The Spelt Christmas Cake is next up, we actually made these the same night as the Christmas Pudding as its quiet handy to do all your baking the same day. We were chatting about Christmas baking traditions and its amazing how much times have changed. I couldn't believe that in those times, around the 1950's a Christmas Cake wasn't baked as not everyone had an oven, they mostly cooked over an open fire. It would be very tricky to cook a Christmas Cake over an open fire! A pudding was cooked as it could be boiled over the open fire in a pot and the tradition was to boil the pudding in a greased cloth, tied at the top. Its amazing how times have changed and moved so quickly, if you have any other baking traditions we would love to hear, the small details are forgotten so easily if they are not passed on to the next generation.
Sieve Together;
15 oz/ 425g of white spelt flour
1 and a half level teaspoons of mixes spice
1 and a half level teaspoons of ground nutmeg
Preheat oven to gas mark 2, 300 degrees F, 120 degrees C
11.
I will put up the icing recipe about
a weeks before Christmas as this will allow the cake to mature!
What you need:
9 and half inch square baking tin
Tinfoil
Baking parchment
9 and a half inch (approx) square
baking tin
Large mixing bowl
Ingredients:
12 oz/350g butter
12 oz/ 350g dark brown sugar
1lb/450g currants
12oz/ 350g raisins
12 oz/350g butter
12 oz/ 350g dark brown sugar
1lb/450g currants
12oz/ 350g raisins
12oz/350g sultanas
5oz/ 150g cherries halved
Grated rind of two lemons
Grated rind of 1 orange
5oz/ 150g cherries halved
Grated rind of two lemons
Grated rind of 1 orange
3 oz/ 75g ground almonds
7 eggs size 2
3 tablespoons of whisky
7 eggs size 2
3 tablespoons of whisky
Sieve Together;
15 oz/ 425g of white spelt flour
1 and a half level teaspoons of mixes spice
1 and a half level teaspoons of ground nutmeg
Preheat oven to gas mark 2, 300 degrees F, 120 degrees C
Method
1.
Brush the tin with melted butter and
line the sides and bottom with two layers of baking parchment
2.
Put two layers of tinfoil around the
outside of tin three inches above the top of the tin and tie with string, this
prevents the cake from burning on the outside
3.
Make a ‘hat’ for the top of the cake
with a double layer of grease proof paper keep this aside to put on top of cake
for the last hour of baking so the top of the cake doesn’t burn
Spelt Christmas Cake out of the oven wrapped in tinfoil and baking parchment
4.
Sieve together the 15 oz/ 450g of white spelt
flour, 1 and a half level teaspoons of mixed spice, 1 and a half level
teaspoons of ground nutmeg
5.
Place all the cake ingredients
together in a very large mixing bowl and mix thoroughly with a wooden spoon until
well mixed, 3-4 mins
6.
Place the mixture in the prepared tin and smooth
out top with a wet spoon
7.
Bake in the preheated oven for 3 hours approx (depending
on oven) at 120 degrees on middle shelf
8.
Test the cake by pressing centre top
with spoon it should feel very firm and also with a warm skewer through the
centre of the cake if the skewer comes out clean with no uncooked mixture
clinging to it the cake is ready. At this stage there should be no sizzling
noise to be heard from the cake either
9.
Once baked leave the cake to cool
overnight in its tin and remove all paper and tin the next day
10. To store your cake wrap it in double grease proof paper and then tin foil! You can feed the cake with extra whisky by using a cocktail stick to put small holes in the top and then pour a few spoons of whisky on top.
Lovely red berries from our holly tree, these will be eaten by the birds as soon as it gets cold