It’s an unusual cake in that when it comes to mixing in the flour you are actually after a slightly lumpy batter as over mixing it will result in a dense heavy cake. In this respect it’s more like a muffin mix where the little lumps of flour help give the crumb its airy texture and springiness. My grandad is also diabetic (diet controlled) so I liked the fact that the recipe didn’t contain too much sugar and that it made use of a nutty streusel topping instead of a buttercream or frosting.
The streusel topping bakes into a delicious crispy crumbly topping and the added nuts get a gentle toasting making them even more flavoursome and nutty. The cake itself was studded with the blackberries which were full of flavour and added little pockets of bright purple juiciness. It was delicious when served slightly warm – we even reheated slices the next day in the microwave, the perfect accompaniment to a cup of afternoon tea.
Blackberry & Lime Cake with Walnut Streusel Topping
(Recipe adapted from Delia Smith)250g blackberries
Zest of ½ lime
275g plain flour
1 tsp baking powder
½ tsp salt
2 eggs
75g caster sugar
170ml milk
110g butter
Streusel
75g plain flour½ tsp baking powder
25g butter
50g Demerara sugar
50g walnuts
1 tbsp water
Method – Streusel Topping
Place the flour, baking powder and butter into a bowl. Use the tips of your fingers to rub the butter into the flour, lifting it up and letting the mix fall back into the bowl. Continue until you have no large lumps of butter left and the flour is starting to look like crumbs.Chop the walnuts into small chunks and mix through the flour mixture along with the sugar. Add the water and rub briefly so the mix forms little into little clumps. Set aside until required.
Blackberry Lime Cake
Preheat the oven to 190C. Grease a deep 8inch springform tin and line the base with baking paper.Whisk the eggs, sugar and milk together until combined and just starting to look foamy. Melt the butter until liquid, then pour into the egg mix and briefly whisk again.
Sift the flour and baking powder over the top and add the salt and lime zest. Mix with a spatula or wooden spoon in a folding motion until no flour streaks remain – it should look lumpy – this is ok – don’t try and beat them out!
Add the blackberries and gently fold them in, don’t mix too much or they will break down, but a few purple streaks are quite pretty.
Pour the cake batter into the tin and scatter over the streusel topping.
Bake in the oven for 1 hour until the top is deep golden brown and a skewer inserted in the middle comes out clean.
Allow to cool in the tin for 30 minutes before removing from the tin and leaving to cool to room temperature.
Delicious served still warm with cream or crème fraiche
Serves 8-10
15 comments:
Looks delicious Katie - lovely seasonal flavours, I hope your Grandad enjoyed it too!
Blackberry and lime sounds intruiging!
sounds like a great cake for your grandfather - I am sure he appreciated it - and I wish I could go blackberrying
Lucky Granddad! This cake looks very impressive, love that first photo.
I love anything with streusel. That cake looks wonderful!!
That sounds like a lovely combination of flavours.
Love the colour of those berries and like the sound of the lime zest combination - yum.
I love the combination of lime and blackberries - your blackberries look perfect!
Lovely looking cake, perfect for this time of year.
That looks delicious! I love the photograph of the berries
That looks amazing - I love the colour of baked blackberries and the fact that no two slices look the same!
That cake looks delicious! The topping is just like the icing on the cake- it makes it perfect.
Interesting recipe and a delicious sounding cake. I'm loving the sound of the nutty streusel topping.
Love the sound and look of this cake!
Maria
x
Blackberries always remind me of my own grandpa, and it draws me to every recipe I see. This cake looks fabulous!
The combination of blackberry and lime sounds so summery to me. I hope your grandpa loved it!
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