Happy Easter everyone! Hope you've all had a fab one. I've been down in London so as you can imagine I've been indulging a fair bit of alcohol and not so much chocolate, naughty I know. Seen as how I wasn't in work on Friday I decided to get up early and bake up a mini-feast carrot cake being at the top of the list. I've made carrot cake in the past, in fact the first time I made it I used a Nigella recipe and it came out really nice. Thinking back this carrot cake was my first bake! How could I forget? It was this very cake that catapulted me into the baking-mad Beanie I am today.
This recipe is perfect, what I love about it is how fruity and moist it is. I love that there is so much you can do with it. For example, adding extra ingredients such as currants and raisins, walnuts, mixed peel or orange zest.
I have made a traybake and layer cake version of this recipe and both turned out perfect I am so happy with the results, I was half expecting to pull it out of the oven and end up launching it down the end of the garden like I have done in the past. But not this time.
The base of this recipe is from Good Food and as always I have added my own little quirks. This recipe is not only great for holidays such as Easter I find it's perfect after dinner and also for afternoon tea, this recipe goes well with Rooibos Gingerbread Tea. I used my offcuts to make little carrot cake hearts with a medium heart-shaped cutter.
This recipe below will make an 18cm traybake, I have also made a layer cake using sandwich tins for this recipe I doubled up on the quantities and shared equally amongst the tins.
I have added two separate decorating methods one for a traybake and the other for a layer cake. For a simple yet effective form of decoration you can dust either versions of this cake with icing sugar and it'll look just as yummy!
This recipe below will make an 18cm traybake, I have also made a layer cake using sandwich tins for this recipe I doubled up on the quantities and shared equally amongst the tins.
I have added two separate decorating methods one for a traybake and the other for a layer cake. For a simple yet effective form of decoration you can dust either versions of this cake with icing sugar and it'll look just as yummy!
Enjoy x
Ingredients
175g light muscovado sugar
175ml sunflower oil
3 large eggs
140g grated carrots
Grated zest of 1 large orange
Grated Zest of 1/2 lemon
175g self-raising flour
1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
1 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp ginger
Freshly ground nutmeg
50g Raisins (optional)
50g Mixed Peel (optional)
For the buttercream (layer cake)
275g Icing Sugar
150g butter
A little milk
1 tsp Orange Blossom flavouring
For the Icing (traybake)
175g icing sugar
2 tbsp lemon juice
Method
- Preheat
the oven to 180C/Gas 4/fan 160C. Oil and line the base and sides of an
18cm square cake tin with baking parchment. In order for the parchment to fit perfectly I drew around the base of my tin and then cut out a little larger in order to make sure it fit inside my tin properly. I then snipped down each corner and stuck the over lapping flaps to the sides of my tin using the oil.
- Add the sugar into a large mixing bowl, pour in the oil and add
the eggs. Lightly mix with a wooden spoon then stir in the grated carrots, add lemon, orange zest and raisins/mixed peel if using.
- Mix the flour, bicarbonate of
soda and spices, then sift into the
bowl. Lightly mix all the
ingredients. When everything
is evenly amalgamated stop
mixing.
The mixture will be fairly soft
and almost runny.
- Pour the mixture into the
prepared tin/s and bake for 40-
45 minutes, until it feels firm
and springy when you press it in
the centre. Cool in the tin for 5
minutes, then turn it out, peel
off the paper and cool on a wire
rack. (You can freeze the cake at
this point.)
Buttercream for layer cake
- Add the butter and beat until smooth.
- Add in icing sugar a little at a time, until the mixture becomes a little stiff (if you need more icing sugar to get a nice stiff mixture keep adding.) the mixture should not be sloppy or runny.
- Pour in flavouring and mix together.
- Place buttercream in the fridge for around an hour (if you are in a rush you can skip this step and move straight on to the next step.)
- Add milk a little at a time until the mixture is no longer stiff and resembles smooth ice cream. Remember not to add too much milk this will cause you buttercream to become sloppy and wet.
- Spoon the buttercream onto your cooled cakes and smooth out with a palette knife. Repeat until all cake layers are added. Then decorate with topping of your choice.
Icing for traybake
- Beat together the frosting
ingredients in a small bowl until
smooth – you want the icing
about as runny as single cream.
Set the cake on a serving plate
and boldly drizzle the icing back
and forth in diagonal lines over
the top, letting it drip down the sides.
- Let icing set and cut into sqaures using a sharp knife.
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