Now this is a personal showstopper. I remember a time before I acquired the taste for fruitcake of any kind – peeling icing and marzipan off Christmas cake anyone?! – but now I have embraced it wholeheartedly. Some amazing tips included here - check out the photos - do yourself a favour and try this instead of a Christmas Pudding this year. I feel like it was written for me - I love it when recipes are specific and to the point.
Time for cake …
… there's a recipe on the blog called Grandad Jack's Tea Loaf – tea loaves are great – they contain eggs but no other fat. The moisture comes in the steeping of the fruit in hot black tea overnight.
You have to be careful that you get the balance of ingredients right – if a tea loaf has a downside it's that it can be dry but you won't know that until you've cut it – it's too late.
I'm always on the look out for something different – here's the Orange Fruit Tea Loaf.
Here's the recipe :
Orange Fruit Tea Loaf
for a 900g loaf
300g mixed dried fruit of your choice -
cranberries work well
150g dark brown sugar
grated zest of two oranges
300ml of hot tea – without milk – just in
case you were wondering
1 egg, lightly beaten
300g self raising flour
a pinch of salt
Mix the dried fruit, sugar, orange zest and hot tea together, cover and leave overnight.
Pre-heat your oven 130fan/150c/Gas
Grease your loaf tin.
Stir the egg into the fruit mixture then add the flour and salt. Transfer the mixture into your loaf tin and bake for about 1½ hours until risen and firm. Use a bamboo skewer inserted into the middle of the cake and comes out clean. Turn out and cool on a rack.
Now for a grumble rather than a rant. The recipe is exactly as I found it. When I read it I realised that it mentions “1 egg, lightly beaten”. So often recipes are badly written – not deliberately – the author perhaps presumes the reader will know – NO! Baking is a science and accuracy is important.
I mentioned moisture in your loaf, texture is equally important. I follow my own rule – if it isn't clear always use large eggs.
Hints and Tips
All is not lost if you produce a dry loaf – you'll just have to toast a slice and add butter – breakfast treat?!
I added ½ tsp of orange extract to the mixture. You can definitely smell the orange zest, I just wanted a little extra boost of flavour.
The secret to the success of this loaf is adding the sugar to the mixed fruit, zest and tea and steeping overnight. Other tea loaf recipes I've come across are based on, for example, “2 cups of flour, 1 cup of sugar” - treating the sugar as a dry ingredient – including it as part of the wet ingredients gives a much better consistency, you can gauge as you're adding the flour gradually to the mixture. “Gradually” is the key, ensuring that the flour is folded in before adding more. I'd already decided to add fresh orange juice if it looked too dry – not necessary!
Old habits die hard – I set my timer for 45 minutes and then turned the loaf tin around. I tested the cake at 1 hour 20 minutes with the skewer which came out clean – out it came. Ovens will vary – a timer will help and remind you to check.
Have a look :
As always, taste tested … “the best slice of fruit cake I've had in a long while”.
A great result!
No comments:
Post a Comment