It’s been a long time since I had battenburg cake. I have this vague memory of an over sweet
cake and dry marzipan – something old ladies like and I’m sure I can hear
someone saying “oooh nice slice of battenburg dear?” at a village fair or
something similar. It certainly doesn’t
bring back fond memories I’ve got to be honest. It also looks a bit complicated and I’m not sure that I’m up for
complicated today. Feeling slightly
grouchy and not really in the mood for baking – but its Sunday and I’ve got
Charlotte primed and ready to go. There
is a lovely picture in the book, so here goes nothing.
We don’t have a Battenburg tin– I know what you’re thinking,
we don’t actually have very many tins but a Battenburg tin is quite special and
has movable sides so that you can make perfectly sized cake. Anyway, needless to say, we don’t have one
of those but with a little bit of amateur origami we should be able to use our
7inch square tin. It actually took me 3
attempts and 20 min to perfect a paper divided tin but I was quite pleased with
the result. In the meantime, Charlotte
was busy mixing up the sponge
mixture. “Mummy what’s ground
rice?!” What? What!! Oh no! We don’t have any of that – right a quick look on
the Internet to find out what else we can use.
Apparently you can substitute either Semolina or ground almonds for
ground rice, but if you choose ground almonds then you cake can be a little
dry. Luckily enough, I do have some
semolina so we used that instead.
Half the mix is spooned into one side of the tin, then you
add the red food colouring to the remaining mixture and put that into the other
side. Now, there didn’t seem to be very
much mixture on either side but we decided that it would be okay and anyway, we
don’t want it to raise too high as we are going to be building it up
afterwards. 35 to 40 mins it said to
cook for, but as usual we were ready early.
Marzipan or Almond Paste?
When the cake is cooled, you have to trim it and make a
checkerboard pattern sticking it together with melted apricot jam. You then wrap it in Marzipan or Almond Paste
and Bobs your Uncle, you’re done…mmm not that easy. If anyone is making this recipe my only piece of advice is – buy
Marzipan. We didn’t but luckily,
Mary gives an easy recipe for easy Almond paste in the back of the Baking Bible
so we decided that was what we were going to make.
Really easy – it’s just ground almonds, caster sugar,
powdered sugar, eggs and almond essence.
You mix it together, give it a little kneed and than wrap it in cling
film and bob it into the fridge until you need it. Easy Right?
Ours didn’t look quite right – it was very sticky but we
guessed that after some chilling in the fridge it would be fine so we left it
in the fridge for an hour while the cake baked and cooled. It still didn’t seem firm enough but we
decided to give it a try.
I
rolled the paste out and we placed the jam-coated cake
onto it. Unfortunately, the paste
wouldn’t roll around the cake – instead it stuck fast to the counter top and
refused to budge. After 10 mins of
trying to lift the paste and a lot of growling and grumbling and a couple of
choice expressions, we decided that this paste wasn’t going anywhere except down
the waste disposal. Time to start
again, but with a little less liquid in the paste. So that’s what we did – however, whilst lifting the cake off the
original paste, it broke – oh flipping flip! The second attempt was much better and not as sticky, but to be
safe I rolled it out between sheets of baking paper. The cake was brushed with jam again, sticking the broken bits
together, and placed on the paste. Using
the paper, I rolled it over and covered the cake in the paste. Yeah! It worked!! Well nearly – I didn’t
actually roll it out enough and underneath the marzipan doesn’t quite join, but
you can't see that can you?

Taste? Was quite nice
with a cup of tea watching the Diamond Jubilee Thames Pageant.
Roll on next week, its Lemon Yoghurt Cake
– must remember
to buy Greek Yoghurt!
10 out of 10 for perseverance you two!!! Turned out pretty impressive in the end though. I have the same memories of Battenburg cake myself. Wasn't one of my favourites either. Sounds very complicated and I think I'll leave it to the professionals! I had no idea there would even be a cake tin especially for this. Raising my cuppa over her to all the Jubilee fun going on in the UK! Big hugs. xx
ReplyDeleteIt looks great! I have never tasted this cake, maybe I should give it a go..
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ReplyDeleteHi I want to make a Battenberg but I do not have ground rice but I do have semolina. When you used the semolina did it work?
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