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Retro bakes - which is your favourite?

(57 Posts)
Nannanoo Mon 30-Nov-15 13:27:48

I came over all 'retro' last week, and made a batch of rock cakes - remember those? They were delicious, and I'm ashamed to say that I scoffed most of them. grin
It took me back to my years as a student nurse. If we were lucky enough to be off duty on a Sunday afternoon, we were served tea in Matron's sitting room. There was a very old rickety tea trolley, and on it would be a white, lacy cloth, plates of bread and butter, a large pot of 'builders' tea, and either rock cakes or jam tarts. cupcake brew
The menu never changed, but it was such a treat for us to sit and be waited on by a maid, and to eat as much bread and cake as we wanted.
What is your favourite 'retro' cake? I think Mary Berry has given us a lot of encouragement to go back to baking sessions, and retirement gives some of us the opportunity!

oldgoat Mon 14-Dec-15 23:07:54

Fatty cakes made, as the name suggests with lots of lard and sugar. Lovely! DM used to buy them in our local Co-op in Gloucestershire. Don't know whether you can buy them now but they should definitely carry a health warning.

Bijou Mon 14-Dec-15 14:03:41

Seed cake, Victoria sponge and bread and butter pudding made with fruit bread, rice pudding with a lot of nutmeg. I still have my Radiation Gas cook book from the 1950's.

granjura Mon 14-Dec-15 13:48:11

Made some Grantham ginger biscuits the other day- as we had an open day for our great 18C building renovation- which will open later this year as a Museum about the history of watch-making, especially the early days of peasant-watch makers in the area. The oldest biscuist recipe in the UK, dating back to the 1740s- great and so so easy to make. Just make little balls wit the mixture and they puff up and bake with a hollow centre. Delish.

Tish Mon 14-Dec-15 13:24:43

I still make rock buns regularly, a Good housekeeping recipe from I don't know when and they never last more than 2 days!

luluaugust Mon 14-Dec-15 11:57:00

Agree, chuck it all in, works very well except with fruit cake as dried fruit needs to go in right at the end of the mix. Love rock cakes and jam tarts made with left over pastry in this house.

Teacher11 Mon 14-Dec-15 10:58:19

This cake looks amazing and I used to make many cake with this sort of method (sifting, folding, beating, creaming, adding, stirring etc.)

My daughter told me not to bother but to throw all my ingredients in at the same time and just mix them up. To my astonishment for many cakes it works. I have used the 'chuck it in and let the Kenwood mix it' method for fruit cake, lemon cake, Victoria sandwich and coffee cake.

Who knew? With non stick pan and cake liners it makes making cakes a doddle.

Teacher11 Mon 14-Dec-15 10:53:35

I love old fashioned cakes and was delighted when my dear OH's oldest friend gave me his mum's recipe for her special fruit cake. It was delicious and very easy to make as I added the modern twist of not measuring out a greaseproof lining but using a cake tin liner instead.

I also make scones (which I serve with home made raspberry or strawberry jam), lemon cake and coffee and walnut cake.

Merseymog Mon 14-Dec-15 07:43:17

We should not look back too much when comparing older cakes with modern cakes. We need to Adapt-Imitate-and-Improve. In our house I do the baking and my wife does the frilly bits. Hence my rant about "The curse of the Cup Cake". These days we do have excellent basic ingredients available and all we need to do is to use them sensibly.

Keep it simple, apply commonsense and consider what is good and bad for you. There is no need to use other than basic ingredients as ready made mixes rarely save you time and trouble; besides you most likely don't know what's in them.. I collect recipes from all sorts of places and archives. Over time you do become skilled at using what suits both your lifestyle and taste.

Modern baking aids such as mixers, silicon paper and non-stick baking pan make life so much easier. Study the recipe and do a work study exercise on it to make it easier and simpler for you; learn from your mistakes. As a retired computer programmer who started in the era small machines I know that a little time looking at how things are done and for better easier ways is well spent.

For example Devil's Food Cake from the original recipe seem very complicated but after a work study exercise it really is ever so easy

Mix LotOf What
Lot a)
60 ml Cocoa (4 tablespoons) or 32gm
40 ml Sugar (2 ½ tablespoons) or 35gm
30 ml Water(2 tablespoons) or 30gm

Lot b)
5 fluid ounces(140ml) Milk or 140gm

Lot c)
4 ounces (115gm)Sunflower Margarine
4 ounces(115gm) Caster Sugar

Lot d)
2 eggs separated
5 ml Vanilla Essence(1 teaspoon)

Lot e)
2 ½ ounces (70gm) of Icing Sugar
4 ounces (115gm) of Self Raising Flour
5 ml Baking Powder(1 teaspoon)

First separate eggs and beat whites(part of lot d) until light and fluffy, doing it in this order means that you don't need to wash the mixer until you have finished.

Cream sugar and margarine (lot c) until fluffy.

Warm Cocoa, sugar and water (lot a), the microwave makes this easier. Mix until smooth and it just begins to thicken. Stir in milk (b).

Beat processed lot c) into cocoa mixture. Then beat in egg yolks and vanilla essence (lot d).

Sift in powdered ingredients (lot e) and beat well.

Finally using a wooden spoon fold in the beaten egg whites, stirring gently until the mixture becomes uniform in texture.

Pour into a greased lined 9 inch round deep tin.

Bake at gas mark 4 (180c or 360f), for fan oven bake at 170c, for 45 to 60 minutes or until the cake passes the skewer test.

This cake has an almost silken texture and a richness that belies its modest ingredients. It is best covered with a chocolate or vanilla butter icing, nuts optional depending on taste.

You buy a Devil's Food Cake Mix but it won't taste as good and will likely be just as involved.

Stansgran Wed 02-Dec-15 10:03:10

Or Tottenham cake

Stansgran Wed 02-Dec-15 10:01:28

Live and learn. I've never heard of manchester tart or London cheesecake until today.

annsixty Wed 02-Dec-15 09:58:39

Much too down market?

Alea Wed 02-Dec-15 09:44:19

Maybe more of a Rusholme Raver? tchwink

annsixty Wed 02-Dec-15 09:41:25

I lived in Finchley Road in Fallowfield and floozie is the last thing I could be called. tchgrin

Alea Wed 02-Dec-15 09:25:11

www.mytaste.co.uk/s/mary-berry-manchester-tart.html

This the one you mean?
(As opposed to a Fallowfield Floozie?) tchgrin

rosesarered Wed 02-Dec-15 09:09:33

What is Manchester tart?

seasider Wed 02-Dec-15 06:56:49

Victoria sponge is my favourite ever cake. I like bread and butter pudding and Manchester tart was my favourite school pudding .

Auntieflo Tue 01-Dec-15 22:34:44

Love old fashioned Seedy cake, with caraway seeds, but haven't made it for several years. The last packet of Lemon Meringue Pie mix that I bought was horrible, no little lemon capsule, so won't buy it again.

Indinana Tue 01-Dec-15 22:18:14

That's one of DH's favourites, MargaretX - he makes them in our house, and I must say he has got them down to a fine art!

MargaretX Tue 01-Dec-15 21:18:34

I like baked custard - my Mum made it in a large dish. Once my cousin and I finished off a whole pie dish full after we'd been to the swimming baths. What an appetite we had and what a lovely baked custard!
We both got a clout round the ears when my mother got home but it was worth it.

Greyduster Tue 01-Dec-15 20:24:56

DH is a huge fan of bread pudding but I only made it for him once - the thought of soaking bread in any kind of liquid turns my stomach. I can't even dip bread in my soup! Fortunately, he has become a dab hand at making it himself - and of course, he gets to eat it all!

chloe1984 Tue 01-Dec-15 20:22:39

Jam tarts,bread pudding,rock cakes,coconut buns,London cheesecake and kunzel cakes

Indinana Tue 01-Dec-15 19:59:15

lock a rock cake? confused Should have been like a rock cake!

Indinana Tue 01-Dec-15 19:53:11

Bread pudding, bread and butter pudding, rock cakes, scones, Eccles cakes, to name just a few of my favourites!
One of my friends' mum used to make what she called 'Date Dumpies' which we kids all used to love. They were lock a rock cake mixture, rolled into balls and then a date was pushed inside, with the mixture joined back over. Oh I'm going to have to make some of these for Christmas!!

shysal Tue 01-Dec-15 19:44:49

As teenagers, my friend and I used to buy a Fuller's cake each for our families every Saturday morning, from their shop in Oxford. I also have a recipe, but can't remember ever baking it. (Going to check recipe scrapbook).
It is funny how bought cake was such a treat when we grew up on home made. The position is reversed for many these days.

Rock cakes were the first thing I made at school in Domestic Science. We used to make a hole in the centre, add a blob of jam, and cover over.

Alea Tue 01-Dec-15 18:40:01

A particular favourite is a Fuller's cake, for which I have a stained and dog eared recipe from The Times in about 1975.
I believe it gets a reference in something like "Hons and Rebels" or "Love in a Cold Climate" so presumably goes back to the 1930's.