This
sort of cake personifies the start of winter to me; it’s got lots of rich
flavours and warming spice. The dates taste like toffee and the gentle
hint of chocolate in the background adds depth to what could otherwise be just
another nice spiced sponge. It has the lightness of texture that you find
in really good sticky toffee puddings. Oh, and if you’re still not sold
it’s a doddle to make, smells divine whilst cooking and keeps for days thus, if
you were so minded, you could eat the whole thing yourself!
I
served the cake at room temperature but, if you omit the glaze, it would be
great served warm with custard for a winter pudding. I smiled when I
typed that because one thing I have realised being married to The Custard King
aka Mr CC is that pudding and custard is an all-seasons food!
This cake just grew and grew – it came out enormous! There’s practically a whole other cake in the huge dome!
I
know some people are wary at using the C word too early, but I think this could
easily be adapted to a Christmas cake for those who don’t want to go down the
traditional fruitcake path. You could go the easy route i.e. make it as I
have but plonk some plastic reindeer on top, or change the tin to a traybake
tin, increase the amount of icing and create a snow scene on top i.e. plonk
some plastic reindeer, trees and snowmen on top. You will notice from my
suggestions that I am not much of a cake decorator…..
Ingredients
For
the cake:
140g
dates – stoned and chopped
410ml evaporated milk
100g soft dark brown sugar
225g plain flour
3 tablespoons cocoa powder
2 teaspoons ground ginger
2 teaspoons bicarbonate of soda
50g stem ginger – chopped
200g unsalted butter, at room temperature
2 eggs
410ml evaporated milk
100g soft dark brown sugar
225g plain flour
3 tablespoons cocoa powder
2 teaspoons ground ginger
2 teaspoons bicarbonate of soda
50g stem ginger – chopped
200g unsalted butter, at room temperature
2 eggs
For
the glaze:
100g
icing sugar
Enough
stem ginger syrup to form a thick, glossy icing – add a teaspoon at a time
Method
Preheat
the oven to 160C/fan oven 140C/320F/gas mark 3.
Line
a 20cm round springform tin with baking paper.
Place
the dates, evaporated milk and dark brown sugar into a saucepan.
Bring
to the boil then reduce the heat and simmer for 5 minutes, stirring regularly,
until the dates are soft and the sugar has melted – you can see this by looking
on the back of your spoon; if you can see any granules you need to cook for
longer.
Put
the pan to one side to cool.
Place
the flour, cocoa powder, ground ginger, bicarbonate of soda, stem ginger and
butter into a food processor and blitz until there are no lumps.
Add
the cooled date mixture and the eggs and blitz briefly just until the
ingredients are combined.
Pour
into the prepared tin and bake for approximately 1 hour – it may take longer –
or until a skewer inserted into the cake comes out clean.
Leave
to cool in the tin as initially the cake will be very soft.
De-tin
after about 30 minutes and leave to cool completely on a wire rack.
When
the cake is cold you can add the glaze: use just enough stem ginger syrup to
turn the icing sugar into a thick white glossy glaze.
Drizzle
over the cake and leave to set.
Bask
in the glory of the wonderful thing you have created.
Eat.
I can totally see why this cake screams winter - it'll be a hit for the next three months for certain! I love the fox plate too!
ReplyDeleteThis sounds so good! I love the way you describe the flavours and that is such an impressive height! Perfectly seasonal =)
ReplyDeleteMmm delicious - I haven't had date cake in ages now I'm going to have to bake one - this looks so tempting!
ReplyDeleteLook wonderful!
ReplyDeleteI love dates:)
definitely a good winter cake and it's not too early now to mention Christmas!
ReplyDeleteWow..... it did grow and grow! Still that's unexpected extra deliciousness..... As a snow scene it would be a perfect ski slope!!!!
ReplyDeleteYum - I love this kind of cake all year round.
ReplyDeletei am going to bookmark this beautiful recipe wow
ReplyDeleteThis sounds yummy!! Can't wait to try it.
ReplyDeleteLove these kinds of warm spices together. YUMMMMY.
ReplyDeleteOh I love ginger anything - this cake would be right up my alley!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great looking cake - you'd certainly get a good slice! Love ginger and dates, so this cake sounds perfect for us.
ReplyDeleteAre you sure Mr CC is the Custard King? I think my hubby would want to challenge his title!!! The cakecumpudding is wonderful for this time of the year.
ReplyDeleteI bet this is the kind of cake that improves with age. Looks glorious. I'll have mine with lashing of custard please :)
ReplyDelete