Accy cyclist
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- Location
- The hills of Accrington
A neighbour gave me a home baked 'space cake' the other month. It didn't do much for me,apart from make me want to eat lots of 'normal' biscuits.

I used to have a breadmaker. It was useless. Maybe I should invest in a new one.. Just for cakes.I baked 4 cakes in my bread maker, as I don’t have a cooker presently. New offices at work so plonked them in our kitchen bit. I baked a ginger cake, lemon cake, toffee fudge cake and a chocolate cake. All sticky loaf recipes. All slices of cake gone by elevensies.
Thanks. Yep. Tasted good!Very good, Pete3X, and the others. Hope they taste as good as they look.
I only occasionally bake a cake, and nearly always a Christmas/Dundee kind of cake.
Cheesecakes are made more often as no baking is required.![]()
MrsPete is the scone queen here..I haven't the patience for all the measuring ingredients.
Scones are my limit.
Good ones.
That must have been fun!I don't bake nearly as many cakes as I used to - I'm more of a bread gal these days - but I did do a wedding cake for two very dear friends a while back. They got married at short notice to help in their court case over a very weird custody battle with an ex, and there was no time to order a cake. So there was me, flitting around Tesco at half eleven at night, buying cake ingredients. Made a two-tier chocolate ganache cake - went down well, there were only a few crumbs left after the reception.
View attachment 502141
That must have been fun!![]()
I do bake but have a limited range and nothing fancy. Trouble is since I live on my own I end up eating most of them which is not good for weight control.
I have baked what I would describe as a classic fruit cake a couple of times when I have someone to give it away to.
Turned out well, moist, fruit well distributed, domed top with a Y shaped crack in the crown, which I was told is a good sign.
I used a recipe by Marguerite Patten, and was very careful to weigh the ingredients and follow all the instructions.
A more talented cook than me could knock up a fruit cake by eye.
I see Patten made it to 99 before dying in 2015.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/11665211/Marguerite-Patten-food-writer-obituary.html
Marguerite Patten's recipes and methods are pretty well much foolproof.Some of them are my go-to for assorted bits.
Cake baking is one of the few things in cookery that you *can't* do by eye, as you are dependent on a fairly exacting chemical reaction to make the cake rise. Which means following recipes exactly. If you don't, you'll end up with something other than intended.
The closest I do to baking cakes by eye is a basic sponge, where you weigh your egg(s) in the shell, then weigh out the same amount of self raising flour, sugar and butter or marg.
As a keen cook you grasp the need for proportionality which would be lost on the less skilled.
I don't recall my grandmother using scales very much.
Experience would tell you an inch of butter off the pat is about 2ozs.
You might also know the weight, or at least the number of scoops required, using your favourite measuring spoon for flour and sugar.
I think all modern cooks are fortunate in having ovens which can hit a temperature reliably.
Going back to granny, I can recall being ticked off for leaving the back door open when she was trying to get the solid fuel Rayburn up to temperature.
I still tell people to open and close the doors gently or my sponge will go flat! Air pressure, so my mum said her mum told her!As a keen cook you grasp the need for proportionality which would be lost on the less skilled.
I don't recall my grandmother using scales very much.
Experience would tell you an inch of butter off the pat is about 2ozs.
You might also know the weight, or at least the number of scoops required, using your favourite measuring spoon for flour and sugar.
I think all modern cooks are fortunate in having ovens which can hit a temperature reliably.
Going back to granny, I can recall being ticked off for leaving the back door open when she was trying to get the solid fuel Rayburn up to temperature.