How cute is this tin!? This cake was inspired by a random bottle of Christmas ale that I found in the cupboard. I feared that it would never get drunk, so I emancipated it and turned it into something wonderful. I used a cocktail of festive spices to liven it up a bit, which made the house smell utterly heavenly!
Ingredients
- 100g sultanas
- 1 spicy tea bag - I used Betty's Christmas tea, but a nice Assam or Chai would work.
- 110g unsalted butter
- 50g of vegetable fat
- 325g golden caster sugar
- 3 medium eggs
- 225g plain flour
- 1/4 tsp baking powder
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp lemon extract
- 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 3 tsp ground ginger
- 2 tsp cinnamon
- 1 tsp mixed spice
- Pinch of ground nutmeg
- 125ml Christmas ale (any beer really - although I must insist you stay from cacky yellow fizzy stuff)
Method
- Grease and flour a large loaf pan (minimum 2lb) - I used the Nordic Ware Gingerbread Loaf tin. Only fill 3/4 full.
- Brew a strong cup of tea and discard the bag - do not add milk.
- Tip in the sultanas, cover with cling film and leave to soak. Leave these as long as you can.
- Soften the butter and vegetable fat and then cream in the sugar in stages.
- Add the eggs one at a time on a slow setting.
- Add all the remaining dry ingredients to a large bowl.
- Add the extracts to the beer.
- Sift in 1/3 of the dry ingredients, followed by 1/2 of the liquid. Repeat until all the flour and liquid is used up. Fold it in gently...
- Note: This will look a right curdled mess, however a bit of festive magic will rectify this...
- Give the whole thing a quick whizz for about 10 seconds or until well combined. It will no longer look terrible.
- Drain the sultanas and pat dry with some kitchen roll. Dust with a little flour.
- Spoon 3/4 of the mix into the prepared tin then layer on the sultanas.
- Spoon over the rest of the mix - this will stop all the sultanas sinking to the bottom!
- Bake at gas 3/160 C for about an hour and fifteen minutes. Just turn it after about an hour.
- It should be shrinking from the sides and a skewer should come out clean.
- Let it cool in the tin for ten minutes then turn it out.
- Allow to cool fully before decorating. I just used piped royal icing with a few sprinkles to accentuate the pretty design.
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