BATTENBERG CAKE
Posted on March 11, 2013 by Francesca Lanni
No cake is more British than a frivolous Battenberg cake. At any afternoon tea, in fact at any occasion bring out a Battenberg cake and watch smiles all round. There is something cheering about the distinctive pink and yellow squares tightly wrapped in a thick layer of marzipan that no other cake seems able to achieve. Battenberg Cake is believed to have been named in honor of the marriage of Queen Victoria’s granddaughter to Prince Louis of Battenberg in 1884. Though today many buy a Battenberg cake they are actually no more difficult to make than any other sponge cake as you can see in this Battenberg Cake recipe.
175g softenedbutter, plus extra for greasing
175g golden canster sugar
3 free-range eggs
175g self rising flour
½ tsp vanilla extract
red food colouring paste
For the covering
6 tbs apricot jam
500g ready-made marzipan
2–3 tbsp icing sugar for rolling.
Preparation method
Preheat the oven to 190C. Grease a 20cm square, loose-based cake tin with butter. Take a 30cm x 20cm strip of baking parchment and make a 8cm fold in the centre. This will create a division in the cake so that the two differently coloured sponges can be cooked at the same time. Line the tin with the baking parchment, keeping the division in the centre. Put the butter, sugar, eggs, flour and vanilla in a food processor and pulse until well combined. Transfer the batter to a bowl set on scales, remove half of the batter and put it in a different bowl. Add a small dab of red food colouring to one bowl and fold it into the batter until it is well blended. Spoon the cake batters into each side of the prepared tin and smooth the surface with the back of a spoon. Bake in the centre of the oven for about 25 minutes, or until the sponges have risen. Cool in the tin for five minutes, then slide a knife around the outside of each sponge and turn them out onto a wire rack. If the sponges have risen unevenly, press the surface gently until level. Leave until completely cold. To assemble the cake, first place one sponge on top of the other and trim off the crusty edges so they are both the same size. Cut the sponges in half lengthways to make four long rectangles. Warm the apricot jam in a saucepan then press through a fine sieve. Brush the long side of one of the sponges with jam and sandwich together with a sponge of a contrasting colour. Do the same with the other two sponges. Sandwich the two pairs of sponges together and brush the top and sides with jam. Place the marzipan on a surface dusted with icing sugar and roll into a rectangle of about 40cm x 20cm; it should be large enough to wrap the cake completely, leaving the ends exposed, and be about 5mm thick. Turn the cake upside down on the marzipan and brush the underside of the sponges with jam. Wrap the marzipan around the cake, pressing it gently onto the surface of the sponges, and press the edges together to make a firm join. Turn back over with the seam underneath, trim a thin slice off each end and place on a serving plate.