Totally Tropical Cake

I'm not big into drinking fizzy soda's. I still think of them as a treat, a throwback to my childhood days when fizzy drinks were always considered a treat reserved for birthdays and Christmas. But the one fizzy drink that I do hanker after, even as a should-know-better adult, is Lilt.

If you've been keeping a beady eye on the latest fresh food trends, you may notice that fresh turmeric root is starting to become more available.  Most of us have grown up with turmeric as that deep yellow powder with an earthy aroma and an ability to stain anything it touches, forever!  We all know that there is no substitute for fresh spices, and fresh root turmeric is no different!

Does anyone actually know what the name of the song is that tells us she likes Piña Colada and getting caught in the rain?  Much less who sings it?  But we all know it, well the chorus anyway, majestically sung out when someone orders it at a bar.

Totally Tropical Cake

I’m not big into drinking fizzy soda’s. I still think of them as a treat, a throwback to my childhood days when fizzy drinks were always considered a treat reserved for birthdays and Christmas. But the one fizzy drink that I do hanker after, even as a should-know-better adult, is Lilt.

With it’s “Totally Tropical Taste” trio of flavours: lemon, lime and pineapple, I just felt it offered a little more sophistication than it’s rivals. Plus the jingle was really, really catchy and impossible to repeat without a very, very bad Jamaican accent. This cake, then, is a celebration of a taste of childhood that I’ll never probably grow out of – and I really don’t mind that at all!

Totally Tropical Cake
Totally Tropical Cake

I have “adulted” up this cake a bit though. This is my well-worn euphemism for “I have added alcohol to this recipe” – you’ll find it cropping up quite a lot in my recipe writing, especially in desserts. If you have little darlings of your own, simply leave it out. Alternatively, make one exactly like this for you and give the kids fresh pineapple and ice cream instead. Sorted!

This is a flourless cake but isn’t gluten free as it contains semolina. If you wanted to make it completely gluten free, you could use entirely ground almonds or substitute the semolina for rice flour. Although rice flour is drying, you will be pouring a small vat of syrup over the whole cake which should amply make up for it.

A note on Pineapples: at the time of writing, Pineapples are in season in the Caribbean, so in autumn this is where we get our juicy fruits from. However, the destruction in The Bahama’s following Hurricane Dorian will not doubt have an impact on supply, and anyway, given that so many have lost so much, I would advocate keeping as much food grown in the Caribbean for the Caribbean people so they can actually feed themselves. So, on that sobering note, if you have a tin of Pineapple lingering in the back of your cupboard, use that instead of buying a fresh one. Keep the juice when you drain them, and make a cocktail out of it using white rum, lemon, lime and soda water and raise a toast to those who are a lot less comfortable than we are right now.

Totally Tropical Cake

Ingredients (serves 8-10 depending on slice size, and I’m not judging!):

For the cake batter

  • 225 g butter (unsalted)
  • 225 g golden caster sugar
  • 6 free range eggs, separated (keep both the yolks and whites)
  • 115 g semolina (or gf substitute)
  • 100 g ground almonds
  • 75 g desiccated coconut (plus a little extra for garnish)
  • Zest of 2 limes and 2 lemon
  • 150 ml Pineapple Juice (ideally not from concentrate)
  • 1 whole fresh Pineapple, or equivalent tinned product (chunks)

For the syrup

  • Juice of 1 lime and 1 lemon
  • Dash pineapple juice
  • 50 ml white Caribbean Rum
  • 125 g white sugar

Method:

  • Butter a 23cm/9-inch round spring-form cake tin.
  • Heat the oven to 180 degrees fan.
  • Prepare the pineapple and cut into equally sized chunks.
  • Lightly caramelise in a dry frying pan, and then (if feeling confident, and safe!), flambe in a good glug of White Rum. Cook off the alcohol and take off the heat. Add to the buttered cake pan and distribute evenly.
  • Put the butter and caster sugar into a large bowl and beat together until light and fluffy. Add the egg yolks one at a time, beat well to combine.
  • Add in the semolina, ground almonds, lemon and lime zest, and pineapple juice and mix well together.
  • Whisk the egg whites until stiff. Take one spoon of egg white and beat it into the cake batter. Then add the remaining egg whites, folding in gently to combine, keeping the air in.
  • Bake in the oven for about 1 hour. Check with a skewer to see if cooked – it may need longer or less depending on the mix of flours used in the cake batter. If the skewer comes out clean it’s cooked.
  • Allow to cool slightly in the cake tin while you prepare your syrup.
  • Put the sugar and water into a saucepan, heat gently until sugar has dissolved.
  • Add the lemon, lime and pineapple juice and bring to the boil for a few minutes or until the mixture begins to thicken. Add the rum, stir, turn off the heat and set aside.
  • Release the cake from the cake tin and place on a plate. Using the skewer, prick the whole cake over to allow for the syrup to seep down into the cake.
  • Gently spoon over the syrup. Take your time doing this, don’t rush and try to get as much of the syrup on and into the cake as possible. If you have some left, decant into a clean jar and cool. This will make a lovely syrup to pour over ice cream or into a cocktail at a later time!
  • Finally, toast a few specks of desiccated coconut in a dry pan and then scatter all across the top of the drenched cake.
  • Serve a slice of the cake with either Whipped Coconut Cream (find the recipe here), thick pouring or whipped cream, or just naked!
Totally Tropical Cake

And…enjoy!

Hake, Turmeric and Coconut Curry

If you’ve been keeping a beady eye on the latest fresh food trends, you may notice that fresh turmeric root is starting to become more available.  Most of us have grown up with turmeric as that deep yellow powder with an earthy aroma and an ability to stain anything it touches, forever!  We all know that there is no substitute for fresh spices, and fresh root turmeric is no different!

It looks like a scrawnier version of ginger, with a darker skin and a bright orange interior.  It smells amazing, and has even more power to stain your clothes, so take precautions and wear an apron!

This curry then make the most of my new found access to this wonderful fresh root and matches it with a beautifully fresh fillet of locally caught and landed West Cork Hake.  Although this is a well-flavoured curry, it’s mild and aromatic not masking the flavour of the fish.  Poaching the hake in the curry sauce also means that the flavour gently infuses and protects ensuring your fish is perfectly soft and flakey!

Ingredients (makes enough curry sauce for 4 portions):

  • 1 piece of Hake per person (apx 250g per portion) boned and skin off
  • 1 tsp Fenugreek seeds
  • 1 tsp dry curry leaves
  • ½ tsp black peppercorns
  • 1 ½ tsp coriander seed
  • 6 banana shallots, finely chopped
  • 1 red chilli
  • 5cm piece of fresh turmeric
  • 1 clove of garlic
  • Thumb-sized piece of ginger
  • 4 fresh tomatoes
  • 1 tbsp of coconut oil
  • 1 x 400g can of coconut milk (full fat)
  • 1 tbsp of ground almonds
  • Handful of fresh coriander, finely chopped
  • Sea salt
  • Drizzle of chilli oil
  • Toasted flaked almonds
  • Jasmine rice to serve

Method:

  • Cook the jasmine rice: 1 cup of rice per person to 1 ½ cups of water.  Add salt, cover and cook until all the water is absorbed and the rice is soft.  Add more water if needs be.
  • While the rice is cooking, take the fenugreek and coriander seeds and black peppercorns and toast gently in a dry pan for just enough time for the oils to activate, but be careful not to burn them.  Transfer to a pestle and mortar and crush as fine as you can.
  • In a small processor, place the shallots and blitz to a fine chop.  Empty out into a bowl and set aside.
  • Place the red chilli, garlic, ginger, turmeric and fresh tomatoes in the processor and finely chopped together.
  • In a large heavy bottom pot on a low – medium heat, add the coconut oil and melt.
  • Add the chopped shallots and cook slowly until softened.
  • Add in the ground spices and crush in the curry leaves and combine with the shallots.  Cook for a couple of minutes, careful not to burn.
  • Add in the tomato mix and stir to combine.  Cook out for another couple of minutes.
  • Add the coconut milk and ground almonds.  Taste for seasoning, add salt to taste. Stir to combine then add the hake.
  • Turn up the heat slightly, cover and leave the fish to poach gently in the curry sauce.  This will take apx 10 – 15 mins depending on the thickness of the fish.
  • When the rice is cooked, mix through most of the fresh chopped coriander.
  • Plate up the rice, a portion of the hake and a generous amount of the curry sauce.
  • Garnish with the toasted flaked almonds, a light drizzle of chilli oil and a final scattering of fresh coriander.

And….Enjoy!

Piña Colada Dessert

Does anyone actually know what the name of the song is that tells us she likes Piña Colada and getting caught in the rain?  Much less who sings it?  But we all know it, well the chorus anyway, majestically sung out when someone orders it at a bar.

I actually am not all the gone on the cocktail itself, probably down to never meeting an actual decent cocktail maker as yet (although the mixologist at The Mayer of Scardey Cat Town – a speakeasy in London was pretty much perfect!) but I do love the flavours.  Pineapple, coconut, lime and rum…a match made in heaven! Continue reading “Piña Colada Dessert”

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