My dear blogging friend Ivy, together with Val of More than Burnt Toast and Giz of Equal Opportunity Kitchen, are hosting an event called Time To Be Thankful. For this event, we are asked to make something festive, and to post about it, together with relating why we are thankful, by 19 November 2008.
I just started my Christmas baking last weekend. I have a mad project to make small Christmas boxes full of goodies for my friends and colleagues, and the fruit cake is where I started because it needs to be made at least a month ahead so that it can mature. I am going to slice it up into individual pieces so each recipient of a box receives a piece of fruit cake.
This is a rich, traditional fruit cake packed with booze and fruit from the 1968 classic, The Margaret Fulton Cookbook. My Mum received this book for her 21st birthday, and when Margaret's daughter, Suzanne Gibbs, issued an updated and revised version around 4 years ago, it became a "must have" on my recipe book list. (In fact, it is the first proper recipe book I bought - my how far we've come since then.)
I am thankful for the fact that Christmas is coming around, and that I am lucky enough to born in a place and time where I know that I will be able to shower and in turn be showered by love, affection and good food by family and friends. I am also thankful for my Mum, who has given me such wonderful memories of the Christmas traditions like making puddings and fruit cakes (even though we hated it as kids :) ) that I in turn am able to practise, long after Mum herself started buying hers.
There is something very warm and comforting about doing things that you know your Mum and her mother before her did, and provides a link to your past that can never be severed. Unfortunately, I never knew my maternal grandmother, but I understand that she was an awesome cook who used to work in a cafe before her marriage. She used to have a book of handwritten recipes that she used at the cafe which, sadly, was lent to someone and never returned. I like to think that my interest in baking (discovered only a few years ago!!) was influenced by my maternal grandmother as well as my Mum.
To make Margaret's fruit cake, you will need:
375g raisins
375g sultanas
125g glace cherries (I am deliberately skipping the mixed peel :p)
60g glace apricots
2 slices glace pineapple
3 tablespoons brandy
3 tablespoons sherry
250g butter, softened
1 1/4 cups brown sugar
zest from 1 lemon
1 tablespoon golden syrup
2 tablespoons orange marmalade
5 eggs
2 1/2 cups plain flour
1 teaspoon mixed spice
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 cup chopped blanched almonds
extra almonds to decorate the top of the cake (optional)
1 tablespoon brandy (extra)
Plenty of time and elbow grease!!
For the fruit - Preheat your oven to 120 degrees Celsius. Wash the raisins and sultanas, and pat dry. Spread the fruit out on paper-lined baking trays and cook in the preheated oven for 30 minutes, then remove the fruit from the oven and cool completely. (I am not sure why these steps were necessary - any ideas anyone??)
Chop the cooled raisins, and place them in a bowl with the sultanas. Dice the glace fruit and add thesse to the other fruit. Sprinkle the fruit with the brandy and sherry, then cover the bowl with clingfilm followed by a towel, and leave to steep overnight.
Next day, preheat your oven to 150 degrees Celisus. Grease and line a deep 20cm square cake tin. (I double lined mine, the first layer being brown paper and the second being parchment paper. Mum used to do this, and a quick telephone call confirmed that the purpose of this is to ensure that the sides of the cake don't burn during the long, slow cooking process. I also greased both layers of paper.)
Beat the butter and brown sugar with the lemon zest until light and creamy. Add the syrup and marmalade and beat well. Combine one of the eggs with one tabelspoon of the plain flour. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition, and adding the egg/flour mix last.
Sift the dry ingredients together, then stir them mixture into the cake batter alternately with the fruit and nuts. (This is where that time at the gym (ha, as if I go to the gym!) will come in handy - the batter is very thick and heavy.)
Place the cake batter into the prepared cake tin, and if decorating the top of the cake with almonds, place these at strategic intervals on top of the raw cake:
Bake the cake in the preheated oven for 3 1/2 - 4 hours (mine took somewhere in the middle). Remove the cooked cake from the oven, and immediately sprinkle with the tablespoon of extra brandy.
Remove the cake from the tin, leaving the paper intact. Wrap it in a teatowel and leave it to sit on the bench until cool.
Once the cake is cool, remove it from the paper, and wrap it in clingfilm followed by alfoil. Store it in a cool place or the fridge for one to six months before serving.
Enjoy!!
Thanks to Ivy, Val and Giz for hosting Time To Be Thankful. You can find the inspiring roundup here.
That looks lovely and your reasons to be thankful are great. I like the touch with the almonds too, in fact I recently made a fruitcake decorated just like that. Great minds think alike ;)
ReplyDeleteCake thanks so much for sharing this lovely recipe with us and I definitely have to start preparing mine soon. Thanks also for participating in the WFD Event.
ReplyDeleteWOw that fruit cake looks so yumm, i would love to have them for my tea or even for christmas :-)
ReplyDeleteWe must be so on the same wave length - I just 10 minutes ago put a fruit cake in the oven. It's a job isn't it but it's so fabulous.
ReplyDeleteThis one is Ivy's event but you're right, we've banded together to bring some interesting things down the pipe.
that fruitcake is beautiful!! i wouldn't have known it was one unless you said it. i honestly don't think i've ever eaten a fruitcake. i love how you lined the edges with almonds. it's really elegant!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a delicious fruitcake.
ReplyDeleteYou have lucky, lucky friends. :)
This is a nice way to start your Xmas baking. :)
ReplyDeleteI'm sure you're going to enjoy baking till the end of the year, as you seem to love baking for friends and the family. They're very lucky.
I've been wanting to make fruitcake for years, but I haven't gotten around to it.
ReplyDeleteThis one looks delicious!
Thank you so much for entering this fruitcake into our event and raising awareness for so many of those who are less fortunate than we are Cakelaw. I have followed your blog around the blogosphere for sometime now. Keep up the excellent work:D
ReplyDeleteThat's really cool. I spent all of today baking for Thanksgiving and Christmas. It's really soothing to me. I love how your culinary talent has been passed down!
ReplyDeleteI am not baking any fruit cake this year. It seems no one has placed any order for a wedding cake hehehe... I am retired. Anyway, I always look forward to eating fruit cake in Christmas time. My mum-in-law usually bakes a non-alcohol fruit cake for me and my family :) lovely to be thanked for, Gaye. Hugs.
ReplyDeleteI have to admit I'm not the biggest fan of traditional fruitcake (it's just me) but yours looks wonderful, indeed!
ReplyDeleteLOL Lorraine - absolutely!
ReplyDeleteThanks for hosting this event Ivy.
Hi Happy Cook, thanks :)
Hi Giz, hope your fruit cake went well. Can't wait to here more about your joint projects.
Thanks Joanna - I thought that this would be better than marzipan and fondant icing, as most people seem to dislike these.
Hi Adele, thanks :)
Hi Aparna, Xmas baking is a lot of fun isn't it - the planning is just as fun as the making.
Hi Emily, this is my first "full on" fruit cake - I previously have only made Nigella's "last minute" fruit cake.
Thanks Val :)
Hi Blonde Duck, I agree - baking is very zen (except when it goes horribly wrong).
Hi Arfi, I have never baked a "proper" fruit cake before - I am a newby!
Hi Vera, I used to loathe the stuff, but it's funny what tastes you acquire with age.
Handsome looking cake...do you get a little excited at the prospect of all the Christmas baking? I know I do!
ReplyDeleteHi Crusader - yes, I love Christmas baking! I spent all of one Saturday morning planning what I was going to make, and I still have to narrow it down a little. We he!
ReplyDeleteHow interesting that you have cooked from a classic Margaret Fulton cook book.
ReplyDeleteSuch a wonderful fruit cake recipe full of the most amazing ingredients. How can you go wrong with a cake such as this.
i've already coipied the recipe of this wonderful cake because it's simply amazing!
ReplyDeleteThanks dear for sharing!
A kiss!
Silvia
Hi Margaret, I have my fingers crossed ...
ReplyDeleteThanks Silvia, a pleasure.
A beautiful fruit cake and for such a great event :) I adore Christmas baking and have my fruit cake baked and 'feeding' it every week with brandy.
ReplyDeleteRosie x
Oh this is a lovely fruit cake and I have bookmarked it.
ReplyDeleteI think I need to find more friends that make Christmas care packages :)
ReplyDeleteHi Rosie, I love the idea of "feeding" your cake!
ReplyDeleteHi Pearls, I'd love to know how you go with it.
LOL Psychgrad - I would be wrapt if anyone made me one.