Christmas Cake – Part I

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Interestingly Christmas round these parts (or, as I should euphemistically say, ‘the holidays’) seems to be rather Germanic in flavour with plenty of gingerbread and not a sign of traditional English Christmas cakes, Christmas puddings or mince pies.

We missed our Christmas cake last year and so this year have decided to make one courtesy of all the glace’ fruit we shipped back from Vancouver recently (how funny that one of the British delicacies we miss most is glace’ fruit).

For those of you who’ve never seen one before, a traditional British Christmas cake is a dark and dense rich fruit cake, made some considerable time before the big day, left to ‘mature’ through the constant application of brandy and then coated with thick layers of almond paste and royal icing.  It is a long and laborious process.  We started ours yesterday, though in an ideal world you should start making your cakes and puddings about two months before the big day.

My ma-in-law has many splendid qualities, not least of which is her quite ridiculously good Christmas cake. A couple of years ago she gave me the recipe, though this is the first time I’ve actually made it.  I was expecting some ancient family recipe carefully handed down through the generations, but instead discovered that it was a Waitrose recipe of very recent vintage. No matter, it’s absolutely delicious and the addition of less traditional ingredients such as dried apricots and glace’ pineapple means it isn’t as dark and dense as traditional cakes which are essentially a solid wall of raisins.

The first step, which the Minx and I completed yesterday, involved chopping and stirring an immense quantity of mixed dried fruits and nuts and then steeping them for 24 hours in orange juice and brandy.

An Atelier LZC tea towel covers up our nasty green countertop.

Christmas-cake (2)

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Comments

  1. says

    Ooh, Christmas cake. I make one (along with Christmas pud and mince pies) for our family every year, though usually end up eating most of it myself (not that that’s a hardship). I don’t do fancy icing, just spread it in little peaks so it’s snowlike, and then I add decorations we’ve had for donkey’s years. Haven’t started on this year’s yet as we’re still without a kitchen.

  2. IHF says

    Tangent: Christmas Cake in Japan is a regular sugary bakery cake with “christmas” decorations — tons of santas, etc. It is also a rude term for an unmarried woman (because no one wants a Christmas Cake after the 25th). An earnest young man explained how it’s much better now, as you would call a woman a “New Year’s Cake” instead of a Christmas Cake, and this was *much* better.
    Thanks for the recipe, this sounds like what we would call a ‘Christmas Fruit Cake’, density of a brick and full of candied fruit, yeah? And you can do even more euphamistic than ‘the holidays’; ‘season’s greetings’ anyone? ;P

  3. says

    Still trying to work out where to get the necessary kitsch decorations. Due to lots of moving about over the years I’ve no idea where our family decorations have gone, and they’re not on sale here. The Husband insists that whatever happens the snowscene on the cake needs to have an iced ‘pond’ made of cardboard and tin foil….
    IHF, yes that Christmas Fruit Cake sounds exactly right. You’ll have to come over in January and have some.

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