Jamie drizzling honey on top of a fig tart

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Eccles cake
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Charming Eccles cakes

Eccles cake
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1 hr plus cooling
Not Too Tricky

serves 16

About the recipe

My Eccles cakes are smaller and a little cuter than the traditional ones, but I think that makes them perfect little treats for teas, parties and any other sort of sharing occasion. I’ve added some really exciting sour fruits to the traditional currant and raisin filling, and also added a fresh bay leaf, for a tutti-frutti vibe. These really are exceptionally good served with a brilliant cheese and a little glass of port for dessert, or as a treat at a picnic. Hope you enjoy.


nutrition per serving

Calories

g

Fat

g

Saturates

g

Sugars

g

Salt

g

Protein

g

Carbs

g

Fibre

of an adult’s reference intake


Recipe From

Jamie's Great Britain

Jamie's Great Britain

By Jamie Oliver

Ingredients

FILLING

1 large fresh bay leaf

1 lemon

1 orange

1 whole nutmeg, for grating

1 level teaspoon mixed spice

100g demerara sugar, plus extra for sprinkling

150g mixed dried fruits, such as golden sultanas, sour bilberries, raisins, cranberries, apricots

2 balls of stem ginger, plus syrup

75g eating apple (just over half an apple)

PASTRY

plain flour, for dusting

1 x 500g all-butter puff pastry

1 large free-range egg

icing sugar, for dusting

Method

  1. Preheat the oven to 200°C/400°F/gas 6. Line two baking trays with greaseproof paper.
  2. Strip the bay leaf off its stalk and bash it up with a pestle and mortar to break it down and release the oils.
  3. Finely grate in the lemon and orange zest, as well as about half the nutmeg, and add the mixed spice and the demerara sugar. Muddle everything around a few times, then put aside.
  4. Pop the dried fruit into a bowl, finely chopping the apricots (if using), then finely chop the stem ginger and add to the bowl along with 1 teaspoon of stem ginger syrup and the flavoured sugar.
  5. Core and cut the apple into 1cm chunks, then add to the bowl of dried fruit, quickly mix to combine and put aside.
  6. Dust a clean surface and a rolling pin with flour and roll the puff pastry out to about 3mm thick, dusting with more flour as you go.
  7. Cut out rounds with a 10cm cookie cutter – just pull any leftover pastry into a ball and roll that out too; it might rise slightly differently, but that’s all right – you should end up with 16 rounds in total.
  8. Put 1 tablespoon of fruit filling into the middle of each pastry circle, then stretch the pastry up and over the filling, bringing it together on top and sealing it in the middle.
  9. Arrange the Eccles cakes on the baking trays, with the sealed side facing down, then use a knife to make three little slits in the top. Some of the juices from the filling might spill out a bit as the cakes cook, but that’s only going to create sticky golden caramelized bits later, so it’s not a bad thing.
  10. Beat the egg, then quickly egg wash each cake. Dust a little icing sugar over each one and sprinkle with a pinch of demerara sugar.
  11. Bake in the oven for 15 to 18 minutes, or until they’re golden, puffy and beautiful, then leave to cool and serve as part of a picnic spread, or with a nice cup of tea.

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