A Cake for Company

Since I knew they were comin’ I baked a cake.
And because they were coming from across the country (and, in the case of one of them, from across a lot of years) I wanted it to be wonderful. When I want wonderful, I frequently turn to Nigella.

Nigella Lawson’s Clementine Cake
from “How to Eat”
4-5 clementines, about 1 pound total weight)
[Margin Note: Since clementines' brief season had passed, I used tangerines. Nigella notes that you also can use an equal weight of oranges]
6 eggs
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons sugar
2 + 1/3 cups ground almonds
1 heaping teaspoon baking powder

Put the clementines in a pot with cold water to cover; bring to the boil and cook for two hours. Drain, and, when cool, cut each fruit in half and remove the seeds.
Then chop everything finely — skins,pith, fruit — in the processor (or by hand, of course).

Preheat the overn to 375-degrees F. Butter and line an 8-inch springform pan. [M.N.: I buttered but did not line. I should have lined.]
Beat the eggs in a large bowl. Add the sugar, almonds and baking powder. Mix well, adding the chopped clementines. Pour the mixture into the prepared pan and bake for an hour, when a skewer will come out clean; you’ll probably have to cover the cake with foil after about 40 minutes to stop the top burning. [M.N.: My cake was done in a little over 50 minutes. Start skewer-testing early.]
Remove from the oven and leave to cool on a rack — but in the pan — until cake is completely cold. I think this is better a day after it’s made, but I don’t complain about eating it any time.[M.N.: I think it's a *lot* better the day after it's made, which inspires me to get it done ahead, saving both prep and clean-up time the day of a dinner party.]

Nigella calls this “the easiest cake I know.” Hmmm. I think Sylvia Vaughn Thompson’s Fresh Ginger Cake might be easier — it’s certainly quicker — but I’ll concede that the clementine cake is even more delicious. Almost as delicious as spending a long food-and-wine-filled evening with old and new friends.

Postscript:Why no photo of the unmolded cake? Because I sent it to the living room but stayed behind in the kitchen for a few minutes to brew coffee. My plan was to join everyone, take a quick photo and then give each of them a thin, thin slice (it’s a very rich cake)accompanied by a dab of lightly sweetened whipped cream and a big spoonful of raspberries.
There were eight of us. This cake easily serves 10-12. Coffee in press-filter carafes takes only a moment to make, but by the time I rejoined the party, Someone had whacked it into eight big pieces and served all but mine.
I try — in this day of moderate eating and controlled sugar consumption — not to force feed a guest a horse-choking-size piece of cake. No one, however, complained. And there were no leftovers.

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Saturday, April 12th, 2008 at 4:09 amand is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

3 Responses to “A Cake for Company”

  1. lmc Says:
    April 14th, 2008 at 2:56 am

    it sounds and looks delicious and no doubt your guests are still talking about the wonderful evening!

  2. Mevrouw Cupcake Says:
    April 14th, 2008 at 2:11 pm

    Obviously your guests felt very at home…lol! ;-)

  3. EAT! Says:
    April 17th, 2008 at 11:31 am

    I too write Margin Notes. what a great way to remember what I have actually cooked from my cookbooks and if I liked the recipe. This cake is going on my dessert menu for this week.

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