Currant and Orange Marmalade Tea Cake

Currant and Orange Marmalade Tea Cake // Not Without Salt Currant and Orange Marmalade Tea Cake // Not Without Salt

The marmalade’s original intention was for cocktail experimenting. When that went terribly wrong the jar sat lonely in the fridge until I found the perfect recipe that would accomplish three things: 1. Satisfy my craving for something sweet with my coffee. 2. Give something new for you to look at while I’m gone, which brings me to point 3. Get us even more excited about our trip to London. We leave today. I’m procrastinating packing as we speak.

This cake was more than just dessert (or breakfast) it allowed me to follow (and adjust quite a bit) someone else’s recipe. I creamed butter and sugar together without the looming pressure that it had to be perfect. I paid attention to the way the oil in the orange zest sprayed the parchment as I zested its vibrant skin because I wasn’t needing to pay attention to anything else. I just wanted to bake.

With three weeks left until my manuscript is due I’ve been working very intensely to get all the details right on the recipes you’ll meet in 2015. And while I’ve loved nearly every minute of this process, I’m tired. My generally right brain mind has been wandering into the left side more than it’s comfortable with. Wait, is it the other way around? Oh I don’t know, all that to say, I’m tired. Which makes this little jaunt to London pretty darn perfect. I’m excited to be inspired by other people’s food. To learn new tastes, new traditions and new recipes. There will also be visits to museums in between the restaurants to remind myself of my passion outside of food. And there will be moments of no plans, just wandering the street with my husband until we find a cozy pub to duck in to.

If you have any recommendations for us I’d love to hear them. Follow along on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram as I’ll be posting about our trip. Follow the hashtag #travelbrillianty. Thursday through Saturday I’ll be working with Marriott Hotels as they develop an idea for a healthy vending machine.

Until then, pour yourself some tea and make this lightly sweetened, currant studded and citrusy cake.

Currant and Orange Marmalade Tea Cake // Not Without Salt Currant and Orange Marmalade Tea Cake // Not Without Salt

Currant and Orange Marmalade Tea Cake

adapted from Nigel Slater's recipe 

1 1/2 sticks / 175 g butter, soft

3/4 cup / 175 g sugar

3 eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 1/4 cups / 170 g all-purpose flour

1/2 teaspoon kosher salt

1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder

2/3 cups / 90 g dried currants

2 tablespoons orange juice

2 tablespoons Cointreau

1/4 cup / 75 g marmalade

zest from 1 orange

 

icing:

powdered sugar

orange juice

 

Preheat the oven to 350°F. Butter and line the bottom of a loaf pan with parchment.

In a small bowl or saucepan add the currants, orange juice and Cointreau (or other orange liquor). Warm this mixture then stir in the orange zest and marmalade. Set aside to cool while you mix the cake.

In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment cream the butter and sugar until very light, about 5 minutes on medium speed. Scrape down the bowl then turn the mixer on medium low and add the eggs one at a time. Stir in the vanilla and then scrape down the bowl again.

Combine the flour, salt and baking powder in a bowl and whisk to combine and aerate the dry ingredients. This helps keep the final cake light in texture.

Add the dry ingredients to the batter and mix on low until just combined. Slowly beat in the currant mixture. Take the bowl off of the mixer and finish mixing by hand with a rubber spatula.

Pour the batter into the prepared pan and bake for 40 to 45 minutes until the cake springs back when gently pressed.

Let the cake cool in the pan for 5 minutes before inverting and cooling on a rack.

If you'd like to ice the cake combine about 1 1/2 cups of powdered sugar with enough orange juice (for me this was the juice from half an orange) to make a pourable icing. I also added a pinch of salt. Pour the icing all over the cake while it is just warm

The flavor of the cake is more pronounced and set the next day.

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Chocolate Panna Cotta with Blackberry Caramel

Chocolate Panna Cotta with Blackberry Caramel // Not Without Salt Chocolate Panna Cotta with Blackberry Caramel // Not Without Salt

 

Things look different around here, right?

I hope you don’t mind the change. I freaking love it. I was getting tired of staring at the same screen and let’s be honest, even I had a hard time using my old site. Now when I land on the home page I get fluttery and excited, when I search for an archived recipe it actually shows up (!) and the photos are a bit more pronounced, which I love. But as you know, with all new things there are often a few kinks. Hopefully they haven’t affected your time here too much.

I’m still working on archiving all my past recipes so they fit in the new format because of that there was a time there that many of my recipes went missing. While I am sorry that the lost recipes were such an inconvenience for many I have really loved hearing from you. I didn’t realize so many of you were using the recipes! I love knowing that the recipes are not just sitting on the screen but that they are actually living in your homes. With each, “I was planning on making ‘x’ for dinner! What happened to it?!” or “It’s my husband’s birthday and he made a special request for your cookies but I can’t find it!” I quickly located the recipe while feeling a great honor that the recipes were exiting my kitchen and entering yours. It’s been a great encouragement as I have been working like a crazy lady trying to make 120 of my very best recipes for the book. I can not wait for you to live in these recipes. You see how it always comes back to the book?! Now you know how my friends and family feel.

If you are having any issues with the site please do let me know. However, if you don’t like it and really have no helpful critique than I’m perfectly okay if you keep that to yourself. I do realize that there are a few more clicks than before but do you see that bar that follows you? It’s right above me. That bar has arrows on it so you can easily switch from post to post without having to go back to the main page. Why am I pointing this out? Because I just realized it myself and I think it’s pretty awesome.

I have my good friend, Jono, to thank for the design and my brother to thank for being smart enough to speak ‘internets’ and make this site become the beautiful and functioning thing it is today. (Here is his company, it’s pretty great thisiscivil.com).

The other reason why I am here is to point you to this recipe I created for S. Pellegrino. It was back in the summer when blackberries lined the hiking trails and filled the shelves at the market but the idea can be used with any number of berry. The fruit itself becomes the liquid to soften the caramel and turn it into a sauce which gives you a deeply flavored, sweet caramel that is also bright and fragrant with ripe fruit. Some of the berries are gently mashed after the hot sugar is poured over top while some are left whole. The panna cotta is softly sweet, not intensely chocolate but perfectly creamy. It doesn’t need the caramel but of course I do recommend it. And I might also suggest turning this into a more seasonal apt dessert by adding in a few warming spices such as cinnamon, nutmeg and cardamom. The panna cotta is fine to sit in the fridge for a few days while you tend to stuffing and turkey and in lieu of the caramel a few arils of Pomegranate seeds would dress it up quite nicely. You can find the recipe here.

 

Chocolate Panna Cotta with Blackberry Caramel // Not Without Salt Chocolate Panna Cotta with Blackberry Caramel // Not Without Salt Chocolate Panna Cotta with Blackberry Caramel // Not Without Salt

Chocolate Panna Cotta with Blackberry Caramel

I realize that blackberries are very hard to find right now but I imagine that you can use frozen or another similar berry; raspberries, strawberries and possibly even blueberries.

As a contributor for S.Pellegrino’s Practice the Art of Fine Food program I created this recipe and post along with many others that can be found on their Facebook page.

*If you are having a hard time finding the recipe click the link to S.Pellegrino's Facebook page and then hit The Recipes in the top left corner. The panna cotta recipe is featured on day 74. I'm sorry it's not easier. I wish I could post it here.

 
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