I met the lovely Alice recently! I made two of these cakes for her book launch at our wonderful new local indie bookshop The Quick Brown Fox. Phew, that's a lot of adjectives. Alice was a Masterchef Aus contestant some years ago, and now writes cookbooks, is on tv and radio, and so on. Her cheery smile is ubiquitous.
I love cherries - so luscious, so round and sweet. They remind me of our backpacking travels through Europe; of buying huge bags of them in Belgrade, a city full of young soldiers in uniform, carrying rifles. Of our many times in Tasmania, picking them off our friends' tree in their backyard overlooking the Derwent River. Of happy summer feasts, enjoying them in their short season. Cherries make me think of Christmas, 'cos that's when we see them in the shops. Don't buy those imported ones, my friends! Stick to the season.
oh so moist and delicious |
Recipe by Alice Zaslavsky:
Serves 8-10:
ingredients:
180g./6.3 oz almond meal (ground almonds)
60g./2 big ounces dessicated coconut
1/2 tsp sea salt
250g./9 oz caster sugar
4 large eggs
1 tsp amaretto (optional)
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 tsp almond extract (see Notes)
200g./7 oz butter, melted and cooled
Nicely rounded handful of flaked almonds
240g./8.5 oz jar of amarena cherries, drained (see Notes)
icing sugar for dusting (optional)
extra fruit and mascarpone for serving (optional)
Method:
Turn on your oven to heat to 180C/355F
Grease a 20 cm/8 inch springform cake tin, and line with baking paper - see Notes
Whisk the almond meal, coconut, salt and caster sugar together in a medium bowl
In a large bowl, whisk the eggs together, add the extracts and whisk them in well
Pour the cooled butter into the egg mixture, and whisk till everything is well combined
Now scatter the dry ingredients over the wet mixture, and whisk in well - Alice says this makes a very runny batter, but I didn't really find this, so I think you'll be fine whether it's super runny or just a normal batter
Bake for 20 minutes, then take out of the oven, cast the almond flakes and cherries over the top of the cake, and back into the oven for another 20-25 minutes (mine took the extra 25 mins. both times)
Let it cool in the tin, sitting on a wire rack, then serve with icing sugar and extra cherries if desired
Notes:
Alice suggests 1/8 tsp bitter almond aroma but honestly, who has that in the pantry? :=) Not me! And she does say it's optional ...
I bought a tub of Amarena cherries at our local deli, which I think were better than the jarred ones. I drained them, and kept the syrup as a cordial
I used a regular cake tin, with lots of baking paper up the sides so I could just pull the cake out of the tin - it worked fine
I made this cake two separate times, and neither time was the batter very runny; the first time in fact it was rather dry, and the second time just a normal batter - perhaps it depends on the freshness (or not) of your almond meal and coconut :=)
ingredients gathered |
whisk your eggs |
whisking dry into wet |
et voilà - a lovely batter for cake number 1 |
the second cake batter - a bit runnier than the first time |
first one ready for the oven |
second batch heading to the oven |
and ... baked |
enjoy with fruit and cream to increase the joy |
the lovely Theresa with my cakes for the book launch/morning tea |
almonds and cherries |
The cake looks rich and incredibly moist and delicious! I would love mine with lots of macarpone please :-))
ReplyDeleteyes you're right Angie. great with mascarpone.
DeleteWhat a lovely way to celebrate a book launch!
ReplyDeleteit was a lot of fun for sure.
DeleteHi Sherry, gosh this looks so delicious! I think this would be a good one for me to try at Christmas when cherries are plentiful. I'm hosting Christmas lunch this year too! Loving all the beautiful tea cups too. I love to paint (draw) tea cups!
ReplyDeletethanks Min. I wonder if you could use fresh cherries? An interesting idea. Tea cups are things of beauty :)
DeleteSince so many bookshops have disappeared and I don't work in libraries anymore I really do miss book launches. Apparently we were in Sydney CBD shopping when Alice was launching her new book at Dymocks I think? Anyway I missed it, but just a train ride away. So disappointing, this cake looks amazing Sherry. How can two batters from the same recipe be so different, could it be the eggs? Anyway, looks delicious. I'm not eating nuts anymore, only walnuts, so I would have to work around that. I must try to get to this bookshop one day.
ReplyDeletewe are lucky in brissie to have lots of bookshops, and wonderful indie ones. and now we have the quick brown fox in walking distance! It's terrific! why no nuts?:)
DeleteHi Sherry, I tried to post using my name and URL but your site doesn't want to do that. So, it's Ron at Lost in a Pot commenting.
ReplyDeleteThis is my kind of cake, I love cherries so this will be a great cake to cook next summer when our local cherries appear. Oh, and it will be served with plenty of extra fruit and mascarpone...
oh sorry Ron. bloody blogger! thanks for persevering. I'm not sure if this will work with fresh cherries but give it a go!
DeleteThis was such a superb cake, and well done from a lucky Mr P!
ReplyDeletethanks Mr P.!
DeleteI am bookmarking this for cherry season here.
ReplyDeleteHappily the cake calls for Amarena cherries (fruit in syrup) so you can make it any time :)
DeleteAll those people at your new book shop launch were very lucky to get a slice of this! I probably would have had 2! Anything with cherries in and you've got me!
ReplyDeletei was so happy the cakes turned out well. Yes i am a big cherry fan too!
DeleteSounds delicious! Why does it look like there are two kinds of cherries on your slice of cake?
ReplyDeleteyou're right mimi. I served it with some morello cherries :)
DeleteThat cake looks super delicious Sherry - I love cherries! xox
ReplyDeletethanks Anon. Me too :)
DeleteI'm not familiar with amarena cherries. I'll have to keep my eyes peeled for them.
ReplyDeletethey are in syrup. you can buy them in jars or bottles.
DeleteThe cake looks delicious. I love the photo of all the slices of cake ready for the booksters!
ReplyDeletebest... mae at maefood.blogspot.com
thanks Mae. Yes it was a lovely event!
DeleteWow, what a gorgeous spread! That's so fun that you got to meet Alice at your local bookstore, too. I know I would love this cake - the cherries, almond and coconut combination sounds absolutely delicious! And amarena cherries really are the way to go when you want to highlight that cherry flavor. Love this recipe!
ReplyDeleteit was all tremendous fun david! and the cake was so good.
DeleteLove cherry desserts - noticed you used a whale bowl - mine arrived last week. Can't wait to use them! I will probably order again :)
ReplyDeletethat's great about the whale bowls judi. i love mine! and now i want them all plus the spoon :=)
DeleteMe too Sherry!
DeleteYou are certainly ambitious . That cake looks fabulous and I can only imagine how good it tastes. Love the teacups !
ReplyDeletethanks judee. it worked out well thank goodness. I didn't want to mess it up with the actual cook/author eating it :)
DeleteI cannot wait for cherry season, which is about 5 weeks away. The best part is Dave does not like them so I can keep them all to myself :)
ReplyDeleteoh yes i love cherry season too. They are so bloody expensive tho that we rarely buy them.
DeleteLooks pretty & delicious.
ReplyDeletethanks Pam.
DeleteBeautiful, Sherry! I hate glace and maraschino cherries, but love real cherries. Lovely cake.
ReplyDeletesorry to say this recipes uses cherries in syrup, Jean. but i guess you could try using fresh cherries.
DeleteI love cherry desserts. Right now on this side of the world I can only get canned or frozen cherries. Trader Joe's ( a German owned grocery store) used to carry Morello cherries in a glass container. They were perfect for baking but unfortunately they are no longer available. Your cake looks wonderful.
ReplyDeletethat's a shame about the morello cherries ANon. so useful in baking as you say.
DeleteWhat a lovely tribute to Alice. I think she'd be very happy with this! I have to admit I'm not a huge amarena cherry person but I love all other kinds so I could easily sub them in :D
ReplyDeleteshe was wonderful - full of life and good thoughts.
DeleteYou are right. We absolutely have to eat fruits while they are in season.
ReplyDeleteAnd that pie looks fabulous-o!
thanks Deb.
DeleteCherry desserts are among my favorites and this cake looks fabulous!
ReplyDeletethanks Jean. we all enjoyed it.
DeleteI have never seen a recipe like this, Sherry - I love almonds and cherries together (and I DO have bitter almond extract in my cubby...). I have added this to my recipes to make for the holidays!
ReplyDeletethat's great. i'd love to try it with the bitter almond sometime. Hope you make and enjoy this one.
Delete