I thought I would make a fruit loaf that would incorporate a little of my homemade Seville marmalade that I made this year. I do enjoy a slice of fruit loaf occasionally with a good hot cup of tea in the afternoon, especially at a weekend when the family are around.
Makes 1x 2lb loaf
You will need a 900g (2 lb) loaf tin, greased with butter and lined with baking parchment.
Method
Preheat the oven to 180°C/fan160°C/350°F/Gas mark 4.
Put the raisins, currants, sultanas, butter, water and brown sugar into a large saucepan. Heat slowly until the butter has melted completely. Take the pan of the heat and allow to cool for a few minutes. Add the beaten eggs, sieved flour, spice, marmalade, cherries, peel, almonds, whisky and orange extract if using. Mix thoroughly together. Pour the mixture into the prepared loaf tin. Bake for 1 hour in the preheated oven or until the cake is a golden brown and a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean. Leave the cake in the loaf tin to cool for at least 30 minutes before turning out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
This cake should keep well if stored in an airtight tin wrapped in foil. It can be served sliced and served plain or spread with butter for afternoon tea.
Lastly cut a slice and sit back with a lovely cup of hot tea and savour your delightful homemade bake!
This loaf is such a ‘piece of cake’ *sorry for the pun* to make and just involves warming a few fruits up in a sauce pan and incorporating the rest of the ingredients, couldn’t be more simple than that. No one would ever suspect just how easy it is and that can be our little secrete should you make this fruit loaf and serve it to your family and friends! It really is a lovely fruit loaf with that hint of whisky; of course the whisky can be omitted from the recipe but in my opinion it really gives this fruit loaf an overall edge on flavour.
Whisky Fruit Loaf
Makes 1x 2lb loaf
Ingredients
75g (3 oz) raisins
60g (2½ oz) currants
75g (3 oz) sultanas
50g (2 oz) butter
100ml (3½ fl oz) water
60g (2½ oz) soft brown sugar
2 eggs, lightly beaten
1 tsp ground mixed spice
25g (1 oz) flaked almonds
50g (2 oz) mixed peel, chopped
175g (6 oz) self-raising flour, sieved
2 tbsp marmalade
50g (2 oz) glace cherries, chopped
2 tbsp whisky
¼ tsp orange extract (optional)
75g (3 oz) raisins
60g (2½ oz) currants
75g (3 oz) sultanas
50g (2 oz) butter
100ml (3½ fl oz) water
60g (2½ oz) soft brown sugar
2 eggs, lightly beaten
1 tsp ground mixed spice
25g (1 oz) flaked almonds
50g (2 oz) mixed peel, chopped
175g (6 oz) self-raising flour, sieved
2 tbsp marmalade
50g (2 oz) glace cherries, chopped
2 tbsp whisky
¼ tsp orange extract (optional)
You will need a 900g (2 lb) loaf tin, greased with butter and lined with baking parchment.
Method
Preheat the oven to 180°C/fan160°C/350°F/Gas mark 4.
Put the raisins, currants, sultanas, butter, water and brown sugar into a large saucepan. Heat slowly until the butter has melted completely. Take the pan of the heat and allow to cool for a few minutes. Add the beaten eggs, sieved flour, spice, marmalade, cherries, peel, almonds, whisky and orange extract if using. Mix thoroughly together. Pour the mixture into the prepared loaf tin. Bake for 1 hour in the preheated oven or until the cake is a golden brown and a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean. Leave the cake in the loaf tin to cool for at least 30 minutes before turning out onto a wire rack to cool completely.
This cake should keep well if stored in an airtight tin wrapped in foil. It can be served sliced and served plain or spread with butter for afternoon tea.
Lastly cut a slice and sit back with a lovely cup of hot tea and savour your delightful homemade bake!
24 comments:
This looks delicious, I have a weakness for glace cherries :)
Gorgeous loaf with plenty of fruits..amazing!!
This fruit cake looks really good! A delicious treat!
Cheers,
Rosa
Rosie, I know a certain special man in my home that would absolutely adore this cake!! This cake looks perfect to serve with that afternoon cuppa.
Maria
x
My dear Rosie What`s really nice and yummy loaf!!look wonderful and I love with whisky!! Cheerss!!!
(ppst!! Mommy will love this!!!!)Gloria
I love fruit cakes and yours looks stunning.
What a wonderful looking cake!
I'd love to have a slice with my tea. :)
i'm a sucker for a good fruit loaf... send it my way! :p
Just 2 tbsp whisky? No idea what you could do with the rest of it.....
I've never seen a bread like this before it certainly looks nice and moist!
ooooooo Christmas is coming early this year!!! looks lovely!
This fruit loaf looks fantastic. I love breads like this. You're right. So perfect with a cup of tea in the afternoon!
Yummy..thats truly full of fruits..making me hungry Rosie...and the jar makes me crazy too..thanks for sharing
ohhh its so easy to make n looks so yum......you know the marmalade made me drool.......n such a pretty bottle...awesome.
Wow such a nutritious cke with all nuts ..It is so simple and looks yummm..Love marmalade..That is one cute jar..
Ohh that looks lovely Rosie. I could just eat a slice now. Wonderful looking marmalde too.
I love fruit loafs and this one looks really fruity delicious.
What a fun blog! Love it.
One sweet cake!
I have a pear torte posted (last month I believe) that you might like.
Actually, I noticed your signature -may I ask how you got it - is is a widget? thanks for responding :)
i know it would have tasted great..i can imagine the taste..looks awesome..
Yum Rosie - I love thick, fruity cakes like this.
That looks lovely and moist Rosie, perfect with a cup of tea!
Looks good! I really like fruit loafs like this.
Just made this cake and it looks and smell delicious, thankyou.
Alexa
Post a Comment