Join MultiplyOpen a Free ShopSign InHelp
MultiplyLogo
SEARCH
RecipeJun 20, '08 8:21 AM
for everyone
Category:   Baking
Servings:   make two cake

Description:
This recipe produces a really moist fruitcake. It was given to me by a Panamanian friend, and it's really easy. It is also call "Black Wedding Cake" and it is used on birthdays, Weddings, Christmas, or just for a treat.

We fill this cake with raisins, currants, peel, walnuts, and cherries, all ground up. Lots of rum and brandy is used in the preparation of this cake. The fruits are kept soaking in aged premium rum for months!
This is not an Ordinary Fruit cake but a delicious wedding cake.

Ingredients:
1 lb Raisins; minced
1 lb Prunes, pitted; minced
1 lb Currants, dried; minced
1 lb Cherries, glaceed; minced
6 oz Lemon peel, glaceed; minced
6 oz Orange peel, glaceed; minced
3/4 l Passover wine or cherry Brandy
3/4 l Rum, dark
2 lb Sugar, dark brown
4 1/4 c Flour, cake
4 ts Baking powder
1/2 ts Nutmeg, grated
1/2 ts Cinnamon
2 c Butter, sweet; softened
10 lg Egg
1 T Vanilla
1 1/2 c Almond paste; if desired

ICING

2 lb Sugar, confectioners; sifted
6 lg Egg white; room temp
2 T Lemon juice
This is for decorations is do not wish to decorated cake skip this part.

Directions:
Preparations


In a large bowl, mix all the fruits thoroughly with the wine and the
rum; let the fruit macerate, covered, at room temperature for at
least two weeks.

In a heavy skillet combine one pound of the brown sugar and 1 cup water.
Bring to a boil over moderate heat, stirring until the sugar is dis-
solved, and gently boil the syrup, swirling the skillet occasionally,
for a few minutes, or until it is reduced to 1 3/4 cups. Let the syrup
cool; reserve.

Sift the flour, baking powder, cinnamon and nutmeg together into a bowl.
In the large bowl of an electric mixer cream together the remaining
brown sugar and the butter until it is fluffy; then beat in the eggs,
one at a time, beating well after each addition. Beat in the vanilla,
the flour mixture, and 1 1/3 cups of the burnt sugar syrup, reserving
the remaining syrup for another use. In another large bowl, combine
well the flour mixture and the fruit mixture and divide the batter
between two buttered and floured 10″ spring form pans. Bake the cakes in
the middle of a preheated 350 F. oven for two hours, or until a tooth-
pick inserted in the centers comes out with some crumbs adhering to it.
(The centers of these cakes will be quite moist.) Let the cakes cool in
the pans on a rack, remove the sides and bottoms of the pans, and wrap
the cakes in foil or wax paper. Let the cakes stand at room temperature
for a week.

Roll out half the almond paste between sheets of plastic wrap to form a
10″ round and remove the top sheet of plastic wrap. Fit the almond
paste layer over one cake, trimming the edge if necessary, and remove
the other sheet of plastic wrap. Roll out and fit the remaining almond
paste onto the remaining cake in the same manner.

Icing:


Using an electric mixer, beat 4 cups of the confectioners' sugar
with the egg whites and lemon juice until the mixture will hold a soft
peak. Beat in the remaining sugar, and beat the icing until it will
hold a stiff peak. Transfer two cups of the icing to a pastry bag
fitted with a decorative tip, spread the remaining icing on the tops and
sides of the cakes with a long metal spatula, and pipe the icing in the
pastry bag decoratively onto the cakes. Arrange the dragees on the
cakes.


maryr1 wrote on Jun 20, '08
Thanks for posting this Katya. I dont eat any type of fruit cake but this is a good description etc. hugs
ladykatya wrote on Jun 20, '08
this is not an ordinary fruit cake the fruits are dump in run and keep there for months, its like nothing you had ever eaten
tonij16102 wrote on Jun 20, '08
Looks beautiful and I bet tastes as goos as it looks
ladykatya wrote on Jun 20, '08
this is my first time using the recipe tab, and I have so many recipe to pass over, but I will do then one every day, not to over whelms you guys. love
tonij16102 wrote on Jun 20, '08
You always have great recipes to share
ladykatya wrote on Jun 20, '08
thanks love
I love you
carolmcht wrote on Jun 20, '08
oh I love the Carribian one
ladykatya wrote on Jun 20, '08
went you cut into the cake. it is black inside, that is why it is also call Black Cake.
When I came to this country I heard of fruit cake I though it was like the black cake but no. I did not like it and I have try it a few time even home bake. your fruit cake is nothing like Black Cake, this cake take moths to have it ready. the fruit ferment in the run and one piece of cake may get you tipsy.
enchantedengima wrote on Jun 21, '08, edited on Jun 21, '08
I've heard of this before...it sounds yummy! And I love how its decorated...great for a beach wedding.
Add a Comment