Jo Walton ([info]papersky) wrote,
@ 2004-12-23 09:30:00
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Cousin Beryl's Fruit Cake Recipe
By request of [info]arielstarshadow.

This cake is remarkably easy to make. It's possible to make even if you can't cook at all -- and I can tell you this for sure because I personally made it before I could cook.

It's also not really a fruitcake. Think of those dark heavy fruitcakes full of weird things like (ick) candied peel and (nasty) glace cherries, and even (horrors!) little candies, as heavy as a brick, as rich as Croesus and as dry as New Mexico. Then forget them. This is a light sweet mechanism for delivering excellent dried fruit. It might be better not to call it a fruitcake at all. If you love heavy dark fruitcake with brandy in, go and find a recipe for one by googling on "fruitcake, brandy, candied peel".

This cake is as good as the dried fruit. Buy golden raisins and plump sultanas and big luscious dark raisins. If you like currants, buy currants -- personally, I think currants don't travel. In Greece they are wonderful, plump and tasty, and once, in Pireaus, before dawn, waiting for a boat I came around a corner to where there was a boat unloading currants, and the wonderful smell was solid enough to bite and it made me quite drunk. However, once exported they tend to become wizened and comparatively tasteless.

You need a 7 inch cake tin that's deep, a mixing bowl, a wooden spoon, an oven with reliable heat, some way to measure weight (a measuring cylinder or a weighing scale) and a pint measuring jug for measuring liquid. That's all the equipment you need.

Pre-heat oven to 150, Gas 4, um, I can't figure it out in F. (Why are the degrees in F the wrong size? It's neither use nor ornament. If you want a scale with more degrees, why not have them half size, for ease of conversion? 350 is 180, so, um, 300? Or something?)

Line the deep tin with greaseproof paper ("baking parchment"). This is the most fiddly bit, and it can be avoided by using a loose-bottom tin, or by putting a large piece of greaseproof over the tin, pouring on the cakemix and trimming the paper after. Something roughly the size of the bottom of the tin is best.

Sift 8 ounces of flour into a bowl. You can use either patisserie (SR) flour or tour usage (plain) flour. This isn't a cake that rises all that much. Add a pinch of salt, a pinch of cinnamon and a pinch of nutmeg. (For fanatical measurers, that would be a quarter of a teaspoon.) Sift in four ounces of sugar -- any sugar. White vanilla sugar is fine, soft brown sugar is fine, whatever you have. Add 14 ounces of excellent dried fruit, and stir with the wooden spoon until all the fruit is coated in flour and all the flour contains fruit.

In a pint jug, measure 4 fl ounces of liquid vegetable cooking oil, not olive oil, the blandest least tasty oil there is, cannola or blended vegetable. Add four fl ounces of milk. The more butterfat in the milk the better, in fact I often use cream. Add two eggs, and beat the glop together with a fork.

Pour the wet glop into the dry, and stir with the wooden spoon until everything is mixed together and you can't see any flour any more. It won't be very liquid. Pour and spoon into tin. Smooth a little.

Sprinkle the top of the cake with demarara sugar. The amount you get in a paper packet with coffee is just right. You can use ordinary sugar, in which case you want about two teaspoons, sprinkled carefully over the top of the cake.

Bake on the lower shelf of the cool oven for an hour and a half. You can tell it's done when it starts to smell done. (Also known as the "That smells lovely. Oh my goodness, what time is it? What time did I put that cake in? I have no idea -- well, it smells done.") You can test with the clean knife method. If it's starting to smell done and isn't done, but a piece of greaseproof paper on the shelf above it in the oven, to prevent burning. This cake is supposed to be golden, not dark brown or, heaven forbid, black.

Leave to cool in the tin -- this is important, as it will crumble a lot if removed when hot. When cool, remove from tin, peel off greaseproof paper, and eat. It keeps fairly well in a tin or a tupperware -- not forever like a dark fruitcake, but for about a week.


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[info]bellinghman
2004-12-23 03:04 pm UTC (link)
It's also not really a fruitcake

But it is, more so than some of the other examples you mention. It's cake mix, and fruit. Possibly more fruit than one of the wizened types.

It also sounds absolutely delicious.

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[info]adrian_turtle
2004-12-23 03:16 pm UTC (link)
150C = 300F. The degrees in F are the size they are, because Herr Dr F set 0F to be the coldest temperature he could get with a bowl of ice and strong salt-water, and 100F to be his body temperature. (And he wanted all the degrees in between to be the same size, which I think was the most sensible part of the exercise.)

Speaking of fruit and cake, I'm planning to make blue claufuiti for Saturday. I had hoped to make a practice batch, when there would be people about to help with the eating, but life got busy. Oh well. Do you cook the berries first? Cook the shortbread? Or just put everything together and pop it in the oven? I'm guessing cake temperature, which I think of as 375F for rising.

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[info]papersky
2004-12-23 03:28 pm UTC (link)
M. Farenheit flourished at the same time as the phlogiston theory.

Clafouti's easy:

Make shortbread, put it in oven.

Wash berries, put them in pan on low heat.

Make sponge (1 egg, 2 ounces of everything else). When sponge is ready, take shortbread out of oven, pour on berries from pan, pour sponge over, put back in oven for 20 minutes.

I've done it at 200 and at 180, depending on what else is in the oven at the time, so yes, 375.

Writing it down, it seems fairly complicated, which is odd as I tend to think of the most difficult bit of clafouti being remembering to buy the fruit.

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[info]pecunium
2006-12-08 07:10 pm UTC (link)
He chose those two temps (as I read it, it was Frau F, and she was running a slight fever) because he wanted something which was easy to replicate, anywhere.

Why he chose the slurry of salt-water, I don't know.

As for the size of degrees, if Ander's Celsius wanted them larger, he could have chosen a range which worked. But he did make his scale in 1742, to Fahrenheit's doing his in 1724, they were both working in the age of phlogiston.

TK

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[info]adrian_turtle
2006-12-25 03:19 am UTC (link)
The slurry of salt water would have been the coldest temperature he could get consistently. You can just wait for a cold night in a cold climate, but it won't always be equally cold. If the salt water has the same concentration of salt, it will always have the same freezing point. You can pack the slurry in a container of snow that's much colder if you have access to it, but the temperature of the slurry itself will be controlled by its composition so long as there's ice and brine together. If it all freezes solid, or melts completely, the game is over.

This is nicer than storing recipes offline. People leave comments between one baking occasion and the next. I have fruitcake in the oven now. I had been thinking of maybe making a little shortbread to cut out with cookie cutters...or maybe I'll just take a bath until the cake is done. There's something luxurious about long baking times.

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[info]pecunium
2006-12-27 12:30 am UTC (link)
I said that badly. I knew he chose the slurry because it was the coldest temperature he could replicate.

I suppose one could argue this made it, "zero" for some value. What I was wondering was why he chose to reach for that (though he knew there were things which were colderthan that), instead of something which didn't need futzing to create (like say, the freezing point of water).

TK

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[info]nmsunbear
2004-12-23 03:25 pm UTC (link)
Sounds good -- I'm going to try it. Thanks!

The last couple of years I've been making a light lemon fruitcake. Tasty. But I want to try this one.

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Thank you!!
[info]arielstarshadow
2004-12-23 03:55 pm UTC (link)
This recipe is an excuse for me to go out and finally buy one of those nifty baker's scales. -grins- Surely, there must be some dried currants somewhere here in the States that are decent. Maybe organic ones...

I wonder if a Springform pan would eliminate the need for the parchment paper?

And now I see another recipe down there further in the comments I want!! -laughing- What is this mysterious "Clafouti" of which you speak??

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Re: Thank you!!
[info]papersky
2004-12-23 11:40 pm UTC (link)
Clafouti is a shortbread base in a quiche dish (9 oz plain flour, 6 oz marge, 3 oz sugar) baked at "375F", 180C, covered with some soft fruit (I've done it with raspberries, strawberries and redcurrants, washed and gently warmed with suger) and then the fruit covered with a sponge mix -- 2oz marge, melted, beaten into 2 oz sugar, then beat in an egg, then fold in 2oz SR flour. You bake the shortbread while you make the sponge mix, then you take it out, plonk the fruit on, then carefully pour the sponge mix to cover the fruit, and bake it again for about 20 minutes.

It's delicious, it tastes wonderful hot or cold, and it tastes and looks as if it was a lot of fuss to make, but it isn't at all.

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Re: Thank you!!
[info]arielstarshadow
2004-12-24 02:33 am UTC (link)
Holy....I'm going to make this. Maybe for tomorrow. Thank you!

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Clafouti
[info]sholamith
2006-12-10 12:24 pm UTC (link)
A friend directed me to your journal.

This is the first I've heard of Clafouti having a shortbread base. Most recipes I've seen for it have been for a kind of baked custardy pancake. The classic French recipe is with cherries, the pit having been left in. Can't wait to try your version. It sounds delicious.

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