Monday, January 18, 2010

Fruit Cake

With apologies for my tweaking to November 1969 Gourmet Magazine

(RIP Gourmet Magazine)


In a large bowl combine

1 pound thin sliced candied pineapple

1 pound golden raisins (I use dried blueberries and cherries or craisins instead)

½ pound finely shrdded citron peel

½ pound candied cherries cut in half

½ pound sultanas

½ pound currents

½ pound shredded candied orange peel


Pour over the fruits

1 Cup Cognac, cover and refrigerate for two days, stirring occasionally.


Remove fruit from refrigerator and sprinkle with

½ cup flour


Add ½ pound pecans

Mix well with your hands.


Combine

1 ½ Cups flour

1 tsp cinnamon

3/4 teaspoon mace

½ tsp baking soda

1 pinch of ground cloves


In the mixer

Cream

½ cup butter until very light


Beat in 2 Cups sugar

6 eggs

2 squares unsweetened melted chocolate

1/4 Cup cognac


Add the flour mixture a little at a time until it is thoroughly mixed


Pour over the fruit and nut mixture and mix thoroughly with your hands (I use a large wooden spoon)


Butter two loaf tins, two 9 inch spring form pans, one (angel food) tube pan, or two 9 inch square pans and line with parchment paper, and butter it.


Pour the batter into the pans and bake at 275 for 1 ½ hours for the small pans or 3 hours for the tube pan.

Test the cakes for doneness by inserting a small skewer into the middle.

Remove from pans and let them cool for a couple of hours.

Remove the pans rom the tins, leaving the paper on and wrap them in clean muslin (a dishtowel works, or a cloth napkin) which has been saturated with cognac.

Store in an airtight tin for up to a year, being sure to keep a small towel on top saturated with cognac, and renew the cognac occasionally.


Note: I frequently keep adding cognac and keep the fruitcake for several years.


1 comment:

Bill Moser said...

This is one of the best fruitcakes I ever ate. You have to be one of those people who likes fruitcake, of course.