Christmas Cake Recipes
Not many know that the Christmas cake started out as porridge. Over time it ingrained the finest of ingredients and what was a luxury, became the bane of Christmas celebrations.

By the sixteenth century, the oatmeal of the porridge was replaced by wheat flour, and butter and eggs were added to hold it together. However, baking was still a luxury since only BIG houses had ovens. These household would bake rich fruitcakes for Easter and top them with almond paste (what we call marzipan), so they started baking a similar one for Christmas, but with spices and the dried fruits of the season....supposed to represent the gifts of the kings from the East. However, it was not exactly a Christmas cake but a Twelfth Night cake (the fifth of January, actually supposed to represent the end of Christmas festivities). These cakes soon became the flavor of the season. The bakers and confectioners usually had leftover figurines, so they started baking rich fruitcakes with snowy scenes for decoration...and thus the Christmas Cake was born.
However, the people of Britain would still send boiled Christmas puddings for family members living in distant colonies, which could take weeks or even months to reach, along with a hamper of gifts, very often chunks of cheese and apple pie (that were unavailable in uncivilized colonies). The tide turned when a German immigrant started baking Christmas Cakes in America with locally grown fruits and the colonizers started shipping these back to relatives in England....and today, this cake is more popular than the traditional European Christmas cake.
Christmas Cake Recipe
Traditionally, the Christmas cake is baked about a month in advance, and some families enjoy the feeling of festivity creeping up on them when the house is full of these divine smells, spices, cinnamon, dried fruits and alcohol....it's time for Christmas again. Here is a simple yet fragrant and tasty recipe for the Christmas cake.
To begin with, soak these fruits a few weeks in advance, to make the fruits plumper and flavored with alcohol.
- 500 g sultanas
- 200 g raisins
- 200 g glacé cherries, halved
- 110 currants
- 110 cut mixed peel
- 110 g roughly chopped dried figs
- 110 g roughly chopped dried apricots
- 110 g roughly chopped dried pitted prunes
- 1 small orange, grated zest and juice
- 150 ml brandy
For the cake:
- 255 g unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 200 g dark muscovado sugar
- 5 medium eggs
- 300 g plain flour
- 200 g macadamia nuts, roughly chopped
Once the cake is done, take it out and cool. The next day, make a few holes with a skewer and over the next few weeks (till Christmas), feed it with a bit of alcohol - sherry or brandy every 5 days.
For decorating it, you can slap down a sheet of marzipan (use about 500 grams of marzipan) and add glazed cherries, maybe marzipan figurines or silver balls, even jam, depending on what you have in mind. Sieving on icing sugar to the decorated top makes it the perfect cake for a white Christmas. The decoration ideas for Christmas cake are unlimited in number, but marzipan usually features in most of them, glazed cherries too and sometimes, apricot jam.
Tips for the Christmas Cake
- Try and avoid opening the door of the oven before the cake is fully done. This may delay the baking process and the cake will not be thoroughly cooked.
- Cakes made for Christmas have a lot of sugar and so the cake might get burned. Cook at lower temperature and cut out the burnt part once the cake is fully done.
- For storage, wrap the cake in cheesecloth or muslin and foil it. Try and keep in an airtight container.
- Avoid keeping the cake in the fridge as it hardens the cake and makes it brick-like.
- Do not try any creativity over baking if you are an amateur. Leave the creativity part for decorations and see for yourself how a simple cake becomes the talk of the town.(wink!)
Like This Article? Please Share!

Post Comment | View Comments


