I have to confess, in most things, to being a fogey before my time, but particularly with music. My radio is set to Absolute 80s where it shall stay until they set up Absolute 40s. I’m more Andrews Sisters than Destiny’s Child, more Bing than Bieber...I’m sure you get the idea.
So, when a modern singer comes along who I really like it’s
exciting for me – I get to buy CDs (sorry, I haven’t caught up with this
new-found downloading of music yet) on the day they’re released; it reminds me
of being young again. (For the record, I
am in my thirties...I know, I know, I sound about 70!)
Paloma Faith is such a talented woman –songwriter, singer, actress, style icon (with a nod to the vintage fashions of days gone by) and also incredibly witty and likable when interviewed. And she’s from Hackney, just like Mr CC. OK, I admit it – I totally have a girl crush on her!
Her debut album “Do You Want the Truth or SomethingBeautiful” has been in my car stereo for so many months now that I think I could sing it in my sleep. I can’t wait for the new album “Fall to Grace” which is out in May.
I’m also very excited that Paloma picked one of my favourite
cakes – a pineapple upside down cake.
Then I hit a problem; I’ve made a pineapple upside down cake before and most pineapple upside cakes are pretty similar. How could I make a cake different from the
norm and worthy of Paloma?
This recipe was the perfect answer to my prayers. I’ve been a slow and suspicious adopter of chilli into baked goods but this recipe tickled my taste buds. The syrup that bakes on the bottom of the cake (and becomes the top on turning out) is spiked with chilli and lime meaning that the cake is infused with a sweet spiciness that is also fresh and light.
The sweetness of the syrup takes all the sting from the chilli just leaving a sweet chilli taste; I think next time I might be tempted to leave a few chilli seeds in there as I do like my spice. Apart from that, it was classic pineapple upside down cake all the way...i.e. extremely pleasant!
Ingredients
250g golden syrup
1 fresh red chilli – deseeded and chopped as finely as you can
Grated zest of 1 lime
430g tin of pineapple rings in juice (not syrup) – this is the weight of the whole tin, not the drained weight; keep the juice as it is used in the cake
225g unsalted butter, at room temperature
225g caster sugar
4 eggs
225g self raising flour
1 fresh red chilli – deseeded and chopped as finely as you can
Grated zest of 1 lime
430g tin of pineapple rings in juice (not syrup) – this is the weight of the whole tin, not the drained weight; keep the juice as it is used in the cake
225g unsalted butter, at room temperature
225g caster sugar
4 eggs
225g self raising flour
Method
Preheat the oven to 180°C/fan oven 160°C/350°F/gas mark 4.
Take a 20cm round springform tin and line the inside with
foil, then a paper liner – if you have an all in one paper liner it will save
you the stress of the syrup oozing out whilst baking. I went for the belt-and-braces approach of
foil and a liner and that worked fine.
Start by making the syrup: place the golden syrup, chilli
and lime zest in a saucepan and heat, only for about2-3 minutes, until the
syrup has loosened up.
Pour just over half the syrup into the prepared tin and
swirl the tin around so the syrup is evenly distributed.
Place as many pineapple rings as you can in the syrup
without overlapping them too much. I got
6 in.
Now make the sponge: beat together the butter and sugar
until light and whippy. Don’t skimp on
this stage.
Beat in the eggs, one at a time.
Stir in the flour and enough pineapple juice from the can to
make a nice smooth dropping consistency.
Chop the remaining pineapple from the can and stir into the
sponge batter.
Carefully spoon the batter into the tin taking care not to
disturb the pineapple rings and syrup.
Spread the batter to the edges of the tin to try and seal in
the syrup and stop it from bubbling up over the edges whilst cooking.
Stand the cake tin on a baking tray with lipped sides – just
in case any syrup sneaks out during cooking!
Bake for approximately 45-55 minutes or until a skewer
inserted into the cake comes out clean.
Mine actually took a bit longer – just over an hour.
Leave the cake to cool, in the tin, for 20 minutes then turn
out i.e. invert onto a serving plate. Tempting
though it is to wait for the cake to cool completely before turning out, you
run the risk of the syrup being glued onto the baking paper!
When you come to serve the cake, remember that you have just
under half the syrup left – if you warm this gently it is very nice poured over
the cake.
Serve the cake warm with ice cream or at room temperature
with cream.
Bask in the glory of the wonderful thing you have created.
Eat.
24 comments:
Oh wow I love this! What a great post, the hint of chilli sounds brilliant too!
Nom!
Paloma has mighty mighty good taste- Pineapple Upside Down Cake is a a Top Fave in our house too! Inspired addition of chilli too
Pineapple upside down cake brings back so many childhood food memories! I love the addition of chilli. Delicious!
Wow looks wonderful and bet it tasted delicious. Love the idea of adding chilli and lime to the syrup. Very tropical.
As always your cake is gorgeous tall!
Don't worry you are not the only one who doesn't like too much modern technology. I'm in my 20's and yet don't own an i-pod or download music either. I'm also not on twitter or facebook. People think I'm strange but whats wrong with the radio and a phone!!
Look absolutely delicious!!
Beautiful, you can't really go wrong with a slice of sponge with pineapple on top! I love the idea of using chilli with the pineapple to balance out the sweetness.
I love the idea of chilli and lime in the syrup, with the pineapple it seems almost Thai inspired - if you know what I mean. The sponge looks lovely and light. I've never tried pineapple upside down cake (I must admit - haven't really tried a lot of baking with fruit), but this looks so lovely, and with flavours I love, it's on my list to bake! :)
I love the sound of this cake - and it looks so beautiful with its yellow and red. I have never heard of Paolma before - I shall have to hit Youtube!
This cake looks so moist and full of flavor. I Love it!!!
This is SUCH a clever idea - and a lovely cake to boot. Sigh, I have blog envy!
Gorgeous looking cake! The red chilli flecks make it look really special!
I love pineapple upside down cake! That looks so good. I'm also a fan of Paloma's music, she is a fantastic singer :-)
That cake looks wonderful.
I have yet to try using chillies in any kind of cake or biscuit so thanks for the inspiration.
I agree about CD's. I still buy them and love having them on the shelf to look at and choose from, to open and read the cover notes. Downloading music just doesn't appeal to me.
I have to admit to being timid when it comes to using chilli in sweet baking. The cake looks very inviting and I would like to try a slice.
Wow! Love the depth of that cake and it looks so moist and gorgeous too. I like the idea of pepping it up a little with the chilli too - I bet it cuts the sweetness perfectly. Pineapple upside down was one of the few cakes my mum occasionally made but I haven't had it for years and years!
I love the twist on this cake! I've never used chillies in baking but can see how it would work so well here.
Ah, Paloma has great choice. Got to love an upside down pineapple cake!
I must admit to being old before my time as well, especially with music. Did you catch that programme the BBC did about the Andrew Sisters? I think it was first on two years ago on BBC4 although I'm sure it has been repeated. I absolutely loved it!
Wow CC I've always wanted to make Pineapple Upside DOwn Cake. You are one inspirational lady! thanks for bringing some sunshine on this rainy day :)
You made me laugh! So I'm not the only fogey on the internet. Will try out Paloma Faith. Can't bear chili in any form though.
Your sponge always looks so light and gorgeous. Highly approve of the chilli addition to this and it looks pretty too speckled with flecks of red.
What a brilliant idea. I simply adore this blog! I can't wait to try this recipe out - makes a nice change from baking children friendly cakes!
What a great idea! I'm a huge fan of chilli in anything and everything. Will definitely give this a go - thanks!
I'm also quite wary of chili in baked goods. The chili and lime sounds great with the pineapple - I'm sure it tasted good!
What a lovely looking upside down cake...strangely I've seen quite a few about this week and I've just made an apricot version! Chilli is a great twist too...and perfect for Paloma Faith! :-)
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