Thursday, 28 August 2008

Putting a Smile on a Little Girl's Face


I am no great cake decorator. I do not have the creativity or the patience so necessary for that particular art and an art it surely is. My Granddaughter starts school next week and she had her last day at nursery. A party was to be held and a cake was required and Granny was to make the cake. The instructions were quite specific from this four year old. It must be chocolate and it must have lots of things on. There was no way I could refuse that anxious little face looking hopefully at me. As if I would dare. I mean her street cred. at nursery was on the line here and these things are very important when you are four. Now what to make. I had to do a little thinking. I was not going to be popular with the nursery teachers who inevitably have the mess to clear up. A thick cake was out of the question and I didn't want a filling either. I turned to Nigella Lawson's 'Feast' If Nigella only knew it, she has pulled me out of many holes in the past and this was no exception.
I turned to the Hallowe'en section and used the recipe for the ghoul cake (without the black colouring) The topping is lovely and so easy. Please remember to use Nigella's tip about placing the cake on top of torn greaseproof paper when pouring the topping over the cake. You will be glad you did. I would use this topping again. It tastes wonderfully fudgy and so easy if you don't mind the mess. My mission accomplished , I embellished the cake with some store bought sugar decorations and presented it to my granddaughter. I may not be the best cake decorator in the world but the look on that child's face made my heart soar far more than any award. Some things just make life so worth while.

The Recipe courtesy of Nigella

FOR THE CAKE

250ml milk
1 teaspoon white wine vinegar
225g plain flour
50g cocoa
2 teaspoons baking powder
one-half teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
200g caster sugar
110g butter or soft margarine
2 eggs
1 teaspoon real vanilla extract


FOR THE ICING

300g icing sugar
60g butter
2 teaspoons cocoa
2 tablespoons golden syrup
60ml milk
1 teaspoon real vanilla extract
one-half teaspoon black colour paste
black sugar sprinkles
Hallowe'en-themed jelly lollies, at least 1 per child

Preheat the oven to gas mark 3/170C. Grease and line a 23cm springform tin. Mix the milk and vinegar together and set aside.
Make sure all your remaining ingredients are at room temperature if you can, but since no one's going to be overly worried about the cake, you shouldn't be either. If the ingredients are cold, the worst that can happen is that the cake will be heavy. But you do need soft butter (or the cake won't mix), so substitute marge if that's not a goer. Put everything for the cake, except the vinegary milk, into a food processor and blitz to mix. Remove the lid, scrape down with a rubber spatula and then put the lid back on and with the motor running, add the vinegary milk.
Scrape, spoon or pour the brown batter into the tin and spread to fill it evenly, baking it for 40-45 minutes until it is well risen and springy to the touch.
Remove the cooked cake, in its tin, to a rack and leave to cool for about ten minutes, then spring open the tin and let the cake get completely cold.
To make the icing, first sieve the icing sugar. Boring, but it's got to be done. Melt the butter in a saucepan and when it's bubbling add the cocoa. Let it dissolve into the butter, stirring with a little hand whisk, then add the syrup, milk, vanilla and colour paste. Stir or whisk well and let it bubble for a few minutes and then take the pan off the heat and whisk in the icing sugar. Put the pan back on the heat and whisk again to help the sugar dissolve and the colouring disperse, then take it off the heat to let it thicken to the right consistency – thick enough to coat, but thin enough to trickle down to cover the sides too – as it cools slightly (but only slightly: it thickens fast).
Put the cake on torn-off pieces of parchment paper to form an outline of a square to catch the excess icing. Place the cake just on top of the torn pieces of parchment paper so you can pull them away once the icing has stopped dripping. Hold the pan of icing over the centre of the cake and pour over it so that the top is covered and the icing has dripped over and down the sides. You will not believe the incredible blackness of this. You'd have to pay me to eat it (good though it tastes) but my children, and all the children I've made it for, can't get enough. You can imagine their mouths look like afterwards.
Working quickly, throw them over the black sugar sprinkles to cover the top and sides of the cake before the icing dries.
Trim the lolly sticks, so that you have a stem of about 3-4cm to stick into the cake, and then plunge the sticks of the foreshortened lollies into the cake so that the ghoulish faces leer out from their black-frosted graveyard.
To be honest, this cake serves as many as you can stick lollies in for, if that makes sense. You could certainly find room for 12.

Notes
I did not use black sprinkles lollies or black colouring.

It is quite a thin cake and I made a mental note that two sandwiched together would make a rather nice dessert cake for entertaining perhaps spiked with a little liqueur and fruit......just a thought.





19 comments:

Lucy..♥ said...

What a darling cake, specially for a special little girl... Kudos!

Rosa's Yummy Yums said...

That's so nice of you! Your cake looks fabulous!

Cheers,

Rosa

violets said...

Granny

Your cake is fabulous I love it, and that is also a great recipe.


Vi xx

Anonymous said...

Granny it's fab. You are such a great granny, she will never ever forget the things you do for her, they will be imprinted in her memories forever.

Tríona

Gloria Baker said...

mmmmmmmm! Granny you really know as to make good Cakes for kids!!! Is absolutely lovely, when I began to make Cakes one of my difficults think how garnish!! this is soooo cute and the kids love special cake for them!!! xxxGloria

La Bella Cooks said...

You did a beautiful job!! I am finishing up my school, can you make me a cake? I love chocolate too ;)

jaygirl said...

Well, are you now Super Gran in all these little four year olds eyes?

Ragdoll said...

What a wonderful looking cake, no wonder your grand daughter was thrilled. Well done!

Thinking About Food said...

That looks like a fab cake Granny, the icing does sound (and look) goooood!

Anonymous said...

What a gorgeous cake Brenda, I bet Rhyley was so pleased.
xxx

Rhyleysgranny said...

Ah thank you all. My little girl was so pleased bless her.
It is a lovely cake and that topping is yummy.
xxx

Kelly-Jane said...

Your cake looks fabulous! Hope it went down well with R. and her chums.

I've not made this cake of Nigella's - will have to look it up, as I know a little somebody who would love this too :)

KJxx

RecipeGirl said...

What a pretty, pretty cake! How sweet you are to make it for your granddaughter!

JillyB said...

Lovely cake Granny!Pleas go to my blog as there is an award for you!!

Teresa said...

What a wonderful looking cake.

Rosie said...

This is one very beautiful cake that is sure to put a smile on a little girls face - especially your granddaughters Granny :)

Rosie x

Maria♥ said...

What a cute cake and what a lucky girl she is to have a granny like you!

Maria
x

hungryandfrozen said...

Aren't you sweet! The cake looks absolutely gorgeous :)

test it comm said...

The cake looks great! I like the glossy finish.