Monday
Nov072011

oranges not lemons


Growing up in the seventies, orange was a familiar sight on clothes and in homes. One house we lived in was painted orange outside. In another, the entire kitchen was orange. Even the floor was terracotta. You had to look up or out to rest your eyes on any other colour. And if it wasn't orange, it was brown. Brown carpets, brown cars, brown cord trousers. 

Nowadays, in our white worshipping society, you don't see orange around so much. But it happens to be my boy's favourite colour so I've felt compelled to use it around his room and in splashes around the house. Last year, I stretched some orange bird-printed IKEA fabric over a very large handmade wooden frame as a cheap (temporary, I thought) hanging on one of our high, breakfast room walls, but it's still there. We took it down, replaced it with more tasteful this and that, but the wall looked so lonely and cold without the vivid splash of colour so it's back up again, reflecting warmth back into the room. It's cheer-making, especially when the days outside are increasingly grey.

This bonfire weekend was heaven for orange lovers and as a contribution to a bonfire feast I made an orange saturated almond cake. Similar to the lemon cake I mentioned previously but moister, it's been a staple of ours for years as you can cook it in advance and let it really soak in the juices or whizz it up quickly on the night as I did, making it a lighter and drier affair. I like it straight with coffee but it sits very happily alongside ice-cream or crème fraîche and simply gets more richly delicious and moist over a number of days.

The recipe below is based on Claudia Roden's orange almond cake, the main difference being that the oranges are squeezed and zested rather than boiled and used whole, so it's that bit quicker to make.

Ingredients

4 eggs, separated

125g caster sugar

grated zest of two oranges

100g ground almonds

For the syrup

juice of four oranges (add an extra one if you want more syrup to pour)

125g caster sugar

a good splash of brandy or cointreau (though equally happy without it)

Preheat oven to 180C/350 F/gas mark 4. Beat together the egg yolks, sugar, orange zest and almonds.

Beat the egg whites until stiff, and fold into the yolk mixture. Pour the mixture into a greased and floured loose-bottomed cake tin.

Bake for 45 mins until golden brown. Meanwhile, place orange juice, sugar and brandy (or whatever) in a pan and bring to the boil. Simmer for 5 mins.

Pierce the cake all over, then pour over the syrup and leave to soak in. Jug any extra: rest assured, it will all be used.

By now your kitchen will be full of orangey deliciousness and November will seem a pleasant time of year. Enjoy.

 

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Reader Comments (6)

hi kate,
i love your orange post and the cake sounds delicious, definately one i shall attempt, thank you for sharing it.
with love ginny x
November 8, 2011 | Unregistered Commenterginny
do try the cake Ginny, it's perfect for adding a bit of sunshine to a gloomy day! x
November 9, 2011 | Registered Commenterlittle house
Your orange saturated almond cake would be so nice right now. I'm in the mood for dessert and we don't have a thing.
November 13, 2011 | Unregistered CommenterDenise | Chez Danisse
Yum!

And I'm obsessed with orange right now -- you are so right, I'm going straight back to my roots as well: the orange chairs and orange pendant over my childhood kitchen table. I just seem to want to go back, you know? To that blatantly optimistic half-globe shining down on us each winter night.
January 6, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterAnna
ps. Those sandals! Adorable :)
January 6, 2012 | Unregistered CommenterAnna
Anna, what a lovely way to describe the light hanging over your kitchen table. I agree that the older I get, the more I appreciate small things from my childhood. I'll think of you under that bright 'optimistic half-globe'.
January 8, 2012 | Registered Commenterlittle house

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