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. 

 

 

Cassata “Romaneasca”

My new dessert love – move over trifle.

One of the best things about Sicily (and there are many ) is its over the top uber sweet desserts courtesy of its Arab rulers. Think candied citrus peel and fruits, cannoli, torrone  and a deep obsession with modelling things out of “martorana” the local almond paste.

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Marzipan “fruit”
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Marzipan “red mullet”. 

 I think well leave it there – you get the idea.  Credits to  www.siciliangodmother.com   an absorbing read

And so I turned to one of my favourite baking booksfor the real deal on “cassata siciliana”

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Persian Halva

Eaten at funerals in its home country – this is nothing to be mounful about

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It is rare I am a recipe skeptic but so it was with the Persian halva.  I was skeptical that a dessert  made merely with flour would deliver the lovely texture of the semolina variety common to Turkey & Greece. But I bowed to this mighty cuisine and I decided to try it out.  Its smooth but almost chewy , its slightly candied, of course the rosewater and saffron has me at every bite and its sinful. A glass of real Persian tea with it was just heaven.  For me this is a very very small step in the glorious alchemy of syrups, nuts, perfumes, essences, pastries, puddings, spices and candies that is Middle Eastern dessert making.  I cant stop nibbling.

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