Saturday, 2 November 2019

The Dinner Party Pudding – the finishing line!


I chose the following pudding because it ticks all the boxes. It's delicious, it looks amazing and three of the four elements I made ahead – boom!

My pudding is Gateau a l'Orange - Orange Cake if you prefer. Despite its French title it's actually Jewish.
2 oranges
6 eggs
250g sugar
2 tbsp orange blossom water
1 tsp baking powder
250g ground almonds

Wash the oranges and boil them whole for 1 – 1 ½ hours or until they are very soft.

Beat the eggs with the sugar. Add the orange blossom water, baking powder and almonds and mix well. *Cut open the oranges, remove the pips and purée in a food processor. Mix thoroughly with the egg and almond mixture and pour into a 23cm cake tin – lined with baking parchment, preferably non-stick and with a removable base. Bake in a pre-heated oven 190c/170fan/Gas 5 for an hour. Let it cool before turning out.

What put me off baking this cake was the boiling of the oranges so to bring it up to date - instead of boiling the oranges, microwave them for 8 minutes on high. I used 3 medium sized oranges (as a guide 67-74mm) and turned after 4 minutes. Make sure your fruits are in a covered vented microwave container. Continue with the recipe at *.

The Orange Cake is moist – moist is good but, to use the northern vernacular, it can be claggy. This calls for “drizzle” to serve with so here's my orange syrup (or drizzle if you prefer).

Orange Syrup

200g icing sugar
250ml orange juice (no bits)

Put the sugar and orange juice in a small saucepan and heat gently so that the sugar dissolves. Bring to the boil and then reduce the heat and simmer on a low heat for 10 minutes.

You'll then have a syrupy drizzle ready to dress your cake.

I made a vanilla ice cream ahead so the final pudding would be a slice of gateau a generous drizzle of orange syrup and a scoop of ice cream on the side. Ordinarily that would be enough, however, I chose to top the gateau with a small scoop of clotted cream. I wanted to showcase a quintessentially English tradition which I thought lent itself to the pudding – a pudding should after all be an indulgence it was also an opportunity to serve an ingredient that I thought my American guests had never tasted – flying the flag as it were!


Coming next … the aim of this game and then the verdict!


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