Tuesday, January 13, 2009



Here is the results of the mini christmas cakes I made for Ewan's teachers at school. The fruit cakes were started in November (later than i should have) using a great recipe from a british cake decorator book by Mary Clee Cladman. I used 5.25 inch round mini springform cake pans. The cakes were topped up almost weekly/fortnightly with brandy until the final layers of apricot glaze, home made marzipan and royal icing were used to finish the cake off. I decorated the tops of the cake with fondant trees and royal icing baubles, and ribbon around the edge.

They were presented on a decorative ceramic plate with a candy cane and wrapped in a large seasonal celophane bag! I was really happy with the finished product, with contained a card explaining how and why we have christmas cake in the UK.
Christmas cake is normally served at around teatime. A Christmas Tea is traditionally very light -- cold meats, cheeses, pickles, salad, sandwiches, Christmas cake and mince pies. (Although to be fair, on Christmas day, the eating never stops from lunchtime to bedtime: chocolates, crisps, biscuits, cakes, fruit, nuts, sweets etc. Well, we do buy a lot of food -- so we do our best to eat it all!)
Christmas cake was originally Twelfth Night Cake, a rich fruitcake made to celebrate Epiphany. But the Puritans had removed Twelfth Night from the church calendar and by the late 19th Century it was becoming a night associated with mischief making, so Queen Victoria banned it as a feast day in 1870. The bakers, not wishing to lose any money, simply iced the cakes they'd already baked to represent a snowy scene and sold them as Christmas cake instead.
Homemade with raisins, sultanas, currants, glace cherries, candied lemon & orange peel, grated zest and juice of oranges, butter, eggs, flour and lots of brandy. Then baked for several hours, left to mature for several weeks and finished with marzipan and royal icing. And finally presented to you from the Palfreyman Family as a gift to enjoy! Just store this cake in an airtight container and it will last for several weeks!


If you are interested here is the wording on the labels!!!

"Christmas cake is normally served at around teatime. A Christmas Tea is traditionally very light -- cold meats, cheeses, pickles, salad, sandwiches, Christmas cake and mince pies. (Although to be fair, on Christmas day, the eating never stops from lunchtime to bedtime: chocolates, crisps, biscuits, cakes, fruit, nuts, sweets etc. Well, we do buy a lot of food -- so we do our best to eat it all!)
Christmas cake was originally Twelfth Night Cake, a rich fruitcake made to celebrate Epiphany. But the Puritans had removed Twelfth Night from the church calendar and by the late 19th Century it was becoming a night associated with mischief making, so Queen Victoria banned it as a feast day in 1870. The bakers, not wishing to lose any money, simply iced the cakes they'd already baked to represent a snowy scene and sold them as Christmas cake instead.
Homemade with raisins, sultanas, currants, glace cherries, candied lemon & orange peel, grated zest and juice of oranges, butter, eggs, flour and lots of brandy. Then baked for several hours, left to mature for several weeks and finished with marzipan and royal icing. And finally presented to you from the Palfreyman Family as a gift to enjoy! Just store this cake in an airtight container and it will last for several weeks!"

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