We had a lovely weekend with the Oandasan’s at Ropes Crossing and then spent the entire Sunday spring cleaning for the quarterly Ryde Council Clean Up day. Its amazing how much junk we hold on to. After a quarter, we still have stuff to get rid off like empty boxes from purchases (aka stand mixer, rice cooker, etc etc)! Why in the world we keep those empty boxes puzzles me. We keep them up for a few months, but then throw them away after a few. Ah. The human mind is indeed perplexing.
Calamansi (sometimes called Cumquats) |
When D gave me these gorgeous green and yellow calamansi last week, I had no plans with them except for the occasional juice and some squeezed in soy sauce for a traditional dip with pork skewer bbq. But when Trisha of Sugarlace tweeted about a calamansi cake, it was an “Aha why not!” moment! I have had a recipe for lemon yoghurt cake which we usually make when lemons abound so the calamansi was a trial-and-error idea. And while calamansi are too small to get some rind of these beauties, we still used some lemon rind and maximized on the calamansi juice for the flavour.
Calamansi is a Filipino indigenous lime variety, which is similar to the local cumquats. Its seldom that these are available locally – either you get a small snack-pack size zip lock bag for $2 at Filipino shops, or you can get them by the kilo courtesy of friends like D. Thank God for friends!
The recipe I used for the cake is the Lemon Yoghurt Cake posted awhile back with ingredients obviously tweaked and substituted and adapted the calamansi glaze/icing from Sugarlace’s post.
1 and 3/4 cups sugar
2 eggs
2 eggs
3/4 cup oil (we used vegetable oil)
grated rind of 1 lemon
1/2 tsp salt
5 tsp calamansi juice
1 cup natural yoghurt
2 cups self-raising flour
In a bowl, mix rind, oil, eggs and sugar with a fork.
1 cup natural yoghurt
2 cups self-raising flour
In a bowl, mix rind, oil, eggs and sugar with a fork.
Add remaining ingredients (salt, calamansi juice, yoghurt and flour) and combine well.
Pour into a 20cm cake pan and bake at 180 degrees C for 30 minutes or until a skewer comes out clean.
Cool on a wire rack for about 15 mintues or more.
Glaze/ice the cake when the cake is entirely cool.
Calamansi Glaze/Icing
1 cup icing sugar
3 tbsp calamansi juice
Mix with a whisk in a small bowl until smooth.
Like all sweet and tangy combo cakes, it takes a mature palate to take in the taste. The calamansi flavour actually kicks in each bite. A very distinct flavour from lemon or lime. The cake is moist, sweet and just a tad bit tangy. A somewhat Filipino cake, dressed in Oz.
PS - This is my first attempt at actual food styling - used a pale blue fabric off cut. After listening to Peter from Souvlaki for the Soul during the conference workshop and reading more of his brilliant tips from his latest post, I've been hunting around second hand shops looking for those odd vintage and classic pieces. I just hope I'll be able to stop to catch up on some more cooking! It does get kind of addictive!
Haha, I can see Peter's influence in your styling :) Nice job though! I love yoghurt or sour cream based cakes, the crumb seems much softer and the edges are a bit crispier.
ReplyDeleteThat is an amazing looking cake! So glad I was able to "inspire" haha *blush* Oh how I wish I have friends who can give me calamansi by the kilo! I sadly have to make do with the packet kind. Never mind, this cake was awesome!
ReplyDelete@Sefie Thanks Sefie! I'm totally getting addicted to finding props! Must. Stop. Soon. Lol!
ReplyDelete@Trisha Thanks Trisha for the inspiration! *hands clasp*. I'll keep you in mind when I have some calamansi by the buckets! Enjoy your hols!
ReplyDeleteThere is no end to the prop hunting - ever. Once you're hooked it's all over from there! Nice job jumping in, and the cake looks delicious too.
ReplyDelete@JJ @ 84thand3rd Thanks JJ! Yes, I am definitely hooked!
ReplyDelete