Search

Brack: a fruit cake to celebrate Women's Christmas - BBC.com

buahkamp.blogspot.com

By Kate RyanFeatures correspondent

Kate Ryan photo of Christmas brackKate Ryan
Fruit cakes are a ubiquitous presence in Irish households (Credit: Kate Ryan)

Featured in Bake, a cookbook paying homage to Irish women bakers, Winter Brack is packed full of fruit, warming spices, almonds and orange.

Twelfth Night is the last great frolicking feast of Christmas. It's the day decorations are taken down and stored away – woe betide anyone who takes them down sooner, tempting bad luck for the coming year. Across the British Isles, 6 January is most associated with this hand-me-down piece of folklore, rather than the arrival of the Three Kings to Bethlehem bearing gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh for the baby Jesus.

On the south-western edge of Ireland, in Cork and bordering parts of Kerry, Twelfth Night is still celebrated in style, and exclusively by women. It's a night for soaking up the last vestiges of Christmas spirit in rambunctious merriment rather than a staid religious observance. 

[jump to recipe]

Known as Little or Women's Christmas, Twelfth Night is an occasion for women to kick back after the hard work of the festive season, gathering in groups of friends and family to dine, drink, chat, laugh and dance the night away.

Christmas cake is a traditional part of Twelfth Night celebrations; rich with fruit, spices and alcohol, covered with marzipan and royal icing, decorated with festive figurines and foil sashes. Where the annual custom of Christmas cake making, baking and feeding (with copious amounts of brandy or whiskey over many months) persists, the effort and expense is never employed for just one cake.

Three cakes are made to last the 12 days of Christmas in Ireland. The first is cut at midnight on Christmas Eve, marking the end of the Christmas fast and paired with whiskey. The second is cut on New Year's Eve, and the third on Twelfth Night. Charms are baked into the third cake – a bean and a pea – and whoever finds them is named king or queen for a night.

Fruit cakes are a ubiquitous presence in Irish households. There is always one in a tin somewhere, ready to serve with butter and freshly brewed tea. Those enriched with tea-soaked fruits are called tea bracks, a lighter version of Christmas cake and less time consuming to make.

Graham Herterich is a chef, baker and owner of The Bakery by The Cupcake Bloke in Dublin. He recently published his first cookbook, Bake. The book is a homage to the women in his family who taught him to bake and nurtured his love for it, especially his Granny Flynn, who taught him how to make tea brack.

"Food has always been a part of my life. I grew up over the family butcher's shop so, from an early age, I learned the importance of food; that it kept a roof over our heads," said Herterich. The men of the family worked in their butchery business, but the women had the biggest influence on him.

"My earliest food memory is my Granny Flynn soaking fruit for a tea brack. I remember sitting at a marbled blue Formica table in her kitchen while she weighed her fruit into a Mason Cash bowl. The tea was always Campbell's loose leaf from its yellow tin and most importantly, Granny Flynn told me that the tea should be almost cold."

Almost cold because, explained Herterich, if the fruit is put into hot tea they become too plump; too cold and it takes longer to soak. Almost cold and soaked overnight produces the best results.

Kate Ryan For the best brack, dried fruit is soaked overnight in "almost cold" tea (Credit: Kate Ryan)Kate Ryan
For the best brack, dried fruit is soaked overnight in "almost cold" tea (Credit: Kate Ryan)

Granny Flynn was to tea brack what Herterich's Aunty Mary was to Christmas cake.

"Aunty Mary was an unbelievable baker; she did all the Christmas baking and a big part was the gifting of cakes. I remember Aunty Mary coming up to the house specifically to gift these cakes to my mum," said Herterich. It speaks to a time when candied and dried fruits, spices and spirits were expensive luxuries for ordinary people and handmade cakes packed full of such dainties were considered generous gifts.

"Aunty Mary's cakes were always packed with fruit, especially lovely dark, rich cherries. She used whiskey and brandy to soak the fruit and feed the cake, made her own marzipan and used a lot of flaked almonds for a really nutty taste."

Herterich has never lost his love for tea brack, dedicating a whole chapter in his book to the simple pleasure of brack and butter. In honour of his Granny Flynn's tea brack and Aunty Mary's Christmas Cake, Herterich created a Winter Brack that marries his two favourite food memories.

"Winter brack is packed full of fruit, warming spices, almonds and orange. Serve it sliced with lots of proper butter and a cuppa. As a simple alternative to Christmas cake, top with a thick layer of marzipan and Royal Icing," he said.

Kate Ryan Winter brack can be served simply with butter, or topped with marzipan and royal icing for Christmas (Credit: Kate Ryan)Kate Ryan
Winter brack can be served simply with butter, or topped with marzipan and royal icing for Christmas (Credit: Kate Ryan)

Winter Brack recipe

By Graham Herterich

Makes one loaf

This version of the classic Irish fruit cake is packed full of fruit, warming spices, almonds and orange. It can be eaten simply with lots of butter and a cup of tea, or dressed up with marzipan and royal icing for a special occasion.

Ingredients

250g sultanas or golden raisins

50g mixed peel (or mixed candied lemon and orange peel)

25g dried figs, cut into small pieces

25g dried cranberries

25g glacé or candied cherries, cut in half

300g almost cold tea (brew from black loose leaf tea)

125g caster sugar

25g flaked (or sliced) almonds, plus extra to sprinkle on top

1 large egg, beaten

zest of 1 orange

2 tsp mixed spice (see Note)

1 tsp ground cinnamon

1 tsp vanilla extract

225g self-rising flour

Method

Step 1

Place the sultanas, mixed peel, figs, cranberries, cherries and tea in a large bowl and leave to soak overnight at room temperature.

Step 2

When ready to bake, preheat the oven to 180C/350F fan. Line a 900g (2lb) loaf tin with non-stick baking paper.

Step 3

Add the sugar, almonds, egg, orange zest, mixed spice, cinnamon and vanilla to the fruit and tea and mix well. Gently mix in the flour, being careful not to crush the fruit. Transfer to the lined loaf tin.

Step 4

Bake in the oven for 60–65 minutes. The cake is done when a skewer inserted into the centre of the loaf comes out clean. Allow to cool fully in the tin. Turn out of the tin, sprinkle on more almonds and cut into slices to serve.

Note

Mixed spice is a particular blend of spice used in baking. It's sometimes called "sweet spice" and is a mix of allspice, cinnamon, nutmeg, ground ginger, cloves, coriander, fennel, caraway and cardamon, all ground into a powder. If it's unavailable, pumpkin spice can be used, but it will change the flavour of the brack significantly.

 

BBC.com's World's Table "smashes the kitchen ceiling" by changing the way the world thinks about food, through the past, present and future.

--- 

Join more than three million BBC Travel fans by liking us on Facebook, or follow us on Twitter and Instagram.

If you liked this story, sign up for The Essential List newsletter – a handpicked selection of features, videos and can't-miss news delivered to your inbox every Friday.



Copyright 2023 BBC. All rights reserved.  The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.

Beta Terms By using the Beta Site, you agree that such use is at your own risk and you know that the Beta Site may include known or unknown bugs or errors, that we have no obligation to make this Beta Site available with or without charge for any period of time, nor to make it available at all, and that nothing in these Beta Terms or your use of the Beta Site creates any employment relationship between you and us. The Beta Site is provided on an “as is” and “as available” basis and we make no warranty to you of any kind, express or implied.

In case of conflict between these Beta Terms and the BBC Terms of Use these Beta Terms shall prevail.

Adblock test (Why?)



"fruit" - Google News
December 16, 2023 at 09:00PM
https://ift.tt/N9G5BlW

Brack: a fruit cake to celebrate Women's Christmas - BBC.com
"fruit" - Google News
https://ift.tt/x6Ckifo
https://ift.tt/LdwKZbs

Bagikan Berita Ini

0 Response to "Brack: a fruit cake to celebrate Women's Christmas - BBC.com"

Post a Comment

Powered by Blogger.