This
was rather a last minute concoction. I
had planned on making raspberry ripple pavlovas and dutifully made my meringues
last night and left them to cool in the oven.
Last night they looked amazing.
This morning, the raspberry swirl had turned to mush and I wasn’t so
much left with mini pavlovas as pink swamp things! At least it happened before I wasted any of
the expensive ingredients...so what’s a girl to do when she has a basic store
cupboard at her disposal and lots of raspberries and cream?
Glammed-up
Victoria sponge was, of course, the answer!
I cut the sponge into four tiers and layered it with whipped cream and
fresh raspberries. And I might be being presumptuous
but I suspect everyone enjoyed it more than they would have enjoyed the
pavlovas (in truth, they were a selfish bake...my eatership isn’t really into
fancy meringues!)
When
I’ve made multi-tiered sponges in the past I find they can get a bit wobbly on
the upper layers. So I deployed my
adjustable dessert ring to hold everything in place – it does give more precise
sides and structure.
Having
cut the sponge into four layers I then found I couldn’t use the fourth layer as
it would have made the sponge too tall...and that’s me saying that. I think when you come up to the top of the
deep dessert ring it’s a good sign that you should stop. It wouldn’t have fit on a small plate if I’d pushed
on with the fourth tier...and cake served on dinner plates seems a bit much! I will possibly use the spare disc of sponge
for little trifles but, if my spidey-senses are correct, I suspect Mr CC will
just polish it off with a cup of tea.
Ingredients
For the sponge:
4 eggs, at room temperature
Unsalted butter, at room temperature
Caster sugar
Self-raising flour
1 tsp vanilla extract
A little milk, if necessary
4 eggs, at room temperature
Unsalted butter, at room temperature
Caster sugar
Self-raising flour
1 tsp vanilla extract
A little milk, if necessary
For the filling:
400g raspberries, washed and dried
600ml double cream
400g raspberries, washed and dried
600ml double cream
To assemble the cake:
Icing sugar or caster sugar, for dusting
Icing sugar or caster sugar, for dusting
Method
Preheat the oven to 180˚C/fan oven 160˚C/350˚F/gas mark 4.
Line two 20cm sandwich cake tins with baking paper; I put a disc
of paper in the bottom and a strip around the side that comes up above the
height of the tin.
Weigh the eggs in their shells – this will tell you the
weight for the butter, sugar and flour. Mine weighed 263 grams.
Whatever the weight of your eggs (in their shells) weigh out the
same amount of butter, sugar and flour.
Beat the butter until it is light and whippy, then beat in the
sugar until light and fluffy. Don’t skimp on this stage as it’s the key way of
getting air into your sponge.
Beat in the eggs one at a time; if you whipped the butter and
sugar enough there shouldn’t be any curdling, but if there is add some of the
flour to correct it.
Beat in the vanilla extract.
Fold in the flour.
If the batter is thick and won’t easily drop from the mixing
spoon, fold in a tablespoon of milk. It may need a further tablespoon. Add
enough milk to reach “dropping consistency”.
Spoon the batter into the prepared sandwich tins and gently
smooth the tops with a knife.
Bake for 25-30 minutes, or until a skewer inserted into the
centre of the sponge comes out clean.
Leave to cool in the tin for a couple of minutes, then turn out
on to a wire rack to cool completely.
When the sponges are cool
cut each one through horizontally so that you have four discs of sponge.
Whip the cream until it
holds firm peaks – somewhere between soft and stiff! Don’t overbeat it.
Now you can build the cake:
place a disc of sponge onto the serving plate.
If you have an adjustable ring mould it is useful to build the layers in
that, as it keeps it upright and stops the cream squidging out the sides. If you haven’t – don’t panic! Just take care not to put too much cream at
the edge of the sponge.
Spoon 1/3 of the whipped
cream onto the sponge and spread.
Scatter 1/3 of the
raspberries over the cream and top with a second disc of sponge.
Repeat until you have used
all the cream and raspberries and have the final disc of sponge on top of the
cake.
Refrigerate until serving,
and dust with some icing sugar.
Bask in the glory of the
wonderful thing you have created.
Eat.