As this month's Tea Time Treat's challenge was to celebrate it's first birthday by baking a cake, this recipe seemed quite appropriate, as it was created with celebration in mind.
I didn't want a layer cake, though, and also didn't want a fresh cheese frosting, so I baked the cake as a traybake, in a 20 x 30 cm (8 x 12") tin, and topped with a light buttercream recipe. The only change I made to the recipe was to use 50g chopped toasted hazelnuts instead of pecans, to suit my daughter's dislike of some nuts. Because the tin size I chose made a deeper cake than if it was baked in two sandwich tins, it took a little longer to bake - about 40 minutes in total. My buttercream recipe was based on that in the Hummingbird Bakery Cookbook, which uses only 80g butter to 250g icing sugar. I added two tablespoons of maple syrup and a teaspoon of vanilla extract as a flavouring, and then sprinkled the frosted cake with maple sugar crystals.
Tea Time Treats is a monthly baking event co-hosted by Karen at Lavender and Lovage and Kate at What Kate Baked. Each month the challenge is to produce something which celebrates the (almost) lost ritual of the tea-time; this month the host is Karen, who has chosen cake in celebration of a whole year of baking for Tea Time Treats! She will be publishing a round-up at the end of the month.
13 comments:
This is lovely, a rustic and unusual combination of ingredients (haven't heard much of parsnip in recipes). I think a square of cake would be delicious with a cup of tea, the perfect tea time treat x
oooh, out come the vegetable cake recipes... I love it, it looks so unctuous and full of sweetness... bet the added maple syrup really made this wonderful... beautiful frosting too... slice on it's way to me i assume?
This sounds delicious Sue once I get all the ingre I shall bake as traybake:)
Looks great as a tray bake. I have made the full version of this a few years ago and its fabulous! I really must try baking with parsnip again
I've used other veg in cakes, but I don't think I've ever used parsnips. This sounds like an excellent set of flavours. Lovely traybake.
Love the flavour combination, and a great idea to make it as a traybake. Haven't tried baking with parsnip, but you have inspired me Suelle.
I think I have this recipe buried in my magazine clippings file! Glad was a success, I've baked bread very succesfully with parsnips in so am very sure I would equally like it in cake form!
Thank you very much for entering such a fantastic bake into TTT for our very first birthday!! I too have this recipe bookmarked and looking forward to trying it after your success!
I can't believe you beat me to it ;-) I made this a few days ago and was thinking it would be perfect for TTT and you've posted it already! I do really, really like it as a cake though - you're quite right that it's definitely the case that the result is more than the sum of the parts. I was surprised to find that I couldn't really taste the maple syrup at all. I wasn't expecting to taste the parsnips (and I didn't) but overall it was such a great cake. I'll definitely make it again. I used a vanilla buttercream with mine, but should probably have used a maple syrup buttercream. Great minds think alike (and I won't complete that saying...!)
Caroline - what a strange co-incidence! But you should still post your cake to TTT.
What a FABULOUS birthday cake for Tea Time Treats, thanks so much for baking this for Kate and I, and THANKS for lighting the candle too! I love the idea of adding parsnips to cake as they are sweet, and I bet this was just amazing! Karen
How funny that you and C should both make the same cake. But they are both very different. I just need to try a slice of yours and a slice of hers so I can see just what effect those differences have.
An aquired taste
Post a Comment