Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Paul's Cherry and Brandy Fruit Cake

 

This is my go to fruit cake recipe, all year round, when I'm not baking my Rum fruit cakes at Christmas time. This cake is also festively flavoured enough to grace your Christmas table, when dressed up in ribbons and bows.  Laced with brandy and adorned with whole glacé cherries throughout, it is a delicious cake to have on standby in your pantry or refrigerator when needed. This one will be travelling away with us shortly.

Our schoolteacher and foodie friend Paul, whom I have mentioned in some of my posts over the years gave me this recipe, which I am so grateful for. We had eaten this cake at Paul's house many times, and now I bake it regularly as well. I remember one year when Paul made many of them in large muffin tins, for sale at a local fête, and they all did the vanishing act. It's such a versatile recipe. It makes two 20 cm cakes, and I love that the second one can then be given to friends and family as a gift. Shannon our daughter adores this cake, especially the flavour of the brandy and the whole glacé cherries dotted throughout. This cake was originally Paul's Mother's recipe, and I think it's lovely that her recipe continues on today. She was a very good cook from what I can gather from Paul's stories.

When we are travelling, I often take one of these cakes with us, it's a taste of home, and wonderful with a cuppa along the way, and it keeps fresh really well, as fruit cakes do. Then there is also one in the refrigerator for when we arrive back home.

I just made two of these cakes this morning, and the aroma of them baking throughout the house was heavenly. My Mum loved baking fruit cakes, and she always said if a large spoon stood upright in the mixture, it was a good cake. Can you just see the handle standing up alone in this cake mixture?



This mornings Cherry and Brandy fruit cakes, ready for the oven


The weather is cooling down beautifully here now, so it's time to bake fruit cakes, with lots of aromatic spices, fruit and brandy.

Let's Cook:

Boiled Ingredients:

250 grams butter
1 cup of sugar
3/4 cup of water
3/4 cup brandy
1/2 kg sultanas
1/2 kg raisins
2 pkts glace cherries, left whole
1 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
1 tsp mixed spice

Method:

Place all the above ingredients in a large saucepan, melt the butter and slowly bring the ingredients to the boil. Simmer until the fruit softens, add 1 tsp. bicarbonate of soda, stir. The mixture will froth up excitedly because of the baking soda. Give the mixture a stir. Remove from the heat to cool. I sometimes leave my fruit cake mixtures to cool overnight, ready to bake in the morning.

Let's cook:

To a large bowl add the following ingredients:
1 1/2 cups Plain Flour
1 1/2 cups Self Raising Flour
3 eggs beaten plus the cooled boiled fruit, and mix thoroughly. 
Be sure to catch all of the flours from the base of your mixing bowl and mix in.

Cook in one tin or two 20 cm baking tins(I prefer two), or even large muffin tins. It is preferable to line the cake tins with two layers of brown paper to prevent them from burning.

In two 20 cm tins, cook for one hour and ten minutes at 160 degrees.


This was the first of Paul's Brandy and Cherry fruit cakes that I ever made. In this one I remember that I halved the cherries, now I don't. They need to remain whole or they become lost. Since then I've made many, and I've never had a failure.

Best wishes,

Pauline



17 comments:

  1. I can understand why you love this cake! It looks amazing :)

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  2. My husband loves a good fruit cake! This looks wonderful studded with lots of dried fruits.

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    1. Dear Angie I know he would love this one. Thanks for dropping by.

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  3. Complimenti, un golosissimo questo pane dolce!!!

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    1. Thanks so much for your lovely comment.

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    2. Congratulations, this sweet bread is delicious!!! Comment in English, Thankyou

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  4. this looks great Pauline. I have a fruitcake recipe that has a cup of coffee in the batter; and it's so delicious and moist :) I remember making fruitcakes with my mum and sister. It used to take all day as we had to blanch the almonds, and wash and chop the glace cherries, and prep all the ingredients. Good bonding time tho :)

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    1. Yes that sounds really worthwhile. I can imagine a cup of coffee in a fruit cake would be delicious. Thanks Sherry.

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  5. Replies
    1. Jeff, all that fruit makes it amazing in every way. Thanks so much.

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  6. I've actually never made a fruit cake but this looks so easy and delicious! I love the idea of making it in muffin tins. Side note: I wish I had smell a vision for this recipe!

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    1. Thanks Sammie, yes it smells pretty amazing. I suggest you start with making this one, so worthwhile:)

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  7. Fruit cake gets such a bad rap, but I have no idea why! Maybe it's the difference between bland store-bought cakes and the ones made at home. I'd love to try this version...it sounds absolutely fantastic!

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    1. That's interesting David, here in Australia I don't think they get a bad wrap, although some people just don't like them, like everything I suppose. This really is one of the best boiled fruit cakes I have ever eaten. Hope you give it a try, don't scrimp on the brandy.

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  8. We both love a good fruitcake and I plan to make this one for Christmas this year. Love it — thanks to you and Paul! David (C&L)

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    1. Thanks so much David, definitely go big on the brandy if it is for Christmas. I pour some over the top when it comes hot straight out of the oven, just adds to the flavour and aroma. I still have a whole cake sitting in my frig:)

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