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Maria Hall
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Welcome to Christmas 2021

Merry Christmas everyone and welcome to the first official newsletter for my new website!

Thanks for signing up and being part of my writing world. It’s Christmas Eve here in New Zealand, the temperature is a fabulous 23degC, and we’re cutting into cake already, something my father was always keen to do, and often we ate an entire Christmas cake before Christmas even arrived. This recipe comes from Nigella, and in case you’re looking to try something new for your own Christmas celebration (next year), the recipe is below. 

Nigella’s Christmas Cake

 Ingredients

700g         raisins
300g         currants
100g         glacé cherries
150g         chopped pecans (or walnuts)
400ml       bourbon (or brandy)
300g         butter
180g         dark brown sugar
2 tsp         lemon zest, grated
4               large eggs
2 tbsp       black treacle or molasses
1 tsp         almond essence
300g         plain flour
150g         ground almonds
1/2 tsp     ground cloves
1 tsp         ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp     ground ginger

 

Essential kit

You will need a 23cm by 20cm tin for this cake, either round or rectangular.

Method

Preparing the ingredients:

Place all the dried fruit in a saucepan, and add the bourbon or brandy. Bring to the boil, then take it off the heat, covering once cooled, and let it steep overnight, covered. Make sure you take your eggs and butter out of the fridge so that they will be at room temperature for the making of the cake tomorrow.

To prepare your tin:

Line the sides and bottom of a deep, round, loose-bottomed cake tin with a double layer of greaseproof paper or baking parchment. The paper should come up a good 10cm higher than the sides of the tin; think of a lining that’s about twice as deep as the tin. Cut out 2 circles of paper, and 2 very long rectangles that will fit along the sides of the tin and rise up above it like a top hat. Before you put the 2 rectangular pieces in the tin, fold one long side of each piece in towards the centre by about 2cm, as if turning up a hem, then take some scissors and snip into this hem, at approx. 2cm intervals, as if making a rough frill.

Grease the tin, lay one paper circle on the bottom and get one of your long pieces and fit it down one side, with the frilly edge along the bottom, then press down that edge so it sits flat on the circle and holds it in place. Press the paper well into the sides, and repeat with the second rectangular piece. Now place the second circle on top of the 2 pressed-down frilly edges, to help hold the pieces around the edge in place.

To make the cake:

Preheat your oven to 150C/gas mark 2, and prepare your tin (see above). Cream the butter and sugar together, then beat in the grated lemon zest.

Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition, then beat in the black treacle and almond extract.

Sift the dry ingredients together, then mix the soaked fruit alternately with the dry ingredients into the creamed mixture, combining thoroughly. Fold in the chopped pecans.

Put the cake mix into the prepared tin and bake in the oven, for between 2 ¾ – 3 ¼ hours, or until a cake-tester or skewer inserted into the cake comes out cleanish.

When the cake is cooked, brush with a couple of extra tablespoons of bourbon or brandy or other liqueur of your choice. Wrap immediately in its tin – using a double-thickness of tin foil – as this will trap the heat and form steam, which in turn will keep the cake soft on top.

When it’s completely cold, remove the cake from the tin and rewrap in foil, storing, preferably in an airtight tin or Tupperware, for at least 3 weeks to improve the flavour. 

I had to substitute sultanas for currants this year as there were no currants available in the supermarket Covid world. The cake is easy to make and tastes scrumptious, although mine is a bit moist, probably due to the substitution. You'll notice my icing is lumpy and bumpy - there wasn't any marzipan either.  

It’s been an exciting year for me. The Family Saga reached 85,000 words and went for a flight to Bali to see my editor Cate Hogan. She said I needed to dig deeper so I’ve been spending a lot of time in the garden, practising, hence the book isn’t ready to be published this year.

As you can see, I’ve worn out my fingertips, digging.

I’ve yet to find a glove that can survive this garden! Anyway, Cate’s enthusiasm for my latest writing has been a tremendous support, and her insight means the book is slowly transforming as I put in the effort to develop it into a more classical shape. I’ve enjoyed taking my characters across the ocean in big bold sweeps of change, but ideally, the story demands a more calculated approach, and that’s my challenge.

So, when my laptop needs a rest, I head to the garden or the sea at the bottom of the garden, from where you can see my writing room on the top left-hand side of the photo below.

Tonight, I wish you all the happiest thoughts and memories of family and friends, both present and absent, and I hope you enjoy some wonderful reading that inspires and delights and teases and tears.

Goodnight to you all...

From Maria

Thanks for reading up to here. Please contact me if you have any difficulties viewing this newsletter and images. And feel free to share it with your friends.

 

My next newsletter will be coming to you sometime in the Southern Hemisphere winter.

 

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