Sticky Marmalade Gingerbread

Sticky, moist and full of spices – who would guess this cake is the result of a raggle taggle band of leftovers? Once upon a time  it was the norm to use what was available…My grandmother would exclaim “wasting food is the work of the devil” and that war generation never could understand anything other than an empty plate at dinner.  Fast forward to our ludicrously imbalanced society where we are plagued by food waste.  They say charity begins at home so…. 

Not only does this cake use up whatever is lurking at the back of your cupboards, it really involves no method other than mixing the ingredients together.

Ingredients

makes 4 x small tins or 2 x 23cm circular, or 2 x brownie tins 

225ml sunflower oil

100ml yoghurt or “lapte batut”

400ml pureed leftover marmalade

200ml treacle or I used leftover slightly crystallized date syrup

2 eggs

400g flour (I used 100g wholemeal and 300g white)

100g of crystallised ginger (blended to give smallish pieces)

2tsp bicarbonate of soda

2tsp baking powder

6tsp powdered ginger

1/2 tsp ground cloves

3tsp cinnamon

How To

Blend the marmalade particularly if your chunks are on the haphazard side – like mine.  The resulting gloop will be opaque and rather creamy. 

If you are patient chop the crystallised ginger finely – I blend it

Measure the marmalade gloop, the oil, the yoghurt and the syrup (a neat trick is to measure the oil first and then nothing sticks as you measure the subsequent ingredients) and pour into a mixing bowl

Add the eggs and the spices

Add the flour

Finally add the bicarbonate and the baking powder.  Due to the yoghurt and the citrus in the marmalade the mixture does puff up in a slightly “honeycomb” fashion so its quite important to spoon it into prepared tins fastish. Fill the tins 2/3 full. 

Bake gently at 160C until a toothpick inserted in comes out clean.  This is a cake better eaten two days later when it is a little bit sticky. 

 

 

Goat Ricotta Tart with Spring Flowers

Inspired by the Michel Roux ricotta tart which I have long wanted to make. It calls for the freshest most perfect ricotta and that from Mihai and Ioana Preotescu in the Spring is incredibly creamy and deserving of the term “unctuous”.  As a follow on from a feast of goats cheese with freshly made flat breads, nuts and cheese a risk of lactic over indulgence? surely not.  Superb ever trustworthy pairing of the Stirbey Tamaioasa Romaneasca Sec recommended by Richard Fox elevated the offerings.  

Ingredients

1 Blind baked pastry case 20cm made with Very Buttery Pastry 

400g ricotta – the best and freshest you have access to

edible flowers – elderflowers, honeysuckle, orange blossom

Good floral honey such as acacia or linden

MR adds pistachios and serves with wedges of lemon separately to heighten the flavour of the ricotta.  This ricotta was so full of subtle flavours and real milk flavour that I didnt want to mess with it very much. I just used honey.

How To

  • Blind bake the tart case and let cool
  • Mash the ricotta with a fork 
  • Dribble honey into the base of the tart case
  • Spoon the ricotta over the top
  • Decorate with the flowers 

Improvs

Cherries, strawberries and my favourite gooseberries lightly poached with some elderflower create a heavenly cheesecake

Lazy leftovers fruit cake…a cake for all times

A gloriously laissez faire affaire full of bonhomie and warmth. It has its roots in the frugality of Nana’s war time fruit cake when eggs, butter and sugar were scarce. This was simply what you did for the generation that believed throwing away food was “the work of the devil”. Fast forward to these food sensitive times and we have a right on “recycled vegan low GI GF  gateau” oh trendy dears. Whatever its name..it is a cake for all times in every sense – judging by the number of second helpings this Easter and enthusiasm from the marauding feline contingent too.

 

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