One thing I really love, love, LOVE is fresh cherries. During cherry season I like to eat as many of them as I can get. Fruit in season tastes the best, don't you think?
I could eat them until they come out my ears and to be honest I don't really care how much they cost, I just can't get enough of them.
One thing I also like to do is to bake a fresh cherry cake! Cherries are one of those fruits that lend themselves beautifully to using in baked desserts, pies, cakes, crumbles, etc.
This moist cherry cake recipe is one that I like to bake for us every year. Not only is it a simple cake to bake, but it has a beautiful crumb, sweet cherry topping and that buttery crumble is just wonderful!
This is a cake that is as much at home with a hot drink as it is for dessert with a nice scoop of vanilla ice cream or some cream poured over top!
Crumbles, pies . . . cakes. Mmmm . . . there is nothing like fresh cherries for baking with. The sour ones make fabulous pies.
Until you have tasted a cherry pie made with fresh cherries, you have just not tasted a real cherry pie!! There is just no comparison to the ones made with fresh cherries and the ones made with tinned cherry pie filling . . . trust me!
I do enjoy the tinned cherry pie filling, but a pie made from scratch is incomparably better, seriously.
Sweet cherries are perfect in cakes and muffins. Especially fabulous cakes such as this one. Scrummily buttery with a lovely crumble topping, this cake is one of our favourites.
Served with lashings of cold cream this cake is so so so good. Each mouthful a buttery bite of sweet cherry bliss. I have to work hard to restrain myself because I could just eat and eat this until it's all gone!!
WHAT YOU NEED TO MAKE CHERRY CRUMBLE CAKE
The ingredients for this cake are fairly simple. Ordinary baking cupboard ingredients and fresh cherries. I have not made it with frozen cherries, but I am sure they would also work so long as you thaw and drain them really well first!
For the cake:
- 3/4 pound (350g) of pitted ripe fresh sweet cherries
- 1 cup plus 1 TBS (150g) of self raising flour
- hefty pinch of ground cinnamon
- 1/4 cup (50g) of sugar
- 1 large free range egg
- 1/8 cup (1 fluid ounce/30ml) of milk
- scant half cup (3 1/2 ounces/99g) butter, melted
For the crumble topping:
- 4 TBS flour
- 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
- 2 TBS granulated sugar
- 2 TBS cold butter, cubed
You will also need:
- Icing (confectioners) sugar to dust
- Pouring cream to serve
As I said you can probably use frozen cherries (although I haven't), just be sure to thaw and drain them first. I know some people have a hard time finding self raising flour. You can very easily make your own, that is what I do most of the time.
To make your own self raising flour for every cup of flour whisk together the following: 1 cup (140g) plain all purpose flour, 1 1/2 tsp baking powder and 1/4 tsp salt. I usually make mine 3 or 4 cups at a time and keep it in an airtight container.
HOW TO MAKE CHERRY CRUMBLE CAKE
Nothing could really be easier. Begin by preheating your oven to 350*F/180*C/ gas mark 4. Butter an 8 inch round cake tin with a removable bottom and line with parchment paper on the bottom.
Whisk the melted butter together with the milk and the egg.
Sift the flour, sugar and cinnamon into a bowl. Make a well in the middle and then add the liquid ingredients all at once. Mix together to make a smooth thick batter and then spread it into the prepared pan. Drop the cherries on top, pressing them down just slightly.
Whisk together the flour, cinnamon and sugar for the crumble topping. Rub in the butter with your fingertips until the mixture is all crumbly. Sprinkle this evenly over top of the cherries.
Bake in the preheated oven for 30 to 35 minutes, until well risen and golden brown. A toothpick inserted in the center should come out clean.
Remove from the oven and allow to stand for at least ten minutes before removing from the pan to a wire rack to finish cooling.
Dust with icing sugar if you wish and serve, cut into wedges with some cream for pouring if desired.
This really is a lovely cake with a beautiful dense crumb. One that goes perfectly well with a hot drink or for dessert. Heck, its even great for breakfast!
If you are fond of this type of cake, here are a few others you might enjoy!
NORWEGIAN RHUBARB CAKE - This is a beautiful cake with a soft delicate crumb. It melts in the mouth. Top that with the earthy tang of tart rhubarb and the sweet crunch of sugar and almonds and you have a pretty unbeatable combination!
CHERRY COCONUT & ALMOND SNACK CAKE - Nutty, sweet, buttery and deliciously stuffed with plenty of fresh cherries, with a fabulously crunchy toasted almond topping. The batter included coconut and ground almonds for the perfect combination of flavors.
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Cherry Crumble Cake
Yield: makes one 8-inch cake
Author: Marie Rayner
Prep time: 15 MinCook time: 35 MinTotal time: 50 Min
A deliciously moist cake, stogged full of sweet cherries and topped with a buttery crumble topping. Fabulous!
Ingredients
For the cake:
- 3/4 pound (350g) of pitted ripe fresh sweet cherries
- 1 cup plus 1 TBS (150g) of self raising flour
- hefty pinch of ground cinnamon
- 1/4 cup (50g) of sugar
- 1 large free range egg
- 1/8 cup (1 fluid ounce/30ml) of milk
- scant half cup (3 1/2 ounces/99g) butter, melted
For the crumble topping:
- 4 TBS flour
- 1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
- 2 TBS granulated sugar
- 2 TBS cold butter, cubed
You will also need:
- Icing (confectioners) sugar to dust
- Pouring cream to serve
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350*F/180*C/ gas mark 4. Butter an 8 inch round cake tin with a removable bottom and line with parchment paper on the bottom.
- Whisk the melted butter together with the milk and the egg.
- Sift the flour, sugar and cinnamon into a bowl. Make a well in the middle and then add the liquid ingredients all at once.
- Mix together to make a smooth thick batter and then spread it into the prepared pan. Drop the cherries on top, pressing them down just slightly.
- Whisk together the flour, cinnamon and sugar for the crumble topping. Rub in the butter with your fingertips until the mixture is all crumbly. Sprinkle this evenly over top of the cherries.
- Bake in the preheated oven for 30 to 35 minutes, until well risen and golden brown. A toothpick inserted in the center should come out clean.
- Remove from the oven and allow to stand for at least ten minutes before removing from the pan to a wire rack to finish cooling.
- Dust with icing sugar if you wish and serve, cut into wedges with some cream for pouring if desired.
Did you make this recipe?
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I have been rather indulging myself lately . . . naughty me, when I was doing so well before the move. It is so hard to not eat all the wonderful things that I bake . . . they are so very tempting.
Sometimes I am content with just a taste . . . but lately . . . I'm afraid that I have not been so good, and have been imbibing just a bit too much.
I decided to try to make a Brownie that would satisfy my chocolate craving . . . but not tip me over the top. Not an easy quest to be sure . . . but quite doable as you can see.
These ended up quite scrummy . . . not as good as my Fudge Walnut Brownies, to be sure . . . but not so bad, and definitely fulfilling that chocolate craving.
The secret is to not overbake them . . . anytime you take the fat and calories out of something you risk taking out a lot of the flavour and moistness . . . so overbaking these is a definite no no . . . (I cannot stress this enough!)
A lot of low fat brownie recipes do use prune puree . . . but I did not want any hint of fruit in my chocolate indulgence. They tend to mask some of the chocolate flavour as well . . . and what is the point? When you want chocolate, you want chocolate, full stop . . .
I do hope you will give these a try. Whilst they are not as good as the full fat version, they are a satisfying substitute . . . and in the scheme of low fat . . . that is what counts!
*Light Brownies*
Makes one 8 inch square pan
Printable Recipe
Make sure you use good quality semisweet chocolate in these, not chocolate chips. The additives in chocolate chips will result in a much drier brownie. Be careful not to overbake.
2 1/2 ounces plain flour (1/2 cup, sifted)
1/2 tsp baking powder
2 TBS Dutch process cocoa powder, sifted
1 TBS hot water
1 TBS vanilla extract
1/2 tsp coffee powder, rubbed through a seive until very fine
2 TBS unsalted butter
3 ounces semi sweet chocolate, good quality, chopped fine
3 1/2 ounces sugar (1/2 cup)
pinch salt
1 large free range egg, beaten lightly
Icing sugar for dusting (optional)
Preheat the oven to 180*C/350*F/Gas mark 4. Line an 8 inch square baking pan with parchment paper, leaving enough overhang so that you can easily lift them out when done.
Whisk the flour and baking powder together. Set aside.
Whisk together the cocoa powder, hot water, vanilla and coffee powder, until smooth. Set aside.
Melt the butter and semi sweet chocolate in a microwave on medium heat, or in a bowl over a pan of simmering water. Set aside.
Measure the sugar and salt into a bowl, whisking them together. Stir in the melted chocolate/butter mixture and the cocoa powder mixture. Mix well and then whisk in the beaten egg. Fold in the flour mixture, folding it in only until just incorporated. Spread into the prepared pan, smoothing the top over.
Bake for about 20 minutes, on the middle rack of the oven. Turn around halfway through the baking time. Test a few minutes before the baking time is up. A toothpick inserted in the centre should come out with a few moist crumbs. Do NOT overbake.
Remove to a wire rack to cool for about an hour. Lift out of the pan by using the parchment paper overhand. Dust with icing sugar if desired and then cut into squares to serve.
I'm going to show myself up right now for the somewhat ignorant gardener that I am. I love vegetables, but I have not had much experience in growing them.
At the beginning of this growing season, Todd and I planted all sorts of things . . . beetroot, parsnips, carrots, potatoes, squash, courgettes, lettuces, tomatoes, onions, cabbages, cucumbers and rocket. Everything was doing so so, but one row in the garden was growing by leaps and bounds.
"What is that?" I asked Todd. "Parsnips." was his answer. Hmmm . . . I thought . . .
Those parsnips are growing really fast. I had always thought they were a fall vegetable and needed the first touch of frost to really come in to their own . . .
In the meantime, every day I looked at them and they were growing larger and larger . . . and a few days ago they looked like they were going to seed . . .
I thought to myself . . . my goodness, but those parsnips have big and leafy tops . . . almost good enough to eat. I wonder if you can eat parsnip tops, coz they look as if they would make a rather tasty green . . . I know you can eat beetroot tops and turnip greens, and they are rather good.
I let them go for a few more days and then I just couldn't help myself. I just had to have a taste . . . they were growing so prolifically that I thought it was worth a try. Bravely I broke a leaf off and popped it into my mouth . . .
Only to discover that it was not parsnips . . . it was rocket!
So now I found myself with bags and bags of rocket that was almost past it's use by date . . . I'm not sure you can freeze it . . . I'm not even sure if it's still good for salads . . . but it is good for this. So you'll have to forgive me if you've seen this recipe on here before.
Some things are just so tasty that they bear repeating, and this is one of them. Besides . . . it helped me to use up a bunch of that overgrown rocket!
Please note, unless they are really young and tender, you will have to remove the beans from the pods, as the pods will be inedible. Put the beans in a pan, cover with boiling water, return to the boil and cook for 3-5 minutes. Then drain, empty into cold water, slit each pod along its seam and run your thumb along the furry inside to push the beans out. I really don't like the tough outer skin that covers each of the little beans, and so I always double pod them by taking a fingernail and slitting that outer skin open and slipping the tender sweet bright green bean inside . . . out! It can be a fiddly and time consuming job, especially if you are preparing a lot of them, but it is well worth the effort in my opinion. The beans will then be ready to re-heat gently with some butter and a bit of salt and black pepper, or to use in another recipe, such as the delicious one I have here today.
*Baked Potatoes with Broad Beans, Rocket and Blue Cheese*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
Imagine a tasty baked potato, it's skin all crispy and split open . . . topped with a delicious blue cheese sauce stogged full of fresh broad beans and tasty rocket. This is wonderfully delicious!
4 large baking potatoes
coarse salt
300g broad beans
1/3 cup cream
4 ounces blue cheese, crumbled
4 handfuls of rocket, chopped
Pre-heat the oven to 200*C/400*F. Wash the potatoes, and while still damp, rub them all over with a little coarse salt. Prick them several times with a fork and then place them into the oven, sitting them directly onto the oven rack. (This will help their skins to become really nice and crisp) Bake for 1 hour, then check by squeezing them gently, to see if they are done. If they are done they will yield slightly. If they are still hard, then bake them for another 15 minutes and try again.
Cook the broad beans in some lightly salted boiling water for 3 minutes. Drain well and rinse under cold water to stop the cooking. Drain well again. Slip off the outer grey skins by using your nail to slit open the skin and then popping the bright green bean out. Discard the outer grey skin. Set aside the beans.
Heat the cream in a small saucepan over medium low heat. Add the broad beans and cook them gently for several minutes. Add the blue cheese and the rocket. Stir everything together and cook until the rocket has wilted.
Take your cooked potatoes and cut a cross in one side of each and squeeze the potatoes around the middle until they open up. Place each on a heated plate. Spoon some of the broad bean mixture over the top of each. Season with some black pepper and serve.
Note - This tasty dish also makes a really delicious light lunch or supper all on it's own!
Tune in tomorrow. I'll have some tasty brownies to show you and the best thing of all is . . . they're low in calories and fat! I kid you not!
We have company arriving today in the early afternoon, all the way up from Kent for the weekend. I wanted to make something that would go over well for lunch . . . I expect they will be quite hungry after the long drive.
We'll be going out for dinner tonight, but I thought a nice salad with some cold ham would make a tasty and filling lunch. We'll be spending all the afternoon walking around Chester, so some energy will be needed!
I just love the versatility of rice and wheat salads. The rice and wheat create the perfect canvas upon which to create something unique and delicious! This salad uses not one . . . not two . . . but three wholesome grains . . . nutty wheat berries, chewy pearl barley and soft brown rice. A totally delightful combination.
Then you have the added sweet crunch of chopped apple. I like to use red ones because they give the most lovely colour. Apples go very well with raisins, and not so surprisingly red onion! When you add the toasty richness of walnuts and a totally deliciously spiced apple cider vinaigrette, you have a wonderful salad, that is not only very tasty, but also very healthy!
You can keep a smug look on your face while you are eating this one. It's scrummily good for you and quite filling, and . . . with all the complex carbs it holds, this one will keep you going and energized for quite a while!
*Three Grain Salad*
Serves 12
Printable Recipe
This is a delicious salad consisting of three separate grains, brown rice, pearly barley and wheat berries combined with the addition of crunchy apple, sweet raisins, red onion and toasted pecans. The spicy honey vinaigrette dressing sets it all off perfectly!
4 servings of wheat berries, rinsed
4 servings of medium pearl barley, rinsed
4 servings of long grain brown rice, rinsed
vegetable stock cubes
1 to 2 medium sweet red apples, unpeeled, cored and chopped
1 small red onion, peeled and finely chopped
4 ounces raisins
60g toasted walnuts, chopped
Dressing:
2 ounces oil (1/4 cup)
2 ounces cider vinegar (1/4 cup)
2 TBS runny honey
3/4 tsp grated gingerroot
1/4 tsp ground cardamom
1/4 tsp sumac
sea salt and black pepper to taste
Cook each of the grains according to the package directions, using a vegetable stock cube in each pot. When tender, drain well, rinse and drain again. Mix all together in a large bowl. Add the chopped apple, onion and raisins, mixing well.
Whisk together the dressign ingredients. Pour over the salad, tossing to coat. Serve immediately or cover and chill for 2 to 6 hours before serving. Just before serving, fold in the chopped nuts.
You can't get more British than a traditional Battenberg cake, a tasty teatime treat that when cut in a cross section displays a wonderfully distinctive two-by-two check pattern of pink and yellow, each layer having been spread with apricot jam and then the whole thing covered in a tin and tasty layer of delectable marzipan. Or can you???
Well, I am all about preserving traditions. I am a great traditionalist at heart. I am also a bit of an innovator. I also like to stretch the norm a bit and to explore the possibilities that traditions present to us . . .
Traditional dishes are lovely, and I adore them . . . but they can also be a wonderful canvas upon which to paint new traditions and create new ideas.
It has been claimed that the original battenberg cake was created in honour of the marriage in 1884 of Queen Victoria's granddaughter to Prince Louis of Battenberg, with the four distinct squares of cake representing the four Battenbery princes . . .
My version was created in honour of the fact that I love chocolate and Todd doesn't. This is a happy medium between the two, giving us each a little taste of what pleases most . . .
Imagine . . . a checkerboard cake, consisting of a deliciously moist yellow cake alternating with a moreishly scrummy hunk of mocha cake . . . cut into rectangles and glued together with oh-so-addictively indulgent chocolate hazelnut spread.
I like to unwrap it like a gift . . . first peeling off the marzipan and nom noming down on that . . . and then each little square gets my full attention . . . could anything on earth be any scrummier???
Well, probably yes . . . but for right now, at this moment in time . . . no.
This is the perfect teatime indulgence for today!
*Hazelnut Battenburg*
Makes one cake
Printable Recipe
Mocha and vanilla layers, sealed together with yummy hazelnut chocolate spread, and then wrapped in the traditional marzipan wrap! Scrummy!
6 ounces self raising flour
(1 1/4 cup)
1 tsp baking powder
6 ounces caster sugar
(scant 1 cup)
6 ounces soft margarine
(3/4 cup)
3 eggs, beaten
2 to 3 drops of vanilla extract
1 TBS cocoa powder, sifted
1 TBS strong black coffee
hazelnut chocolate spread, as needed
1 pound (16 ounces) prepared marzipan
Caster sugar to roll the marzipan out on
Preheat the oven to 190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5. Grease and base line two one pound loaf tins. Set aside.
Place the flour, baking powder, sugar, margarine and eggs into a bowl. Beat well together with an electric whisk. Divide the mixture in half. Stir the vanilla into half of the batter. Stir the cocoa powder and coffee into the other half. Put each mixture into one each of the prepared tins. Bake for about 20 minutes, until risen and a toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean. Remove from the oven and lift out of the pans to cool on a wire rack. Once cool, trim both cakes to make neat, matching rectangles. Cut each in half lengthwise. Sandwhich one of each flavour together with chocolate spread. Then join both pairs together alternately with more chocolate spread to make a single block. Dust the counter top with some caster sugar. Roll the marzipan out thinly on it into a rectangle large enough to wrap around the cake. Spread the cake on all four sides with more chocolate spread and then wrap the marzipan around, crimping the corners and trimming the ends. Dust with more caster sugar if needed. Cut into slices to serve.
I shall be going on holidays for 3 weeks at the end of this month. I will set up a few posts to play while I am away, but if you would be interested in doing a guest post on here during that time please e-mail me. I'd love to sponsor you and would invite you to contact me on MarieAliceJoan at aol dot com so we can see what can be arranged! Thanks!
Another cold, windy and wet day here today. What happened to June??? It seems to be passing us by and leaving in it's stead a taste of March or April!!! Brrr . . . when it is damp like this I really feel the chill and want something warming and comforting.
When I was a child tomato soup and grilled cheese did it every time. It was a special combination of flavours that made me feel very safe and toasty warm . . . and very much loved!
Of course, as an adult I still love the combination although I do up the amps on it a bit by cracking it up a knotch or two, or even three!
This tasty tomato soup has a bit of a kick from the red chilli . . . not a lot, but just a touch of heat. Not at all unpleasant . . . that is unless you lick your fingers after cutting the chillies . . . that has quite a burn, so wash your hands well after handling them, and do not . . . I repeat, DO NOT rub your eyes under any circumstances!!
Of course we like cheese on toast with this, but not just any old cheese on toast. I amp that up a knotch too with the addition of a layer tangy sweet chutney just beneath the cheese. Oh my, but this is some good!
I hope you'll give it a try and if you do, let me know how you like it!
*Tomato and Chilli Soup*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
A warming and delicious soup with more than a little kick of exitement!
1 (410g) tin of chopped Italian tomatoes in juice
(2 cups)
1 tomato tin of a well flavoured chicken stock
1 TBS olive oil
1 large onion, peeled and chopped
2 sticks of celery, chopped
1 small red chili, seeded and finely chopped
2 cloves of garlic, peeled and minced
1 tsp balsamic vinegar
a pinch of saffron
1 tsp sugar
sea salt and cracked black pepper to taste
50 ml (1/4 cup) single cream
additonal chicken stock as needed
Croutons to serve if desired
Heat the olive oil in a large saucepan. Add the onion, celery, chili and garlic. Cook and stir over medium low heat until softened. Add the tomatoes, water and chicken bouillon sachet. Bring to the boil. Stir in the vinegar, sugar, saffron and season with some salt and pepper. Reduce heat to low and simmer for 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Liquidize the soup in your blender in batches, or with a stick blender right in the pot. Return to the hob and whisk in the cream and additional stock as needed to give you the right consistency. Season and adjust seasoning as required. Serve in heated bowls with several croutons floating on top if desired.
*Top Knotch Cheese on Toast*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
Delicious cheese on toast with the added surprise of a tangy layer of chutney beneath the cheese. We like Mango, but you can use any type of chutney you favour!
4 thick slices of a rustic white bread
4 TBS chutney
8 thick slices of strong cheddar cheese
Heat the gril to high. Pop the pieces of bread on a grill pan and toaste beneath the grill, first on one side and then the other until light brown. Spread 1 TBS of chutney over one side of each piece of toasted bread and then cover the chutney with the sliced cheese, using two slices for each piece. Pop back under the grill and grill for several minutes until the cheese is melted and bubbly and beginning to brown slightly in spots. Remove from the grill and serve hot.
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