Monday, August 2, 2010

Treat of the Week: Victorian Tiara Sponge Cake

This one is a real doozy! A hot-milk sponge cake—a recipe that’s been used for hundreds of years—is the foundation for homemade French pastry cream, fresh cherries which have been deliciously glazed and a gorgeous crown of whipped cream. I wish I could give each one of you a piece of this cake! It’s light, creamy and scrumptious.

My mother has a knack for recreating pastries that would have been eaten in Victorian and Edwardian households. Can’t you see Mrs. Bridges from Upstairs, Downstairs presenting this cake to Lady Marjorie? One of my mother’s favorite kitchen tools is a cherry pitter that pits four cherries at once. When you bake the way she does, that’s a real time saver. I can assure you, there’s not a pit anywhere in this magnificent cake. I think, in fact, I’ll go have a piece right now.



5 comments:

Anonymous said...

Beautiful. The "Victoria Sponge" was one of the first recipes taught to young girls in the 19th Century. If anything like this it will have served them well their whole lives.

Book Lover said...

Beautiful!

Fran said...

Leave me in a room alone with that cake for five minutes, honey, and I'll give you back an empty plate.

Joseph Crisalli said...

Fran, I'm afraid, at this point, all you'd be alone with is that empty plate. : )

On My Soapbox said...

That is spectacular! Truly, edible art!

Will you share the recipe? :)