I was introduced to Jane’s site when she was assigned my blog as part of her Secret Recipe Club assignment. But it was when I was assigned her blog a few months later (as part of my SRC assignment) is when I really took to her blog, bookmarking tons of recipes. I finally zeroed in on an apple crisp recipe from her site and loved it.

A few days later I tried her red wine poached pears recipe, one of the many I bookmarked. And that recipe too was absolutely amazing.

Basically what I am trying to say here is that I just love Jane’s blog and all her recipes.

So when she asked for some help with guest posts, I jumped at the opportunity. I also owed her for the delicious coconut layer cake recipe that she had guest posted on my blog.

I decided to share my mom’s famous date cake recipe, which has got my mom several compliments over the past few years.

Some call it the sticky date pudding, but I have always known it as Date Cake with toffee sauce. The sauce is to die for and the cake is perfect served heated for just a few seconds in the microwave.

Head over to The Heritage Cook for the recipe and more. This is one recipe you would definitely want to try!


Guest Post for The Heritage Cook: Mom's Date Cake
 
Ingredients
Date Cake
  • 225 grams (7-1/4 oz) seedless dates
  • ½ cup chopped toasted walnuts
  • ½ tsp baking powder
  • 85 grams all purpose flour
  • 60 grams sugar (see note)
  • 100 grams (2-3/4 oz) butter, cut into pieces
  • 2 eggs
  • ½ tsp vanilla essence
  • Pinch salt
  • ½ tsp baking soda
Toffee Sauce
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • 3 tbsp sugar
  • 6 tbsp fresh cream, at room temperature
  • ½ cup roughly chopped toasted walnuts, optional
  • Instructions
Instructions
Make the Cake:
  1. Chop the dates, and soak them in 5 tbsp water and baking soda for 30 minutes. Keep aside.
  2. Preheat oven to 150°C / 300°F. Grease and dust with flour an 8-inch square cake pan. Sift the flour and baking powder in a bowl.
  3. In a stand mixer, or with an electric mixer beat the butter and sugar until light and creamy. Add in the eggs and beat well. Add the vanilla essence. Mix in the dates and walnuts to the flour mixture.
  4. Fold in the flour date mixture into the liquid mixture, mixing only until well combined.
  5. Bake in the oven for 50 to 60 minutes, or until a tester comes out clean. I would suggest checking after 50 minutes, my cake is generally almost done after 50 min. Remove from the oven and leave in pan for 5 minutes, before unmolding it.
  6. Prick the cake slightly with a fork for the sauce to seep in.
Make the Toffee Sauce:
  1. Caramelize the sugar on medium heat, until just about brown (not too dark, but light golden. It will continue to caramelize when you add in the butter and cream, so don’t let it turn too dark).
  2. Quickly add the butter. Stir for a few seconds only, and then quickly add the cream (be careful as it will sputter a little). Stir as you pour to avoid lumps. Return to low heat.
  3. Stir for a few seconds until well blended, removing the lumps, if any. (My mom sometimes adds a little milk if she has too many lumps of sugar, stirring it until all the lumps are removed). Do not bring to a boil.
  4. Spread on the cake immediately to get an even coating of the sauce. Quickly top with the chopped walnuts.
  5. Yield: 1 (8-inch) square cake or an 8-inch loaf tin (preferable)

 

As I started writing this post, I could hear the sounds of fighter planes (going about their routine sorties) in the background. And that was enough for nostalgia to sink in.

My dad is a fighter pilot for the Indian Air Force. My childhood has been spent in air force stations (or air force base as they are called in the US). And growing up, the sound of MiGs up in the sky was a common affair.

Sometimes our dads would have night flying. Those were much anticipated events for the wives and the children as well. For us kids, it meant meeting our friends past the regular day time hours and seeing air crafts take off on the runway at night. A truly incredible sight. Our moms would also pack a little snack or something for their kids and to share with everyone and it used to be a mini picnic of sorts. Those were fun days.

The recipe today has nothing to do with those days. In fact all this nostalgia started after I made this dish and made me reminisce the old days. I thought I would quickly share some of it with you.

Coming to this month’s recipe swap. I was supposed to post this recipe yesterday, as we always do for the monthly recipe swap. But somehow couldn’t.

This time Christianna had given us a vintage Ham snails recipe to play with.

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