Tag Archives: cut and come again cake

A deceptively plain but tasty cake. Spiced chai bundt cake.

This is a Donna Hay recipe, from a few of her books, most notably Modern Baking which is an, I think, under-celebrated baking bible. I’ve made this cake for many years and it’s a firm favourite in our house and needs few ingredients – we keep a stash of chai tea on hand especially for it and the rest are store-cupboard/fridge staples. It’s also a good way of using up too much milk.

Ingredients

1 tablespoon of loose chai tea (if you can only find tea bags just open them up, one tablespoon is about two tea bags’ worth)
Two tablespoons of boiling water
375g of self raising flour
330g of caster sugar
two teaspoons of mixed spice
4 eggs
375ml of milk
250g of butter, melted
two teaspoons of vanilla extract.

What you do

Preheat oven to 180C. I use a 9′ savarin/bundt tin for this – specifically this one. Butter the tin and dust with flour and shake off the excess.

Put the loose tea in the boiling water and let it steep for 5/10 minutes, whilst you melt the butter and let it cool.

Note: you’ll need all the tea mixture for the cake, ie the tea leaves and the water.

Now you can go ahead and put all the ingredients, including the tea mixture, into a freestanding mixer and whisk it until combined, or if you want to do it the old fashioned way then you can do butter and sugar – cream together, then add the vanilla extract, eggs, flour, mixed spice, tea mixture and milk.

Pour the batter into the cake mould and bake for about 35 minutes. Mine usually takes 40 but you can check after 30. Do check it’s done with a skewer inserted – it should come out clean. Leave it in the tin for about ten minutes, I loosen mine around the edge and the middle ring bit with a knife and then turn out.

It’s a really lovely, moist cake that keeps for a good few days and is so much nicer than you think it might be.

Plum and Olive Oil Cake with Lemon Cream

This is a slightly adapted recipe from The Waitrose magazine and it is wonderful. Soft, moist, delicious, simple. Just the perfect cake to have in.

You need a round tin measuring 20cm/8″ lined with baking parchment – you can line just the bottom.

Oven to 190C, cooking time 1hr

Ingredients

150 plain or spelt flour

75g ground almonds

Two teaspoons of baking powder

Zest of an unwaxed lemon

Pinch of salt

Three eggs

200g caster sugar

180g natural yoghurt (I used Greek organic)

100ml of very good (or as good as you can) extra virgin olive oil

400g ish of plums stoned and cut into pieces

(I’m sorry, there’s no reason for these gaps in between the ingredients, I have no idea why WordPress does this, if anyone knows do let me know!)

Lemon Cream

225ml double cream
Two tablespoons of lemon curd

Preheat the oven to 190C. Mix together the flour, ground almonds and baking powder and then add the lemon zest and the salt.

Whisk together – preferably using an electric whisk or your arms will fall off – the eggs and sugar until pale and thickened. About 5-7 minutes. Then slowly whisk the yoghurt and olive oil until all combined.

Now slowly fold in the dry ingredients. I used the whisk to do this but switched off if you see what I mean.

I placed the plums on the base of the cake tin and poured the mixture over the top. Mine was done in an hour, but after 20 mins I covered the top with foil. Yours might need a tad longer – check with a skewer or dry piece of spaghetti, it should come out clean.

You can serve this nicely warm, about 30 mins out of the oven. Or you can let it go cold. In warm weather, store in the fridge and to take the chill off give it 10-15 mins in the microwave. Serve with the cream which you have whisked together with the lemon curd – it all comes together very nicely, very fast.