Friday, March 4, 2011

Something for the weekend

Banana Loaf Cake


From my cookery blog, The Queen of Puddings

A homely cake which fills the house with a wonderful cakey fug which seductively lets everyone who enters know that you are truly a domestic goddess. A crisp crust and moist springy sponge. Kids love it. And the adults do too! It's perfect for using up those deep brown spotted bananas that populate the fruit bowl.



We eat it plain. You can butter it. Or ice it, with a cream cheese icing, a la carrot cake, or a lemony butter or even lemony water icing. All are divine. Or how about a chocolate butter icing for a kiddies birthday cake (just bake it in a round tin).

It is divine still warm from the oven, but keeps well a few days too as the banana adds moisture. Ring the changes and cater to your individual crowd's needs: add 100 g sultanas (soaked in rum or orange juice to make them extra plump), 100g chocolate chips or chunks, and/ or 60 g chopped pecans or walnuts.

With thanks to Nigella Lawson's How to be a Domestic Goddess and Rose Levy Beranbaum's  The Cake Bible for their combined techniques!


175g plain flour
2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp baking soda- sieved to remove lumps
150 g sugar
125g butter
2 large eggs
3 medium, very ripe bananas (about 300 g peeled)
1 tsp vanilla extract
Finely grated zest of 1 lemon - optional

Pre-heat oven to 170 C
Put the dry ingredients in a bowl and mix quickly to combine.
Melt the butter over a gentle heat.
I use a stick blender to whizz up the banana and egg and vanilla into a puree. You could also mash it by hand or use a food processor.
Add the banana puree mix, melted butter and lemon zest (if using) and mix up.

Pour into a standard loaf tin (23 cm x 13cm x 7 cm) or a 8 inch round tin, lined with baking paper.

Cook for about 35-40 mins for a loaf cake, (25-30 min for a round cake). Check after 20 mins, if it is browning too quickly cover with foil. Cooked when a skewer comes out clean.

http://thequeenofpuddings.blogspot.com/2011/03/banana-loaf-cake.html

2 comments:

  1. I loved your piece in ROTH.

    I have often thought of my daughter's tantrums as weather systems. They are as spectacular and sometimes frightening as an electrical storm.

    I loved what you wrote about the candle "reshuffling" the emotion and helping her refocus.

    Thank you,
    Rachel

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks Rachel.

    The link is here if other readers want to check it out.
    http://rhythmofthehome.com/spring-2011/happy-candles-for-tantrums/

    ReplyDelete

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