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Christmas Cake with Drambuie-Soaked Vine Fruits

Preparation time : Prepare 1 hour, plus overnight soaking
Cooking time : 3 hours to 4 hours
Total time : 4 - 5 hours plus overnight soaking

Makes: 25- 30 slices

Ingredients

750g Waitrose Wholesome Vine Fruit Mix
250g soft apricots, quartered
200g tub cut mixed peel
200g tub glacé cherries, halved
100g pitted soft prunes, quartered
Grated zest and juice of 1 orange
100ml Drambuie
250g unsalted butter, softened
200g dark muscovado sugar
5 medium eggs, beaten
300g plain flour, sieved
200g walnut pieces

Method

  1. Place all the dried fruit in a large bowl then stir in the grated orange zest and juice, and the Drambuie. Cover and leave to soak overnight.
  2. Preheat the oven to 150°C, gas mark 2. Grease and line the base and sides of a 23cm-round or 20cm-square cake tin with baking parchment so it stands 5cm above the top. Use string to tie a double thickness of baking parchment around the outside of the tin. This will help prevent the cake drying out during cooking.
  3. In a large bowl, use a hand-held electric whisk to beat together the butter and sugar until pale and fluffy. Gradually beat in the egg, a little at a time. If the mixture begins to curdle, add a spoonful of flour with the last few additions of egg.
  4. Add the soaked fruit and walnuts, with any remaining liquid, then mix well. Fold in the rest of the flour. Spoon into the cake tin, then use a round-bladed knife to level the top of the mixture. Stand the tin on a tray and bake for 3-4 hours until cooked through, covering the top of the cake with foil if it starts to over-brown. To check that the cake is cooked, insert a skewer into its centre – if the skewer comes out clean the cake is cooked. Leave to cool completely in the tin.
  5. Remove the cake from the tin and store in its lining paper, wrapped tightly in foil. Keep in a cool place. Feed the cake every few weeks by unwrapping it, making small holes in its top, then drizzling with a couple of tablespoons of Drambuie. This will help to keep the cake moist and add extra flavour. If the cake has domed in the centre during baking, neatly slice off the top before covering with marzipan. To ensure a completely flat surface for decorating, turn the cake upside down before covering with marzipan and icing.

Cook's tips

Look for Christmas Cake Decorated on how to ice this cake.

Average customer rating

Rating 5 out of 5 stars Based on 50 ratings


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Nutritional information

Per serving % of RDA What is RDA?
Energy 375kcal
Fat 15.7g
Saturated Fat 6.4g
Salt 0.2g
Sugars 45.6g

For more information about nutritional labeling, click here.

Drink Recommendation

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Customer comments & images

Average customer rating: Rating 5 out of 5 stars

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Peagreen

02/02/2009

this is a fantastic recipe. I made this as a gift for my in-laws for christmasand they raved about it. I also made one for my family and I have to say it was yummy. I take out the nuts as my husband can't eat them and replace with cranberries

ROZELLA

21/10/2008

With all the very good comments about this cake. I am hoping to make one this weekend. I have made the Delia one in the past. This sounds fantastic sorry again Delia.

jackid

18/10/2008

I made my first christmas cake last year - using htis recipe - and as everyone here agrees it was so good I am about to repeat it this weekend. Also discovered I like drambuie !

mlermitte

08/10/2008

Silly me. I've found the oven temperature now. I was looking at the top and the bottom of the recipe, not in the middle!

Regards Mary Lermitte

mlermitte

08/10/2008

The Christmas cake recipe, which I am just about to cook, doesn't say which Gas regulo to cook it on.

Regards Mary Lermitte m.lermitte@yahoo.com

ELB

04/10/2008

I made this cake last Christmas, and had many comments on it being the best they had ever had. I am just about to make one for this year!

Magnifying glass

Sarah G

08/01/2008

Fantastic. Relatively easy even though I'd never made a Christmas cake before - I'll definitely be making it again next year!

Rusalka

31/12/2007

Very good recipe and the result was great.

arsenal mum

27/12/2007

feeling slightly nervous about cutting the cake on Christmas day having supervised my two sons who made and decorated the cake in November. Can happily report that this is a fabulous cake, moist, juicy and beautifully flavoured. The extended family loved it - wish we had made two.

Clare of Monmouth

09/12/2007

I made this cake for my school fund raising event. I did not add the walnuts just in case of nut allergies and only had brandy to hand but it still worked out to be a fabulous cake. I tied newspaper around the tin (as well as the lining as described in the receipe) as I had read this was a good way to keep the cake from burning! Am doing this one again for my Christams party.

PJPassion

11/11/2007

Well what can i say made 3 cakes in october gave them to friends and got 12 out of 10 what a result all i can say is bye to delia.

PJPassion

11/11/2007

Well what can i say I made 3 cakes in october and they have already gone.

Casper

03/11/2007

Hmmm... bit nervous, never made a Christmas cake (the closest I have been was drying the icing with a hairdryer when I was 8), but after arranging a syndicate to pay (and eat) for this all, watched the video on this website about how to line a cake tin, losing the recipe card in the supermarket and a little disorganisation (meaning the fruit has soaked for 3 days instead of 1)... here we go!

leigh72

28/10/2007

Best Christmas Cake i've ever done!! Moist, yet light, not as dark as others, full of flavour without being heavy!! A real winner and easy to make - just made mine for this year and also used it for a wedding cake this year and went down a storm!!

Trona

24/10/2007

It's easy to make this cake but the grasing & lining of the tins is a bit fiddly - you need six hands!


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