Merry Christmas Fruitcake
Submitted by audriilyn
Traditional Christmas fruitcake with brandy-soaked candied citrus peel, citron, currants, and raisins, deeply spiced and aged in a tin with periodic brandy basting before the holidays.
YIELD
24 servingsPREP
20 minCOOK
20 minREADY
40 minA proper old-fashioned Christmas fruitcake, the kind that gets started weeks (or even months) before the holiday and feeds itself brandy through the long sit. This is not the dry brick that gets passed around as a punchline; built properly with brandy- and wine-soaked candied citrus peel, currants, raisins, citron, and a heavy hand with warming spices, fruitcake is a serious dessert.
The technique that distinguishes a real fruitcake is the boozy soak. Six cups of mixed candied and dried fruit get a hours-long bath in red wine and brandy before they ever touch the batter, and the whole cake gets a fortnightly basting of more brandy through its tin-aging. That cumulative soak is what produces the moist, complex, almost wine-like quality of a well-aged fruitcake.
The low slow bake at 250°F (120°C) for nearly four hours is intentional. Higher heat dries out the dense batter before the center cooks through. The brown paper cover (not foil; the original recipe insists on this) protects the top from over-browning during the long bake.
Pro Tips
- The author’s “listening test” is a real chef trick. A cake still has water boiling inside if it makes faint bubbling sounds when removed from the oven; bake until quiet.
- Use whole pieces of candied peel from a specialty store rather than the pre-diced glace mix from the supermarket; the flavor difference is dramatic.
- Beat egg whites in a perfectly clean, fat-free bowl; any grease prevents stiff peaks and the cake will not rise properly.
- Make the cake at least 4 to 6 weeks before Christmas; it tastes flat the day it is baked and improves dramatically with time.
Variations
Ingredients
Directions
Mix all the fruit in a large bowl and pour in the wine and brandy.
Stir gently and set aside to marinate for a few hours.
Butter a 10-inch tube pan or two 9-by-5-by-3-inch loaf pans and line it (or them) with clean parchment paper.
Butter the paper.
Sift the flour with the spices twice.
Add the baking powder and salt and sift again.
Put the butter into a large mixing bowl and cream until satiny.
Add sugar and, using an electric mixer, cream until light and fluffy.
Beat the egg yolks slightly and then add them to the bowl.
Mix the batter well before you start to add the flour-spice mixture.
Stir the batter as you add the flour, a litlle at a time, stirring well after each addition.
When the flour is thoroughly incorporated, add the molasses and stir.
Finally, stir in the fruit and any soaking liquid in the bowl.
Put the egg whites in a grease-free bowl and beat with a clean beater until they hold stiff peaks.
Fold them into the batter thoroughly and then spoon the batter into the prepared pan (or pans).
Cover loosely with a clean cloth and let the batter sit overnight in a cool place to mellow.
On the next day, heat the oven to 250 degrees F.
Place the fruitcake on the middle rack of the oven and bake for 3½ to 4 hours.
After 3½ hours, cover the pan with a piece of brown paper (do not use foil) or set the pan in a paper bag and return it to the oven.
When the cake has baked for 3½ hours, remove it from the oven and listen closely for any quiet, bubbling noises.
If you “hear'' the cake, it needs more baking.
Or test the cake with a toothpick or cake tester.
If the toothpick or tester comes out of the center of the cake clean, the cake is ready to take from the oven.
Put it on a wire rack to cool, still in the pan.
When the cake is completely cool, turn it out of the pan (or pans), leaving the brown-paper lining on the cake.
Wrap the cake with parchment, then aluminum foil, and pack the cake in a tin.
Homemade fruitcakes need air, so punch a few holes in the lid of the tin or set the cover loosely on the tin.
Set the tin in a cool, undisturbed place, and every two or three weeks before Christmas, open the foil and sprinkle the cake with a liqueur glassful of brandy, wine, or whiskey.
The liquor will keep the cake moist and flavorful and help preserve it as well.
Dust with icing sugar if desired.
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