… we’ve decided to give the cottage a little bit of an internal and external facelift. Believe it or not, despite our creative bent, The Viking and I are quite the procrastinators, particularly when it comes to our own home. It has been known to take years to pick a paint colour. It begins with the recognition that the job needs doing… The Viking will mutter words such as ‘we really should get the upstairs hall painted’ or ‘i’d like to get sash windows for the front of the cottage’ and these mutterings can be years in advance of the final installation of job… years of choosing paint colours followed by months where nothing happens… followed by meeting decorators and suppliers… followed by months of nothing happening. I find it both exhausting and quite exciting. I tend to ignore him when the muttering begins but those last few weeks where we rush into a decisions where I come alive. We’ve started work on the bathroom. Something we should have done the day we moved in 11 years ago but we’ve finally chosen tiles and a new bath and have managed to lock down a man who can – believe me, in Lincolnshire, when they say they can it means they can, perhaps, next year… the kitchen is next… it needs a bit of a touch-up since being done so gloriously a few years ago and of course we’re having a new log-burning fire installed, all within a matter of weeks. It means the cottage is an absolute mess… dust sheets everywhere… dust everywhere, including my skin but I love living in the progress and since we had our kitchen ripped out three years ago i’ve got used to the idea and would much rather be on site during the process… there is no bigger critic than oneself and The Viking loves to tell me that I didn’t measure twice cut once… which of course, drives me insane….
black currant jam layered sponge cake
I was in a cake baking mood this weekend which is handy because I know that February is going to be one of those blog-lite months and I wanted to pop something up here that was pretty to look at and sit as a bit of a place holder whilst i’m busy going crazy at work… the cake tasted spectacular but I went a bit too far with the blackcurrant icing and it curdled a little. I tried to revive it with some extra icing sugar but it was getting more sweet and not smooth so I gave up and went with it anyway… so, not so pretty but very tasty. I love a jam-in-the-batter cake. It always comes out so moist and fruity and a great way to add sugar without actually adding sugar, if you know what I mean…
for the cake
3 large free-range eggs
220g sugar
220g butter
220g self raising flour
1 teaspoon vanilla paste
the grated zest of one orange
2 tablespoons blackcurrant jam
for the butter cream
250g butter
500g icing sugar
the grated zest of an orange
1 tablespoon blackcurrant jam
pre-heat the oven to 170C and grease and line 2 x 18cm loose-bottom cake tins – I also lined the sides as this cake tends to burn easily
in a large bowl, beat the sugar and butter until soft and light and creamy (roughly 5 minutes) and then beat in 2 of the eggs, followed by half the flour, then beat in the last egg and the rest of the flour along with the vanilla paste – then, using a metal spoon, fold in the blackcurrant jam
divide the batter between the two cake tins and smooth over the tops
bake on the same shelf for 30 – 40 minutes, then remove from the oven and set aside to cool on a wore rack until cool
for the buttercream icing simply beat the butter in a large bowl until very pale and soft, then gently fold in half the icing sugar, then beat together until creamy, then fold in the remaining icing sugar along with the orange zest and beat again until creamy
use the icing to sandwich the cakes together and cover the outside, then add a tablespoon of blackcurrant jam to the remaining icing and a little milk to slacken and beat until a creamy consistency and swirl onto the top of the cake
eat and of course, enjoy!
From the Kitchen says
I can totally relate! We lived in our previous home twenty-seven years and could never make up our mind for window treatments in the living room (nine windows). Same thing here in our new place–less windows but same indecision. I do know that your cake looks delicious!!
Best,
Bonnie
Keep Calm and Fanny On says
You know we lived in our flat for around 5 years before even hanging a picture, so I can relate to this sooooo much. We must do a few things too, but meantime you've suggested this wonderful cake so…
belleau kitchen says
Thanks Bonnie… at least we're finally making the decisions…
belleau kitchen says
Thanks honey, xx
Tricia Buice says
Good luck with the renovations Dom – we are about to start a new kitchen floor which is very involved when you have to move everything. Such fun but we will be thrilled when it is done – we have been in the house 10 years – and still have rooms to paint! Anyway the cake would help! It is beautiful and the color looks fabulous 🙂
Suelle says
This sounds a delicious cake, but how come you can spread and dribble icing so artistically, but if I did anything like that it would just look a mess?
Beth Sachs says
We bought a big doer upper last year…I think it's going to be at least 10 years before its finished. The cake looks yummy.
Choclette Blogger says
Hang on, you can't do the kitchen again, we're still waiting to be shown it from three years ago! All sounds very exciting. So much needs doing to our house, but it'll probably never get done. Love the cake and the blackcurrant gives such a pretty colour. Very annoying about curdled icing though – I do it too often by trying to add fruit something or other in when I probably shouldn't.
belleau kitchen says
Thanks. It is hard work but well worth it.
belleau kitchen says
Thanks. I was always told not to try too hard when it comes to food styling or it looks worse. Messy is good.
belleau kitchen says
Oh how exciting. I'd love to start again from scratch!
belleau kitchen says
I know I know. I promise we'll do a walk round just for you!
Phil in the Kitchen says
That's a spectacular colour for icing (who cares about some curdling?). Sounds ideal for dark February days. We'd been trying to decide on a paint colour for around 2 years but finally went for a colour very similar to one in a local restaurant on the grounds that if you can eat happily alongside a colour then you can probably live with it even when you're not eating.
Ethan W. says
Glad I found so delicious dessert with my favourite fruits. Thanks for sharing this awesome recipe!
Sarah James says
Your cake looks delicious Dom, a splash of colour in the winter cheers anyone up and even better if you can eat it. Love the idea of putting jam in the mixture. Good luck with the renovation work.
Kate Glutenfreealchemist says
That sponge looks amazing and the colour of the icing is just beautiful (curdled or not!). A darn fine cake!
If you've not had the benefit of a log-burner before, you are in for a real treat! I have been known to have ours going in the middle of June….. I could just watch it for hours!
Treat and Trick says
All the best for your renovations and can't wait to see its final reveal. What a stunning cake!
Jean | DelightfulRepast.com says
Dom, I'd love a big slice of that cake right now with a nice cuppa tea! Blackcurrant is one of my faves though a bit difficult to find here in the US. We've been doing up our bedroom since early December, and I think by a week from today it should be all done. So I know just what you're talking about. We got a bit tired of the mess and dust.
Jo says
This looks not only delicious but also beautiful. Love it!
Karen S Booth says
How on earth do I miss this! This is SPECTACULAR Dom and a perfect cake for Easter too! LOVE all that jam and pink icing, it's a cakey triumph! Karen
Tina Vesić says
As far as house redecorating goes, don't even get me started. It takes so much work and time, especially if you do it on your own :/
But the cake is amazing, I love the sponge cake layers! It's been a while since I've had a proper sponge cake, I do miss it 🙂
maggie says
This cake looks so delicious and colour of icing so beautiful!! Dom your cake looks so sponge and I'd like try this recipe..