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Cornish Saffron Cake
in Guest Recipe Book
Average Rating:
(total ratings: 2) [Read reviews] [Post a review] |
Servings: Makes 2 (1 pound) loaves or 16 buns |
Comments: From Cornwall England, comes the Saffron cake, once made only at Easter time but now available from many Cornish bakers throughout the year. Saffron was once grown in England, in Saffron Walden in Essex, but there is a story that it first arrived in the country with the Phoenicians who traded it for Cornish tin. It was certainly grown in Cornwall until the eighteenth century. |
Ingredients: Large pinch saffron strands 4 tablespoons boiling water 1 oz. (25g) fresh yeast 6 fl. oz. (175ml) milk, warmed 1 lb. (450g) all-purpose flour pinch salt 1/4 nutmeg, freshly grated 5 oz. (150g) butter 8 oz. (225g) currants 2 oz. (50g) candied peel, chopped 2 eggs, beaten |
Instructions: Put the saffron into a bowl and pour on the boiling water. Leave it to infuse overnight. In a small bowl sprinkle the yeast into the milk. Put the flour into a mixing bowl and add the salt and nutmeg. Rub in the butter. Toss in the currants and peel. Make a well in the centre. Pour in the saffron and saffron water, yeast mixture and eggs. Mix everything to a dough. Knead the dough in the bowl. Cover it and leave it in a warm place for 1 hour or until it has doubled in size. Heat the oven to 350 degrees F/180 degrees C/Gas Mark 4. Knead the dough again. Either divide it into two and put it into two greased 9 x 5-inch (450g/1 lb) loaf tins, or divide it into sixteen buns and put them onto a floured baking sheet. Cover the loaves or buns with a cloth again and leave them in a warm place for 10 minutes, or until the loaves have risen about 1/2-inch (1.5cm) above the top of the tin and the buns have almost doubled in size. Bake the loaves for 1 hour and the buns for 30 minutes. Cool them on wire racks. Eat them plain or buttered. Makes 2 (1 pound) loaves or 16 buns. |
Source: The Complete Bread Book by Gail Duff |
Date: November 28, 2004 |
Reviews
Reviewer: Diana Duckworth
Rating:
Review:
I am a New Zealander that married a Cornishman and we once lived in Cornwall UK. Saffron cake and buns were eaten all the time and like a true Cornish pasty and the famous clotted cream remain Cornish if made right. I was pleased with your recipe and made Saffron Cake for my Cornish son for his 43rd birthday treat today. I love cooking and experimenting in the kitchen. Thank you for posting your web site. Diana
Rating:
Review:
I am a New Zealander that married a Cornishman and we once lived in Cornwall UK. Saffron cake and buns were eaten all the time and like a true Cornish pasty and the famous clotted cream remain Cornish if made right. I was pleased with your recipe and made Saffron Cake for my Cornish son for his 43rd birthday treat today. I love cooking and experimenting in the kitchen. Thank you for posting your web site. Diana
Reviewer: josephusrex
Rating:
Review:
It's good if what you're looking for is "saffron bread" rather than saffron cake. I couldn't believe that this receipt called for no sugar, so I added about 1/3 cup and it was still more like a bread than a cake. I'll make it again, but with more sugar--half a cup at least--and more fruit. (I used half currants and half sultanas, rather than all currants.)
Rating:
Review:
It's good if what you're looking for is "saffron bread" rather than saffron cake. I couldn't believe that this receipt called for no sugar, so I added about 1/3 cup and it was still more like a bread than a cake. I'll make it again, but with more sugar--half a cup at least--and more fruit. (I used half currants and half sultanas, rather than all currants.)