Dundee Cake
I’ve been making this for about 40 years now, mailing it out, and calling it my “yearly lump”. I started adding cherries a few decades ago… no complaints.
It is the only “fruit cake” that I really like, living half way between fruit cake and Stollen – the heavy bread we would slather with butter Christmas morning for breakfast.
Prep Time | 30 minutes |
Cook Time | 1 hour |
Passive Time | 20 minutes |
Servings |
portions
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- 2 1/2 cups regular flour
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1/2 lb unsalted butter
- 1 cup sugar
- 5 eggs room temperature
- 1/2 cup ground almonds
- 1 orange rind use a grater
- 2 tbsp orange juice freshly squeezed
- 1 cup golden raisins rinsed of sugar
- 1/2 cup currants rinsed of sugar
- 1 pound mixed fruit coloured if you can find it
- 1/2 of 450g container of whole cherries in syrup
Ingredients
Dry Side
Wet Side
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- Gather all your ingredients, and take the eggs and butter out of the fridge to warm up.
- Place your butter in a large bowl, cut into peices, and cream with beaters. Work it until it softens somewhat, add the sugar, and cream together until smooth.
- Beat in eggs one at a time. Not two... patience here.
- Grate your orange, and squeeze it.
- Add the ground almond, orange rind, and orange juice. Beat until smooth, and set aside.
- Reserve 1 cup of the flour into a very large bowl. Into this place the mixed peel and cherries, and mix to coat.
- Place the raisins and currants into a sifter, and rinse under hot water to get rid to the sugar. Dry on a towel, pressing the water out, then add to the bowl and mix again to coat.
- Add the remaining flour to the mix, and toss thoroughly.
- Now, take your wet ingredients and add it to the larger bow. Here, a wooden spoon can sometimes be best. This is a thick, sticky dough.
- Coat the ENTIRE surface of the bunt pan with butter.
- Place the dough into the base of the pan, being sure it is evenly placed. Pound the pan onto the counter several times to "seat" it into the form.
- Level it out, and place it in the middle of the oven at 300 degrees for 1 1/4 hours.
- Remove from the oven when a tooth pick comes out clean. Invert and remove from pan to cool, covered with a towel.
Wrapped in plastic, then in tin foil, this will freeze and keep for years... but rarely makes it past January for us.