Nigel Slaters Ginger Cake recipe

You all seem to be such proficient chefs. Well here is a place to share some of that cooking knowledge. Or do you have a cooking problem? Ask away. Jams and chutneys go here too.
Post Reply
Peppa Pig
Jerry - Bit higher than newbie
Jerry - Bit higher than newbie
Posts: 48
Joined: Sun May 23, 2010 8:53 pm
Location: Leicestershire

Nigel Slaters Ginger Cake recipe

Post: # 201831Post Peppa Pig »

This is our favourite cake! We have it with vanilla custard, clotted cream and also with strong cheese.
I emailed Nigel at the guardian a few yrs back and told him what a great recipe it was and he replied suggesting we try it with a strong fruity cheese.
Its a big cake and Iv found that people who have never eaten ginger cake or dont like it always change there minds after this.
Its ginger heaven! :flower:

Servings: 8
Level of difficulty: Easy
Preparation Time: 20 minutes
Cooking Time: 40 minutes
Ingredients
250g self-raising flour
2 tsp ground ginger
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1 tsp Bicarbonate of soda
pinch fine salt
200g golden syrup
2 tbsp syrup from the jar of Ginger
125g butter
3 lumps stem ginger in syrup, about 55g
2 tbsp sultanas, heaped
125g dark muscovado sugar
2 large eggs
240ml Milk

Method
You will need a square cake tin measuring approximately 20-22cm, lined on the bottom with baking parchment or greaseproof paper.

Set the oven at 180C/Gas 4. Sift the flour with the ginger, cinnamon, bicarbonate of soda and salt. Put the golden and ginger syrups and the butter into a small saucepan and warm over a low heat. Dice the ginger finely, then add it to the pan with the sultanas and sugar. Let the mixture bubble gently for a minute, giving it the occasional stir to stop the fruit sticking on the bottom.

Break the eggs into a bowl, pour in the milk and beat gently to break up the egg and mix it into the milk. Remove the butter and sugar mixture from the heat and pour into the flour, stirring smoothly and firmly with a large metal spoon. Mix in the milk and eggs. The mixture should be sloppy, with no trace of flour.

Scoop the mixture into the lined cake tin and bake for thirty-five or forty minutes, until a skewer inserted in the centre of the cake comes out clean. Unless you are serving it warm, leave the cake in its tin to cool, then tip it out on to a sheet of greaseproof paper. Wrap it up in foil and, if you can, leave it to mature for a day or two before eating.
Muddy Puddles is our favourite episode!

User avatar
Millymollymandy
A selfsufficientish Regular
A selfsufficientish Regular
Posts: 17637
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 6:09 am
Location: Brittany, France

Re: Nigel Slaters Ginger Cake recipe

Post: # 201893Post Millymollymandy »

Sounds very gingery! :thumbright: Unfortunately I haven't found preserved ginger in syrup here - I can get it crystalised but dry. Somewhere in my house is a newspaper cut out of a recipe for apple and ginger cake with fresh ginger which is fantastic but I can't bloody well find it!!! :banghead:
boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM, :hugish: (thanks)
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/

User avatar
Green Aura
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts: 9313
Joined: Thu Feb 07, 2008 8:16 pm
latitude: 58.569279
longitude: -4.762620
Location: North West Highlands

Re: Nigel Slaters Ginger Cake recipe

Post: # 201895Post Green Aura »

I think it's quite easy to make your own MMM. It's just peeled chunks of ginger root boiled in syrup then bunged in a jar - I think :lol:
Maggie

Never doubt that you can change history. You already have. Marge Piercy

Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage. Anais Nin

User avatar
Millymollymandy
A selfsufficientish Regular
A selfsufficientish Regular
Posts: 17637
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 6:09 am
Location: Brittany, France

Re: Nigel Slaters Ginger Cake recipe

Post: # 201915Post Millymollymandy »

Therein lies another problem - getting decent fresh ginger :roll: - so I'd have to go to the Asian store (where they sell the crystalised ginger) as the stuff in the supermarkets is old and woody and no good for grating or anything much really!
boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM, :hugish: (thanks)
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/

User avatar
Green Aura
Site Admin
Site Admin
Posts: 9313
Joined: Thu Feb 07, 2008 8:16 pm
latitude: 58.569279
longitude: -4.762620
Location: North West Highlands

Re: Nigel Slaters Ginger Cake recipe

Post: # 201918Post Green Aura »

That's weird - you (one) expects French markets to sell the freshest of everything :roll:
Maggie

Never doubt that you can change history. You already have. Marge Piercy

Life shrinks or expands in proportion to one's courage. Anais Nin

User avatar
Millymollymandy
A selfsufficientish Regular
A selfsufficientish Regular
Posts: 17637
Joined: Tue May 10, 2005 6:09 am
Location: Brittany, France

Re: Nigel Slaters Ginger Cake recipe

Post: # 201957Post Millymollymandy »

You must be joking :shock: :shock: :shock: - I've moaned about this often enough - nothing's refrigerated so everything is limp through to sprouting to downright rotting - trying to find a decent red pepper amongst the pile of overripe to slimey peppers is always a real pain in the BUM. :angryfire:

On the upside ( :? ) we don't have imported Egyptian* potatoes in winter so all the spuds are old stored ones I presume as the flesh inside is grey and half has to be chopped or peeled off. Garlic is always sprouting and ditto onions in winter - it's rarely different from what I've just finished of my own stored stuff. The majority of fruit and veg for sale is local or from Spain (apart obviously from the tropical type stuff). So there's good and bad there.

*Saw a proggy about this recently and was rather :shock: :shock: :shock: , growing spuds in the desert just for the UK winter market. :shock: :shock: :shock:
boboff wrote:Oh and just for MMM, :hugish: (thanks)
http://chateaumoorhen.blogspot.com/

Peppa Pig
Jerry - Bit higher than newbie
Jerry - Bit higher than newbie
Posts: 48
Joined: Sun May 23, 2010 8:53 pm
Location: Leicestershire

Re: Nigel Slaters Ginger Cake recipe

Post: # 202081Post Peppa Pig »

Growing pots in the desert for the Uk winter, isnt that just nutty as a fruit cake!
We have always got ours locally from a farmer or market, the imported ones which I think iv tried in the past just go horrible and bitty in the pan. As George from PP would say "Yuuk"

Do the markets sell a lot of cheeses? Here in Melton its brilliant for the local stuff and more . My little Boo, just gone two, is becomming a cheese officianardo. :flower:
Muddy Puddles is our favourite episode!

Post Reply