Toffee Cake

This is the cake which I baked for Gordon’s birthday and it’s based on a Marguerite Patten recipe. It was a nice change from a completely chocolate cake. Although the ingredients specify using castor sugar I usually just use normal white sugar. The brown sugar can be any kind from Demerara to dark soft brown sugar depending on how strong you want the toffee flavour to be.

6 oz brown sugar
5 oz butter or marg.
4 tablespoons milk
2 oz castor sugar
2 eggs
8 oz self-raising flour

Put the brown sugar, 1 oz butter and 4 tablespoons of milk into a heavy based pan and stir until the sugar has dissolved. Then allow the mixture to reach the ‘soft ball’ stage.

Cream the remaining butter and sugar together until it’s soft and light then beat in the warm toffee syrup gradually to stop the mixture from curdling. If it does curdle just add some flour.

Beat in the eggs and then the rest of the flour.

Put the cake mixture into an 8 inch cake tin which has been well greased.

Bake for about 50 minutes in a pre-heated oven at 170 C, Gas mark 3 or 325-350 F. Remove from oven and run a knife around the edge of the cake tin, the cake should come out quite easily. Leave to cool on a wire rack.

This cake tastes lovely on its own but I decided to cover it with my own version of buttercream icing. This is quick and easy, no faffing about with butter and cocoa powder required.

Nutella Topping
Place about 3 heaped tablespoons of Nutella into a glass bowl with a sploosh of milk, about a quarter of a cupful, and microwave for about 30 seconds on medium or until the Nutella mixture has melted. It depends on the strength of your microwave.

Stir the mixture until the milk is well incorporated then add about 4 heaped tablespoons of icing sugar into it. Be sure to sift the icing sugar first otherwise the icing will be lumpy.

Mix well and quickly spread it over the cake and down the sides if wished. It sets fairly fast so I couldn’t get the top of my cake as smooth as I wanted and I ended up taking a rolling pin to a bar of Aero to disguise the top. No disaster. Chocolate on top of chocolate isn’t exactly a problem.

We were half way to Stirling before I realised that I had left the birthday candles behind. So we had to improvise with a tealight. Well, he could still make a wish, which is the main thing.

Early birthday celebration

Because Laura (our son Gordon’s girlfriend) has her birthday on June the 10th and mine is on the 19th, we decided to combine our birthday meals out. The only evening which we could all manage was on Wednesday.

So we went to the Annapurna restaurant and had lovely Nepalese food. We had been there before but it was the first time for the rest of the family and luckily they enjoyed it.

I did make a chocolate birthday cake for us both but it turned out to be the driest one which I have baked yet. So the search for the perfect chocolate cake recipe continues.

I did quite like the icing though. Very different because instead of using butter, you use jam and although it probably isn’t any healthier for you somehow the fact that you aren’t eating loads of chocolate flavoured butter is a plus.

So this is the recipe for it.

75g dark chocolate
75g jam of your choice
150g icing sugar

Put the chocolate in a bowl which has been placed above a pan of hot water. When the chocolate has melted, remove the bowl from the heat and mix the jam into the melted chocolate. Add the sifted icing sugar and beat with enough water to make the mixture easier to spread.

I used strawberry jam but you are supposed to use blackcurrant or raspberry. I think any red fruit jam would work though.