Last minute Christmas cake recipe
Posted by Fiona Nevile in Christmas, Desserts | 297 commentsOver 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:
- Preheat oven to 160c (140 fan)
- 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.
- Cream the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy (I use an electric mixer for this).
- 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.
- Using a tablespoon, gently fold in the flour, lemon zest and spices.
- Fold in the beer and honey and stir gently.
- Add the fruit and ground almonds and stir gently.
- Transfer the mixture to the cake tin and make a hollow in the centre of the mixture (roughly 2″ wide and 1″ deep).
- 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.
- 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).
- Wrap the cake in baking parchment and store in a tin or cover with foil until you need it.
- 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.
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Many thanks for a beautiful Christmas Cake, even my nut hating son eats it by the slab. I will definitely be making this again next Christmas. I changed some cherries for cranberries and that worked just as well.
Absolutely fantastic recipe! For once we had a home-made christmas cake; not just home-iced! Everybody loved it and said they couldn’t believe it was made only days before christmas. Thank you so much!!!
Hi Nancy
Did you buy Royal Icing? This makes the teeth breaking stuff that’s on wedding cakes. I always use ordinary icing sugar and just make it with water and a little lemon juice. This makes a soft icing with a firm top. Delicious.
i put three teaspoons of glycerine and i still thought the icing was a bit hard any advice you can give me
Thanks for a great recipe. Really easy to follow and very user friendly. I have to say, I used Peroni lager instead of Speckeled Hen – I had my doubts, but it worked and it’s delicious. Really! Merry crimbo cx
Hi Zoe,
Brown sugar is OK. It will make the cake darker but should not affect the flavour.
Hi, I know I’m cutting it fine, but I have finally got aroubnd to getting my ingredients, but I’ve picked up dark brown sugar by mistake is this ok? This may be a silly question, but I don’t want to make any mistakes!
i made this cake for the first time last year and it was so good i have ended up making seven this year for all the family the report i got back was the cake is absolutely delicious but the frill on the cake was stuck solid with the icing so I’ve learnt something this year i will put it on with sellotape next year thank you so much for this amazing recipe
Hi Sam, we use one shot glass (a double measure approximately).
Hi, Zoe, and thanks for asking that question.
Fiona is cooking my supper 🙂 so I asked her and this is her answer:
The 200 ml of beer adds flavour, not alcohol, because the alcohol evaporates during cooking. Ideally you would want to add the essence of hops, malt etc. that give beer its flavour. But you could omit it entirely and just add 200 ml of water, I guess.
Personally, even if you are strictly non-alcoholic, I would add the beer or a non-alcoholic beer if you are ultra-conservative.