Category Archives: Sunday bake-off

Coffee and walnut cake


I’ve been going back to my roots lately. I learned to bake from a mixture of my mother and grandmother’s recipes, and  recipes from New Zealand’s iconic Edmonds cookery book.  This walnut and coffee cake is without a doubt one of my favourites from the flour company’s book (with the motto ‘Sure to rise’).

Within months of first moving to London I was on the phone to home asking for a copy of the book to be posted to me. I still go back to it when my shelves of other cook books fail to inspire me, or if I’m feeling a bit homesick. I tweak this cake recipe a bit, espresso rather instant coffee, and use a little rapeseed or sunflower oil instead of butter and throw walnuts into the mixture. It’s the perfect cake to bake on a Sunday.

Coffee and walnut cake (adapted from Edmonds cookery book)

Ingredients

2 tablespoons strong espresso
1/3 cup of oil (sunflower or rapeseed)
3/4 cup brown sugar
scrape of fresh vanilla or 1/2 teaspoon vanilla essence
3 eggs separated
1 cup plain flour
3 tablespoons cornflour
1 teaspoon baking powder
3 tablespoons milk or soy/rice milk
Walnuts
Coffee icing (icing sugar, butter or alternative, espresso)

Steps

1. Make your espresso and set aside to cool.
2. Cream butter, sugar, coffee mixture and vanilla until light and fluffy.
3. Add egg yolks one at a time, beating well after each addition.
4. In a separate bowl beat the egg whites until soft peaks form.
5. Sift flour, cornflour and baking powder together.
6. Add sifted ingredients to creamed mixture alternately with the egg whites.
7. Stir in milk and walnuts.
8. Pour cake mixture into two greased and lined 20 cm sponge sandwich tins.
9. Bake at 190°C for 20-25 minutes or until cake springs back when lightly touched.
10. Leave in tin for 10 minutes before turning out onto a cooling rack.
11. Fill and ice with Coffee Icing. Decorate with walnut pieces if desired.

x C

P.S. Where I find cake inspiration

Sunday bake off: When I made a vegan wedding cake…

I will never understand people who say they don’t really like cake. I mean, really? What is not to like about gooey, sticky, double-chocolate fudge cake? Or light-as-air sponge cake dripping with passion fruit icing, layered with jam and cream?

But then again, maybe it’s just me. Cake. I love cake. I think I like baking cakes even more than I like eating them. Now that the other half and I live on our own I have more space to bake. Away from the busy kitchen of my previous flat, filled with gin-drinking and wine-drinking, chatting, fabulous girls. Cakes are being baked far more frequently. I have space for several types of flour. And sugars. My Kitchenaid mixer is not packed away in its box and now has a permanent spot on the bench. Baking is good for the soul (if not so good for the hips).

It’s not even the taste that does it for me (don’t get me wrong I’ll always have at least one slice) – it’s the visual feast of cakes that I enjoy the most. Icing, berries, cream, little people toppers, mini bunting and then flowers on top. And cake plates and cake stands (which I don’t love as much as my sister but I still have more than I need). Then there’s cake forks and cake tins… I won’t go on. You see, I just really like cakes.

My old friends Louise and Dan got hitched at the end of last year in a lovely low key ceremony at Islington Town Hall. Guess who had volunteered to bake the wedding cake? Yip, me. (I took care of hair flowers and button holes too but that’s for another day).

I didn’t want a structured, iced to strict perfection wedding cakes like these. No, I like cakes to look baked, and although it sounds cheesey, that they have been baked with love. Not carved from polystyrene.

It was a very busy week and I hadn’t had enough time for a trial run. To make matters more complicated, several of the guests (and my best buddies) are vegan. So no cream, eggs or butter could be included. I’ve made quite a few vegan cakes before, but I wanted something special. Then I was told about this recipe for Raspberry Blackout cake. I adapted it slightly and baked it in two different circular cake tins so I could create tiers. The final touch was just lashings of vanilla icing and fresh raspberries.

That’s me above putting on the finishing touches at their house after transporting it in pieces by taxi. Topped off with baby bunting I made earlier. And I’m pretty pleased to say not even crumb was left the next day.

Image 1: Sweet Dee Design on Etsy
Image 2 & 4 by Luke
Image 3, iPhone pic by me.

Cake – one of your five a day

Pistachio Chocolate Cake

I have a thing for cake recipes that contain vegetables.  My favourite cake recipe for the last couple of years has been a beetroot chocolate cake. It’s completely decadent and mouth wateringly good. I’ve made it for many birthdays and even dinner parties. Beetroot and chocolate – yum.

Recently the beetroot cake has been surpassed by the Pistachio Chocolate Cake from Harry Eastwood’s book ‘Red Velvet & Chocolate Heartache‘.  It is probably one of the best cake recipes I’ve used and has been a success each time I’ve made it.  It has ground up pistachios and grated courgettes in it, which give it an amazing texture.

It doesn’t rise much, probably because it’s made with rice flour, but once filled with ‘Naughty Chocolate icing’ you don’t even notice.

I’m not sure that you could count the courgette in this cake as one of your five a day but it’s definitely worth the effort. So far this is the only cake I’ve attempted from the book as I just can’t imagine any of the others being better.  Perhaps I should give the Red Velvet cake a try next…. it is made with beetroot after all.

inaugural tea party

My Royal Winton coffee set is a beauty off eBay.  Unfortunately when we tried to use it and we filled the pot with coffee it starting tinging. It really did sound as though it was going to explode. It has a lot of crazing and is in far from perfect condition. I love it anyway. I have the same green with rose handle tea set back home in New Zealand. It was my grandmas, bought for her by my grandad in the 40′s I think. The teapot and rest of the set is in much better condition than the coffee set off eBay. I’d like to think that someone like my grandma had owned the coffee set, keeping it on her shelf or in a china cabinet and saving it for best. Maybe it was packed away in a box or cupboard for years. I hope many ladies and gents drank coffee from the sweet cups that had been brewed in the magnificent pot.

The green glass cake stand was bought from Columbia Rd markets for only £16.  It will no doubt be regularly filled with treats.