Allow the muffins to cool for about 5 minutes before removing them from the tin and placing on a wire rack to finish cooling.

Tip If you like, you could use some of the syrup from the stem-ginger jar to brush over the top of the muffins after they come out of the oven.

Macadamia nut and lemon cakes (#ulink_db6513ab-8053-5fc1-9888-0b825fded896)

This quick recipe uses a food processor to whiz up macadamia nuts before incorporating them into a lemon sponge mixture. The sharpness of the lemon contrasts so well with the rich and buttery nuts. If you can’t get hold of macadamias, you can replace them with ready-ground almonds for an even speedier cake, as the almonds won’t need whizzing in the food processor.

Prep time: 20 minutes

Baking time: 15–18 minutes

Ready in: 50 minutes

Makes: 12 cakes

50g (2oz) macadamia nuts

150g (5oz) self-raising flour, sifted

150g (5oz) caster sugar

3 eggs

Finely grated zest of 2 lemons

100g (3½oz) butter, melted

For the icing

200g (7oz) lemon curd (#ulink_a530b5f5-d44f-5700-ba99-d9665757e773) (to make it yourself,

25g (1oz) macadamia nuts (or almonds), lightly toasted (see the tip (#ulink_9ff933d9-11c6-58bc-b7d3-0baaa5de5dc1)) and roughly chopped

12-cup muffin tray and 12 muffin cases

Preheat the oven to 180°C (350°F), Gas mark 4, and line the muffin tray with the paper cases.

Place the macadamia nuts in a food processor and whiz for a minute or two until fairly fine. Add the rest of the ingredients and pulse just until combined. Divide the batter between the muffin cases, filling each up to three-quarters full.

Bake for 15–18 minutes or until the cakes spring back lightly to the touch. Take out of the oven and allow to cool for 5 minutes, then remove from the tin and place on a wire rack to cool down fully.

When the cupcakes are cool, spread generously with lemon curd, then scatter over the toasted macadamia nuts.

Tip To toast nuts, either scatter them over a baking tray in a single layer and toast them in the oven (preheated to 180°C/350°F/Gas mark 4) for 4–5 minutes or until golden brown, or place them in a frying pan and toast over a medium–low heat for a similar length of time. In either case, the nuts need to be shaken every so often to prevent them burning on one side.

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Lemongrass coconut cake (#ulink_69590a5e-e849-5d58-becf-518443895f62)

Coconut and lemongrass, two quintessentially Southeast Asian ingredients, are combined here in this deliciously moist cake. The lemongrass is added to a syrup that infuses the sponge with its aromatic flavour. Found in supermarkets as well as in Asian food shops, the taste of lemongrass is certainly reminiscent of lemons but has a unique floral flavour all of its own.

Prep time: 15 minutes

Baking time: 40–45 minutes

Ready in: 1 hour 30 minutes

Serves: 6–8

4 stalks of lemongrass, base and tops trimmed, outer leaves removed but reserved for the syrup (#ulink_3386b526-b8ec-53eb-ba4e-234475091213)

250g (9oz) caster sugar

4 eggs

200g (7oz) butter, softened, plus extra for greasing

125g (4½oz) desiccated coconut

125g (4½oz) plain flour, plus extra for dusting

2 tsp baking powder

Greek yoghurt or crème fraîche, to serve

For the syrup

Reserved trimmings and outer leaves of the lemongrass (#ulink_6ef41ddb-5e94-5a98-89ea-ade3e4f7b9fe)

75g (3oz) caster sugar

23cm (9in) diameter cake tin with 6cm (2½in) sides

Preheat the oven to 170°C (325°F), Gas mark 3. Butter the sides of the cake tin and dust with flour, then line the base with a disc of baking parchment.

Slice the lemongrass stalks quite thinly into rounds about 3mm (⅛in) thick, then place in a food processor with the caster sugar and whiz for 1–2 minutes or until the lemongrass is finely pureed and very aromatic. Add the eggs, butter and coconut and whiz again until combined, then sift the flour and baking powder together and add to the machine, whizzing very briefly just until the ingredients come together.

Tip the mixture into the prepared tin and bake for 40–45 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the centre of the cake comes out clean.

While the cake is cooking, make the syrup. Roughly chop the lemongrass trimmings, place in a saucepan with the sugar and 75ml (3fl oz) of water and set over a high heat. Stir the mixture until the sugar is dissolved, then bring to the boil and boil for 2 minutes before removing from the heat and leaving to infuse.

When the cake has finished baking, take it out of the oven and let it sit in the tin for 10 minutes. Loosen around the edges using a small, sharp knife and carefully remove the cake from the tin before transferring to a serving plate.