Sunday, 19 July 2009

Flourless Orange and Almond Cake


Winter is orange season in South Australia. And one of my favourite recipes using oranges is this flourless orange and almond cake from Stephanie Alexander's The Cook's Companion. Stephanie herself adapted the recipe from Claudia Roden's middle eastern orange cake.


Incidentally, I like it when chefs and authors acknowledge their influences and the sources of their recipes, rather than pretending that they created them themselves out of thin air.


There is a lot to like about this cake; it is moist, dense and utterly irresistible. As an added bonus, it is dairy and gluten free, so is a great dessert if your guests or family have allergies.


Although the recipe calls for ground almonds, I cut costs by purchasing whole almonds and blanching them myself. I then grind them in the food processor before adding the remaining ingredients. The almonds will be coarser than ground almonds but I think that adds to the texture of the cake.


Flourless Orange and Almond Cake

2 large oranges, washed

6 eggs, beaten

250 g ground almonds

250 g sugar

1 tsp baking powder


Boil oranges in a little water in a covered saucepan for two hours. Allow to cool, then cut open, remove pips, and chop roughly.


Preheat oven to moderate and grease and flour a springform tin. Blend oranges and remaining ingredients thoroughly in a food processor. Pour batter into prepared tin and bake for 1 hour. If cake is still very wet, cook a little longer (my cake took 15 minutes longer). Cool in tin before gently turning out.

11 comments:

Tracy said...

That looks incredibly simple and utterly amazing.

I'm sorting almonds from the rest of the packet in the hopes of having enough to do this!

han_ysic said...

It looks as though you use the skin of the orange as well after boiling, just wanting to check that's the case before I stuff it all up :)

Our Red House said...

Yes, you use the whole orange, although you need to cut off the sharp stem bit and remove pips.

Kate

daharja said...

Thanks so much for this recipe! My son is on a GFDF diet, so being able to add another cake recipe to my lists will be very very welcome!

Megs said...

hello lovely Kate!
I put a beautiful pic of you and your firstborn into an album today - it had been on our wall, and then in a box. made me think of wonderful you!!

lady m's lavender cottage said...

The recipe looks delicious...but tell me what is 250g of sugar in cups?

let me know,

lady m

Megs said...

hello Kate!
this cake is in the oven right now, 58 minutes to go, as a special treat for my poor Eowyn with her broken arm!
it is lovely to use your recipe and feel connected to you!
and Bens is singing the girls goodnight songs on the guitar - off i go to join them!
barney-ish-love meg

tbchadwick said...

Lady M,

250g is one metric cup, and about 8 oz. It is a little over 1 US or imperial cup.

Kate

Chocolate Vegetables said...

Do you think mandarins would work as well? The kids haven't liked the flavour of the box of mandarins I bought at the markets.

Thanks
Jen in NSW

Our Red House said...

Hi Jen,

I don't know if the receipe would work with mandarins, but it's worth trying. Perhaps you could try it with oranges first so you know how it's meant to look.

Kate

Melissa said...

Ooh, wow! I'm so excited to find this recipe...in the beginning stages of a gluten free, wheat free, dairy free (meat free, soy free) diet for my 3 y/o. This looks delicious! Glad you converted the grams to cups...that had me confused. :)