A few months ago I had a craving for carrot cake and wanted to celebrate having survived my first block of beginner adult ballet classes. Instead of defaulting to my usual favourite recipes I flicked through my baking books to find something slightly different.
Perhaps a controversial statement but I enjoy dried fruit in carrot cakes so this fruitier carrot cake recipe from the Clandestine Cake Club Cookbook appealed to me. I've always meant to try adding raisins or sultanas to my carrot cakes yet somehow this is the first time I've done it.
Perhaps a controversial statement but I enjoy dried fruit in carrot cakes so this fruitier carrot cake recipe from the Clandestine Cake Club Cookbook appealed to me. I've always meant to try adding raisins or sultanas to my carrot cakes yet somehow this is the first time I've done it.
The resulting cake was well spiced, dark and had satisfying bursts of orange juice-soaked raisins and chunks of walnuts. My only gripe was that it took an eternity to bake in the oven. There's no way the recommended temperature and timing in the book are correct. My gut instinct thought the temperature looked too high and it was right. When I opened the oven door after the recommended 45 minutes the top was borderline burnt yet the inside of the cake was still raw so I turned the temperature down and laid a folded sheet of greaseproof paper on top of the tin to stop the top from burning further.
As I made this a couple of months ago I can't remember how much longer it took, I'm guessing an extra 20-30 minutes. I know that when I baked this cake again a week later I baked it at a lower temperature for at least an hour and it turned out much better.
I also found the cream cheese icing from the recipe slightly too sweet so I added more cream cheese. There's no point in cream cheese icing if you can't taste the tang of the cream cheese! It's almost the best thing about carrot cake, surely?
I think this recipe has the potential to become a favourite with a little bit of tinkering. I just need to write down my changes next time since I have the memory of a goldfish. If/when I do make this cake again I'll update my recipe at the bottom of the post.
I think this recipe has the potential to become a favourite with a little bit of tinkering. I just need to write down my changes next time since I have the memory of a goldfish. If/when I do make this cake again I'll update my recipe at the bottom of the post.
As mentioned at the beginning of the post, I baked this cake to celebrate having survived my first block of adult ballet classes without my dodgy back or leg going into sciatic spasm. Yay! Progress, people! I've now finished my second block of classes and making small steps of progress. I can see a difference in my flexibility and I'm feeling slightly less uncoordinated. My core strength is still pants though and I really struggle with stability in pirouttes and turns. I just wobble and fall to the side EVERY DAMN TIME.
I'm also the proud owner of a pair of ballet slippers. My first pair! I was so happy when I put these on my feet for the first time. Childhood dream fulfilled! Darcey Bussel better watch her back. HA!
I'm also the proud owner of a pair of ballet slippers. My first pair! I was so happy when I put these on my feet for the first time. Childhood dream fulfilled! Darcey Bussel better watch her back. HA!
Carrot cake
Recipe adapted from Clandestine Cake Club Cookbook (Published 2013)
cake:
100g raisins (or sultanas, whichever you prefer)
juice from 1 large orange
175g self-raising flour
1 tsp mixed spice
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
1/2 tsp salt
175g soft light brown sugar
2 large eggs
125ml sunflower oil
175g grated carrots
50g chopped walnuts
cream cheese icing:
100g cream cheese (possibly more, sorry I can't remember. Add to taste!)
50g softened butter
225g icing sugar
1 tsp vanilla extract
First, soak the sultanas in orange juice in a bowl. You can either leave them to soak overnight, or if like me you forget to do that, set the sultanas and juice in a pan and place on the hob over a low heat for about 5 minutes or until the sultanas have soaked up some of the juice.
Grease and line a 20cm round, springform cake tin and preheat the oven. The original recipe says to preheat to 200C/Fan 180C/Gas 6 however I think this is way too high. I would recommend 180C/Fan 160C/Gas 4. I think that's what I went with the second time I made this cake and it turned out better.
Sift together the flour, spices, bicarbonate of soda and salt into a large bowl. Add the sugar and mix. Whisk the eggs in a separate small bowl and add them to the sunflower oil. Pour the egg mix into the flour mixture and mix well. Add the grated carrot, chopped walnuts and soaked sultanas and fold the mixture until fully combined.
Pour the cake batter into the tin and spread it out evenly. The original recipe says to bake for 40-45 minutes but as mentioned earlier I found that to be way off the mark. Baked at the lower temperature I recommend, it should take about an hour. Keep an eye on it after about 50 minutes and if it looks cooked on top but is still raw in the middle when you stick a knife/skewer into the centre of the cake, then put a greaseproof paper hat on it until the cake is fully baked. Once baked, turn the cake out onto a wire rack to cool.
For the icing, beat together the icing sugar and butter then add the cream cheese and vanilla extract. Whisk for a few minutes until very smooth. Spread the icing on top of the cake once the cake is completely cool and decorate with more chopped walnuts and a dusting of cinnamon.