The Brits are passionate about their Christmas cake, a
almost-white, almost-fruitcake concoction heavily frosted with thick
icing. Miss Read, one of my favorite 'cosy' authors, is forever having
her heroines add frosting holly and robins on top! (Maybe yours truly,
being a Coloradoan, should add frosting magpies, instead.)
Serve
your cake at Christmas tea, along with a good English Breakfast or
Prince of Wales cuppa, and you'll be in with the best of 'em. (Maybe
even listen to the Queen's annual address, while you sip and crunch.)
This version is adapted from Tasha Tudor's TAKE JOY,
a wonderful compendium of recipes, stories and crafts that celebrate
the holiday season. Tasha had a thing about candied fruits, and LOVED
her butter intake. I'm not fond of greasy pools spreading over the
baking pan, so adapted that. Add a cup of candied fruit to this recipe
if you're a fruitcake-lover.
CHRISTMAS CAKE (Colorado style)
1 1/2 cups butter
1 1/2 cups sugar
8 eggs (no, I'm not making this up)
1 cup chopped almonds, pecans, filberts (your choice)
4 tablespoons orange juice (I also grate a bit of the orange rind in)
2 teaspoons vanilla
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
5 cups flour (make this 5 heaping cups if you're cooking at high altitude)
1 cup 'craisins' (dried cranberries -- or substitute raisins, if you like them)
1 cup halved maraschino cherries
Cream
butter and sugar together. Add the eggs, one at a time, mixing as you
go, then the other ingredients -- stop before the flour. (It's easiest
with two people, but one can manage just fine.) Stir in the flour, a cup
at a time, then add craisins and cherries. Mixture will be very thick.
Line your pans with foil -- I can generally get a 10" springform
pan, plus 3 or 4 little patty pans out of this, but you might prefer two
round cake pans or an angel cake-type pan (the kind with a funnel in
the middle). You'll get approx. two round cake pans, or a round (or
loaf) pan plus the angel food cake pan. Now 'glop' the mixture into the
pans, smoothing on top when they're done. (About half-full)
Bake
at 275 degrees for approx. an hour -- my 10" springform took 1 1/2 hours
because it was so thick. Cake is done when it's firm in the
middle...test by gently pushing against it, or using a toothpick poked
in. (Clean means it's done.) Let cool in pans, then fold foil over and
store in a cold place for at least a week. (Tasha does it for months,
but I have had these spoil when held that long.) Frost with
confectioner's sugar, or serve as-is with tea. (The Brits like to add a
layer of almond paste on top, then frost it.)
Makes one good-sized cake for you and your dinner companions -- plus a cake for a friend. Intensely rich and memorable.
One
sad year, I made a double batch of Christmas cake. It turned out
beautifully. I put all of the cakes in a heavy box 'safely' on the back
deck. They were -- for about a week. The night before Christmas, they
all disappeared...with only a few delectable crumbs left. So if you're
stashing your cake, make sure it's protected!