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[personal profile] venta
Last night, I was making cake to feed a bunch of people coming round this weekend. Among other things, I got out The Best Cake Recipe Ever.

Now, I'm not claiming that it makes the best cake ever: that would be quite a claim. However, it is the Best Cake Recipe Ever for these reasons:

1. It is trivially simple to make. No baking required, even.
2. It's a wartime recipe made with margarine. Make it with something like Stork and choose your chocolate carefully, and your cake is dairy-free.
3. It's got no eggs. See also (2), you can feed it to vegans.
4. It's got no flour. You can feed it to coeliacs.
5. I've never (yet) met anyone who didn't like it (although for one person I do have to miss the chocolate covering off, because she's allergic to chocolate).

And so it is my go-to recipe for just about every occasion (the only exception being people who are on a totally fat-free diet). Although (as mentioned) it's not the best cake in the world, it has the highest cake quality output to effort input ratio of anything I know. It's a recipe I got from my mum, and has been a staple throughout my life - but even she doesn't know who the Millie Piper named in the recipe is...


You need:
4 oz sugar
4 oz margarine (or butter)
6 oz dried dates
1 oz glacé cherries
3 oz rice kripsies (or similar brand-free rice-based cereal)
chocolate for icing [*]

Chop up the dates and cherries into small pieces. If you want a really palaver-free cooking experience, buy ready-chopped dried dates.

In a large saucepan[**], melt the marg, sugar, dates and cherries together. When it's all melted and nicely gooey, stir in the rice krispies.

Put into a swiss roll tin [***] and press it all flat with a fork. Press firmly.

Melt the chocolate, pour over and spread evenly. If you're that way inclined, sprinkle hundreds and thousands or other cakey-prettifiers over it. Put in fridge. When set, slice into fingers (hence the name; actually I usually do squares).

And that's it.

"But Venta," you cry. "You promised us exciting cake, and that's just krispie cake!"

Well, yes. What did you expect with a trivial recipe without eggs and flour? But trust me, it's quite a lot more exciting than bog-standard krispie cake. It's the dates that make the difference, I reckon - I've substituted dried apricots for the cherries before now when I'd run out of cherries.

Or, as a friend of mine put it: "What do you mean it's got dates in it? It can't have, it's nice!"

[*] Dairy-free chocolate is harder than you think; most plain chocolate has dairy in. Check carefully if it's important. I use Green & Black's 70% Dark, which says in its allergy advice "may contain traces of milk" - they don't put milk in, but it's made in the same factory as milky stuff. I know this is ok for my dairy-allergic person. Check with yours if worried :)

My sized cake takes about two packets of G&B's to cover nicely.

[**] Yes, large. You've got to fit 3oz of rice krispies in there. And that's quite a lot.

[***] That is, if you're not familiar, a shallow rectangular tin. Mine's about 9" x 7", which is a little on the large side (the cake comes out quite thin). I don't think it really matters. You could probably squash it into cupcake cases if you felt like it. It's not a very exact science.

Date: 2011-04-15 11:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beckyc.livejournal.com
I will have to try that!

I made krispie cake at the weekend from golden syrup (that's treacle to you ;-)), Lindt 70% and crunchie nut cornflakes. It was most yummy. Though, in point of fact, no longer a krispie cake.

Date: 2011-04-15 01:00 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
I was horrified when (aged about 4) I realised other people made chocolate cornflake cakes with just chocolate and cornflakes. I mean... they set all thick and matte and icky-looking!

In our house cornflake cakes were made with margarine and cocoa and stuff (no actual chocolate ;) and hence come out all glossy and lovely. I presume adding treacle has a similar effect.

Date: 2011-04-15 01:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beckyc.livejournal.com
Treacle mitigates the matte-ness to some degree, yes. But more importantly, it stops them from being so brittle that you have to duck for cover from the shrapnel ;-).

Date: 2011-04-15 01:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
Yes, that is the other problem with the other approach :)

Date: 2011-04-15 01:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
Is Lindt 70% dairy-free then? Worth noting, as I cook for Jo quite a lot and she goes all icky on contact with cow stuff.

Date: 2011-04-15 03:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] undyingking.livejournal.com
Ah, that's like my recipe. Except I put a big slug of brandy in as well. These have proved amazingly popular for T (my partner) to take in to her workmates…

Date: 2011-04-15 04:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beckyc.livejournal.com
I have brandy! I should make this new and subtly different recipe to test it out ;-).

Date: 2011-04-15 02:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] motodraconis.livejournal.com
Isn't Stork made from fish? That's not very vegan! Though it's certainly dairy-free.

(Vegan cakes are nasty I've had some pretty unpleasant side effects when I've been fed - unwittingly - vegan cakery.)

Date: 2011-04-15 02:50 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
Isn't Stork made from fish?

Er... not as far as I know! I've certainly never been aware of that. I'm struggling to find much online, but certainly Ocado (http://www.ocado.com/webshop/product/Stork-Margarine/14954011?from=search&tags=&param=stork&parentContainer=BOP_SEARCHstork_SHELFVIEW&tab=nutritionInfo&ignore=this) and Tesco both reckon it's suitable for vegetarians, so let's assume not!

There are two kinds of Stork - one (in a tub) which is sold for cake-making and one (in a block) which is sold for pastry. The former isn't dairy-free, though the latter is.

I think vegan cakes are often nasty because people try to make normal cakes and substitute vegan alternatives into them. I think my krispie cake works because it kind of happens to be vegan.
Edited Date: 2011-04-15 02:52 pm (UTC)

Date: 2011-04-15 03:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] venta.livejournal.com
I should add - I was only mentioning it having the capacity to be made vegan because I thought it was useful. I'm not actually making vegans eat it - if I were I'd have checked a bit more carefully.

Edited Date: 2011-04-15 03:03 pm (UTC)

Date: 2011-04-15 04:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] beckyc.livejournal.com
Margarine *used* to frequently be made of fish. It used to be a nuisance for me in the early 1990s. But in the Uk, these days, less of an issue. I can't say the same for abroad though :-(

Date: 2011-04-15 07:46 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cuthbertcross.livejournal.com
We put sultanas in our krispie cakes. You can't go wrong with sultanas.

(unless you feed them on KFC, which makes them non-Vegan.)

Date: 2011-04-16 01:47 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] exspelunca.livejournal.com
Not wartime (no dates and glace cherries much then) but acquired in mid-1960s from Millie Piper, wife of the then Rector of Hurworth, Co Durham, who used to give me tea and cake when, as a young trainee reporter, I was doing "village calls".

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