Recipe: Orange Drizzle Cake

Lucy Deedes Orange Drizzle Cake from the Little Book of Marmalade

Published 19th Feb 2021

Every week food and wine expert, Nigel Barden, joins Simon Mayo on Scala Radio to talk us through a new recipe and the drinks to compliment them.

As well as satisfying your taste buds, we also satisfy your ears with a classical track that compliments the food perfectly.

Simon Mayo's show is on from 10am until 1pm every Saturday and you can listen here. On Saturday 5th February we made Orange Drizzle Cake.

The full recipe is below:

Orange Drizzle Cake

by Lucy Deedes from The Little Book of Marmalade (HarperCollins)

Serves 10

Ingredients

2 oranges

200g butter, at room temperature

200g golden caster sugar

3 large eggs, beaten (or Nigel says use 3 medium, if that’s what you have)

200g self-raising flour

40g ground almonds

1 tsp fresh rosemary, chopped

1 large tbsp marmalade, shreds roughly chopped

For the drizzle

4 tbsp caster sugar

2 tbsp water

Method

Heat the oven to 180°C/160°C fan/Gas 4. Grease a 20cm cake tin and line with baking parchment.

Slice 1 of the oranges into rounds and lay the slices neatly in a single layer to cover the base of the prepared tin.

Cream the butter and sugar together in a food mixer. Mix in the beaten egg a third at a time, adding a spoonful of the flour if it looks like curdling. Sift in the flour and ground almonds and mix until smooth. Grate in the zest of the remaining orange and add a squeeze of the juice (keep the rest of the juice for the drizzle). Stir in the rosemary and marmalade.

Spoon the mixture into the cake tin, being careful not to dislodge the orange slices. Bake for 30–45 minutes, until a skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean, then remove from the oven and allow to cool in its tin for 15 minutes.

Meanwhile, to make the drizzle, mix the remaining orange juice with the sugar and water in a small pan. Warm over a medium heat, stirring as the liquid turns into a syrup.

Turn the cake out of its tin and onto a plate, prick holes on the top with a skewer, and pour over the syrup. Leave for a few minutes for the syrup to sink in. Serve warm as a pudding, with cream or ice cream. Once cold, eat as cake!