Hertzoggie Cake

Hertzoggie Cake

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A spin on the South African hertzoggie, this Hertzoggie Cake consists of a light coconut sponge cake with crunchy coconut meringue topping and is layered with whipped cream and apricot jam.

#SPONSORED

Do you know what a hertzoggie is? It’s one of the bakes us South Africans are immensely proud of. Like koeksisters, malva pudding, and peppermint crisp tart (there are loads more but these are my favourites!). Hertzoggies are little tarts with a crisp, shortcrust pastry bottom filled with apricot jam and then topped with crispy coconut meringue. It’s a heavenly combination that is only made better with a cup of rooibos tea! This Hertzoggie cake is inspired by those little tarts. 

When the team over at Stork Bake challenged me to make a Mother’s Day bake for their Mmmmzansi campaign (such a cute name!), I immediately knew which cake I wanted to make. On page 51 of my grandmother’s handwritten recipe book, there’s a recipe for ‘Stork Sponge Cake’. The recipe is dated back to 1967 – she wrote it down over 50 years ago! It’s one of my favourite recipes for a reason; all the ingredients get added to a bowl and mixed for 3 minutes.  It has never failed me. 

Although the cake batter is very easy, the golden rule of baking applies specifically to this recipe. All your ingredients MUST be at room temperature – particularly the Stork Bake. If not, your cake batter will curdle and won’t be as light and fluffy as it should be. My grandmother probably didn’t know it at the time, but using Stork Bake is the secret to getting a better rise on your cakes – and that’s something even Mary Berry and Paul Hollywood preach about

Apart from the very special recipe, there are some other rather special features to this cake. The coconut meringue topping is baked onto the cake batter so it really is as crispy and crunchy as the hertzoggies it’s named after! Then lastly, make sure you use the best apricot jam you can find – or make your own – no storebought jam here, please! 

My hertzoggie cake is slathered with a thick layer of Tannie Anita Boonzaaier’s Appelkooskonfyt (apricot jam).  My friend Lehan’s mom makes THE BEST apricot jam and each year I get a jar which I am pedantic about using. This cake? It deserved the entire jar because it is THAT good. 

Hertzoggie Cake
Serves 8
A light coconut sponge cake with crunchy coconut meringue topping is layered with whipped cream and apricot jam.
Print
Prep Time
30 min
Cook Time
45 min
Total Time
1 hr 15 min
Prep Time
30 min
Cook Time
45 min
Total Time
1 hr 15 min
0 calories
0 g
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Nutrition Facts
Serving Size
0g
Servings
8
Amount Per Serving
Calories 0
Calories from Fat 0
% Daily Value *
Total Fat 0g
0%
Saturated Fat 0g
0%
Trans Fat 0g
Polyunsaturated Fat 0g
Monounsaturated Fat 0g
Cholesterol 0mg
0%
Sodium 0mg
0%
Total Carbohydrates 0g
0%
Dietary Fiber 0g
0%
Sugars 0g
Protein 0g
Vitamin A
0%
Vitamin C
0%
Calcium
0%
Iron
0%
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your Daily Values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Ingredients
  1. 120g (125ml or ½ cup) STORK Bake, softened
  2. 400g (375ml or 1 ½ cups) castor sugar
  3. 360g (875ml or 3 ½ cups) cake flour
  4. 22 ml (1 ½ tbsp) baking powder
  5. 40g (140ml or 1/2 cup + 1 tbsp) desiccated coconut
  6. Pinch of salt
  7. 3 large eggs, at room temperature
  8. 260ml (1 cup + 2 tsp) coconut milk, at room temperature
  9. 100ml milk (1/3 cup + 4 tsp), at room temperature
  10. TOPPING
  11. 170g (125ml or ½ cup) smooth apricot jam, plus extra for spreading
  12. 4 large egg whites, at room temperature
  13. 230g (250ml or 1 cup) castor sugar
  14. 155g (500ml or 2 cups) dessicated coconut
  15. Icing sugar, for dusting
  16. 500ml (2 cups) cold cream, whipped
Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 170°C (150°C fan-forced) and line 3 x 20cm springform cake tins with baking paper.
  2. Place the STORK Bake, castor sugar, flour, baking powder, coconut and salt in the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a paddle attachment and mix together on a low speed until a sandy texture forms.
  3. Whisk the eggs, coconut milk and milk together in a jug then slowly add to the dry ingredients while the mixer is running, to form a batter. Don’t overmix.
  4. Divide the cake batter evenly between the prepared tins. Bake the cakes for 20 minutes.In the meantime, prepare the coconut meringue topping. Whisk the egg whites until soft peak stage then beat in the castor sugar until thick and glossy. Fold in the coconut.Remove one of the cakes from the oven and working quickly, drizzle over ⅓ of the apricot jam and spread the coconut meringue mixture over the top. Return the cake to the oven and bake for a further 15-20 minutes or until a skewer inserted comes out clean.
  5. Allow to cool a little in the tin before turning out onto a cake rack. Trim the cooled cake layers (without the meringue on) by levelling the tops then place one cake layer on a serving plate. Sandwich the cake layers with apricot jam and whipped cream finishing with the coconut-topped layer. Dust with icing sugar, to serve.
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Salted Caramel Cake

Salted Caramel Cake

This Salted Caramel Cake has buttery malt sponges sandwiched together with layers of caramel and toffee buttercream with just a touch of sea salt. Can I get an ‘Amen?’. Caramel on top of caramel, on top of more caramel – this, can never be a bad thing. Especially when it’s to celebrate a birthday. A very special birthday!

It’s The Kate Tin’s birthday!!!! Hooray! If you’ve been following my bakes for a while, you’ll probably know that this is the blog’s 8th birthday. Can you believe it? ‘Cos I can’t. It feels like just the other day that I was celebrating it’s 7th with this cake and oh, the 6th birthday cake was also so delicious!

Back in the day, when The Kate Tin was a baby, she actually had a different name. She was called ‘Katelyn’s Korner’ – original, ey? And the ‘K’ in the ‘Corner’ is so very 90’s. *Cringe*. Luckily someone knocked some sense into me and she was promptly renamed. But not before I decided to only do baking.

When it first started, I’d share sweet and savoury recipes – meals, drinks, whatever. Because I was fresh out of chef school and working in restaurants and wanted to share everything that I’d learnt. But you guys, you had other ideas. Everytime I posted something drenched in chocolate or dripping in caramel, you LOVED that, and I just couldn’t ignore it. Secretly, I was happy, because I LOVED doing it too! So today, on it’s 8th birthday, I thought I’d celebrate with a throwback to one of my (and your) favourite cakes. This salted caramel cake is one of my greatest hits and if you haven’t tried it yet, then well, your weekend just got exciting! Kx

 

Salted Caramel Coma Cake

Serves 6-8

260g salted butter, softened

100g golden syrup

200g brown sugar

1 tsp vanilla extract

3 large eggs

250g cake flour

2 tsp (10ml) baking powder

60g malted milk powder (aka Horlicks)*

40ml milk

 

Toffee buttercream

120g white sugar

1/2 cup (125ml) water

3/4 cup (180ml) cream

250g butter, softened

 

200g (1/2 tin) tinned caramel or dulce de leche spread

Sea salt flakes, for sprinkling

Caramel popcorn, to serve (optional)

Preheat the oven to 160 degrees celcius. Line the bottoms of 2 x 15cm springform cake tins and set aside. Cream together the butter, syrup and brown sugar until very light and creamy (about 8-10 minutes). Beat in the vanilla and the eggs, one at a time, mixing well between each addition. Sift in the cake flour, baking powder and milk powder and fold together, adding the milk to form a thick batter. Divide the batter between the two cake tins and spread evenly. Bake for 1 hour and 15 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean and the cake has pulled away from the sides. Remove from the oven and allow to cool completely, upside down, on a cooling rack. To make the buttercream, place the sugar and water in a pan and heat gently until the sugar is dissolved. Bring to the boil and simmer, without stirring, until the mixture begins caramelising. Once the syrup reaches a toffee-colour, pour in the cream and swirl to combine. Allow to cool completely. Cream the butter until very white and fluffy (about 8-10 minutes) then add the toffee sauce and whip to combine. To assemble, slice each cake in half to create 4 layers. Spread the first layer with tinned caramel then a layer of buttercream and top with the next cake layer. Continue until 4 layers are formed. Frost the entire cake using the buttercream (I used some tinned caramel along the bottom of the cake to achieve an ombre affect). Place the remaining buttercream in a piping bag (to create a swirled effect, simply smear stripes of caramel in the piping bag before adding the buttercream) then pipe blobs onto the top of the cake. Place in the refrigerator to set. To serve, sprinkle with sea salt flakes and top with caramel popcorn (if desired).

*If you can’t find malted milk powder, simply toast normal milk powder until golden brown in the preheated oven. Allow to cool, pass through a sieve and incorporate as usual.

TIP To make a 25cm cake with 4 layers, double the recipe above.

The Sweet Life Of A Pastry Chef & Opera Cake Recipe

The Sweet Life Of A Pastry Chef & Opera Cake Recipe

The hero of petit fours, the champion of chocolate, the conqueror of macarons and the instigator of my ever expanding waistline… The Pastry Chef’s job is one we all dream of having! Whipping up decadent desserts all day long? Oh yes, that sounds like the perfect job. But what does it really involve? After my recent trip to Mauritius where I ate 40 desserts in one day (tough life, eh?), I simply had to pick the brain of the mastermind behind all the magnificent bakes. Nicolas Durousseau is not just any pastry chef, he’s the Executive Pastry Chef at the Constance Belle Mare Plage Hotel home to 5 restaurants. Jip, that means 5 different dessert menus, bread and pastries baked daily for the 1000 guests that stay at the resort and a never-ending amount of creativity!

Nicolas’ story began long before he could wield a palette knife; his love of food runs fluidly in his family but began with his grandfather working in famous Parisian pastry shops well into the sixties. He also remembers his grandmother preparing Nice clafoutis with red cherries in the summer along with beautiful egg custard cream with deep-fried beignets – with memories that sweet, no wonder he chose to be a pastry chef! Gordon Ramsay, Marco Pierre White, Pierre Gagnaire, Le Negresco… Nicolas has worked with some of the finest chefs in the world, and while he spends his days tempting the hotel’s guests with decadent creations, I wondered what desserts does he enjoy? So I asked him the question that has always haunted me; If you could only eat one dessert for the rest of your life, what would it be? His answer; a simple Flan Parisien (which to you and I, is a French Custard Tart similar to our milk tart minus the cinnamon). Ah yes, a man after my own heart!

After tasting so many of Nicolas’ wonderful creations, I was struck by his incredible ability to merge flavours effortlessly, but with so many wonderful combinations to choose from, what is his favourite?  “We received a sample from a world-renowned French chocolate maker,  Valhrona, it is a blond chocolate couverture made with muscovado sugar from Mauritius. I simply made an emulsion with the ganache by adding some red chilli, a fresh fruit caramelized compote made of mango, pineapple and banana with a thin layer of yuzu jelly and lime zest. ”  *taste buds explode, brain explodes, tummy grumbles*

Okay, okay but how can we be like him? How do we channel our inner pastry chef at home? “Perseverance” he says, “Set yourself a goal and then keep practicing until you achieve it”. How about taking his advice and tackling one of Nicolas’ recipes? Like this Opera slice which was my favourite of all his desserts! It consists of layers of sponge, coffee buttercream and chocolate ganache. 

OPERA CAKE SLICE

by Nicholas Durousseau

Serves 8

Sponge

25g butter

125g ground almonds

145g castor sugar

4  whole eggs

3 egg whites

Coffee Syrup

110ml water

100g sugar

2 tsp instant coffee powder

Coffee Buttercream

25ml water

90g sugar

2 eggs

2 tsp instant coffee

1/2 vanilla pod, deseeded

170g butter, cubed

Chocolate Ganache

20g butter

80g 70% dark chocolate

40ml milk

10ml cream

To make the sponge, preheat the oven to 210 degrees Celcius. Melt the butter in a pan and allow to cool. Combine the ground almonds in a separate bowl along with half the sugar and the whole eggs. Mix in the cooled butter. Beat the egg whites until soft peaks then gradually add the sugar and whip until stiff peaks.  Gently fold into the almond mixture in 3 batches. Take a large sheet of baking paper and use a ruler to outline a 30cm by 20cm rectangle then flip the baking paper over. Place the baking paper on a large baking sheet and spray generously with cooking spray. Gently spread the mixture out about 5mm thick on the sheet of baking paper (keeping within the lines of the rectangle) and bake for 10 minutes or until slightly golden in colour. Make the syrup by combining all the ingredients in a small saucepan and bringing it to the boil for 1 minute. Take off the heat and cool. Set aside. For the buttercream, make the syrup by bringing the sugar and water to a boil in a small saucepan over a medium-heat until the syrup reaches 118 degrees Celcius on a thermometer. In the bowl of a stand mixer, beat the egg whites together on a low speed until soft peaks form. Increase the speed to high and pour the hot syrup in a steady stream. Sprinkle in the coffee powder along with the vanilla seeds and drop the butter in, cube-by-cube, until all of it has been fully incorporated. To make the chocolate ganache, roughly chop the chocolate into medium-sized pieces. Bring the milk and cream to a boil and pour over the chocolate, allow to sit for 2 minutes then stir to combine. Mix the butter in and allow to cool.

To assemble: Slice the sponge into three equal parts, these will make up the layers of the opera. Dab the coffee syrup gently onto the sponge slices using a pastry brush. Evenly spread half of the coffee butter cream on top the first layer of sponge then add the second layer and spread half the ganache over. Add the final layer of sponge and spread the rest of the buttercream evenly then spread the rest of the ganache over the buttercream. Allow to set before trimming the edges neatly. Once set, slice the opera into 10cm by 3cm rectangles.

Rosé Champagne Chiffon Cake

Rosé Champagne Chiffon Cake

Champagne, bubbly, sparkling wine, whatever you call it, it’s the perfect companion for cake. Just like cake, it’s usually our choice for any sort of celebration – birthdays, weddings, promotions, if we’re celebrating there is always a cake and there is always bubbly (well in my case, anyway!). My favourite quote of all time, is Julia Child’s ‘A party without cake is just a meeting’ and I’d go so far as to also say ‘A party without bubbly is just a meeting’ too! So I’m not sure why it took me this long to put the two together and make a champagne cake – but it was worth the wait, I promise because this right here will change your life. The buttercream? Thinking about it makes me weak at the knees!

This is the perfect cake to celebrate, well, anything you’d drink bubbly at! New Year’s Eve, Kitchen Teas, Birthdays, Anniversaries, Fridays or any day that ends in ‘ay’! 😉

Rosé Champagne Chiffon Cake

Recipe originally created for Food and Home Entertaining Magazine

Serves 10-12

 

12 eggs (separated)

300g Natura Sugars Golden Caster Sugar

180g cake flour

2 tsp vanilla extract

 

FRENCH BUTTERCREAM

100g Natura Sugars Golden Caster Sugar

400ml rosé bubbly or sparkling wine (optional)

6 eggs

500g unsalted butter, softened (not salted butter!)

Pink food colouring

Raspberry or peach jam, for spreading

 

Preheat the oven to 180°C. Grease and line two large 20 x 30cm baking sheets with baking paper. In a large, clean bowl whisk the egg whites until thick and stiff, then slowly whisk in 1/2 cup of caster sugar. In another bowl, whisk the egg yolks and the remaining sugar until the mixture is very thick and pale (about 10 minutes). Fold in the vanilla and sifted flour. Lightly whisk 1/3 of the whipped egg whites into the egg yolk mix to lighten it, then fold the remaining egg whites in, taking care to knock as little air out as possible. Pour the cake batter into the lined baking sheets and bake in the preheated oven for 20 minutes or until springy to the touch. Allow to cool completely. For the frosting, place the sugar and champagne in a saucepan and simmer gently until reduced by half and set aside to cool completely. Cream the butter until very light and fluffy and set aside. Whisk the eggs and syrup together over a pot of gently simmering water with an electric hand mixer until tripled in size and hot to the touch (it should read 60 degrees celsius on a sugar thermometer) then remove from the heat and continue to beat until room temperature and cooled. Fold the egg mixture into the whipped butter, adding a few drops of pink colouring, and continue mixing until a light, smooth buttercream forms.

To assemble, cut the sheets of cake in half lengthways so you have four long strips. Spread with a thin layer of peach jam, then spread the buttercream on the cake and roll up, laying the strips end to end, to form a short, fat swiss roll. Place the swiss roll on its side to form the cake (trim it if necessary). Allow to set in the fridge until firm, then frost the sides with buttercream.

 

 

TIP  To make the gold brush strokes, mix gold and copper edible dust with 1 tsp of vodka (or vanilla essence) to form a paste. Brush the paste onto the sides of the cake.