Friday, April 5, 2013

LIME MARMALADE DRIZZLE TYPE-CAKE


I'm Washing Up This Evening.....


From the chaos of unpacked bags and boxes I’m starting my food blogging.

The first thing i did after moving my stuff into mine and Squirrelface’s new Peckham flat was sort out the kitchen. Chaos isn’t chaos when the kitchen is in order.

I like baking with fruits and vegetables – they give a naughty treat a slightly healthy hue – and this evening I’m making a lime marmalade drizzle type cake.

I’m not much of a recipe follower when it come to savoury things, I like to let my instincts kick in  but when it comes to baking I know it’s science as much as it is art. When I adapt, I tweak flavours, not measurements. I’ve had enough cakeccidents being gung-ho and have learned my lesson.

This cake can, I imagine, be made with any other kind of marmalade and citrus fruit combo you like, mix and match etc. I’m not prescriptive, I would encourage you not to be either. Lime marmalade is evocative of my maternal grandparents and triggers happy culinary memories, the heady citrus tang of the fruit itself is possibly my favourite flavour, savoury or sweet. The Chinese don’t have the monopoly on sweet and sour.

I particularly love a thick shred marmalade, which adds an emerald glisten to the top of the cake, not unlike candied peel.

LIME MARMALADE DRIZZLE-TYPE CAKE


DRIZZLE

  • 75g lime marmalade
  • juice of 3 limes
  • 2 tbsp icing sugar

Preheat oven 180C/Gas 4. Grease and line a loaf tin.

Beat together the yoghurt, vegetable oil, lime zest, caster sugar and eggs until well combined and glossy.. Sift the flour and baking powder in and mix until no lumps are visible..

With the help of a spatula, pour the mixture into the loaf tin and bake for about 45 minutes. Do the skewer test to check it comes out clean.

Whilst the cake is baking warm the marmalade, lime juice and icing sugar until the marmalade melts.

Take out of the oven, use the skewer to poke holes in the top of the cake and leave in the tin. Drizzle the marmalade mixture over the cake and set aside to cool completely.

Remove the cake from the tin and eat with friends (or in my case, Squirrelface).



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