A feast of quick cake and cookie recipes | Food (2024)

Store cupboard recipes

Bakers need to be resourceful with ingredients in lockdown. This batch minimises fuss and maximises pleasure. Happy cooking!

Mina Holland

Sat 16 May 2020 11.00 BST

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Anna Jones’ vegan chocolate fudge cake – and a butter-free chocolate loaf

This plant-based chocolate fudge cake uses coconut oil as an alternative to butter, for a decadent moist crumb and gooey icing. It needs no creaming or sifting and defies vegan cakes’ reputation for being complicated and/or inferior.

There are two butter-free recipes for the price of one in this link. Second up: a chocolate, olive oil and rosemary loaf, in which the olive oil imbues the sponge with its golden grassy notes alongside the herb. A tea cake’s sojourn in the Mediterranean, perhaps. Both recipes are staples in AJ’s kitchen: they soon will be in yours, too.

Meera Sodha’s vegan peanut butter blondies

A blondie batter, says Meera, should be merely a vehicle for whatever brings you joy. In this case, she has gone “full American girl scout” with the peanut butter, raspberry jam and a little chocolate, but use the same measurements of what you have and what you love – tahini, almond butter, apricot jam, roasted rhubarb, halva, salted caramel, nuts, white chocolate chips, the list goes on – to customise this incidentally plant-based batter as you please.

Yotam Ottolenghi’s white chocolate and pear cookies with lime and cardamom

The crowd-pleasing US-style chewy-crisp cookie is given a twist with fruit here, and it – quite literally – works a treat. The pear offsets the monotone sweetness of white chocolate with its acidity, while cardamom brings sweet spice. Yotam wasn’t sure if this recipe would work, but given the results he was glad he tried. I urge you to do the same – now is the time to give things a whirl, after all.

Tamal Ray’s raspberry and lime bars

A reinvention of the better-known American lemon bar, using raspberries (which are just getting good) and that zingy complement to almost everything – lime – on a shortbread base. I have never really “got” shortbread’s rich, rather one-dimensional character, but here its butteriness is the perfect foil for the vibrant, almost jellied fruit topping.

Meera Sodha’s vegan banana bread with toasted coconut

Banana bread is everywhere: it is officially a lockdown 2020 trend. Do we need another recipe? No, but you do very much need this one, which is as good eaten neat as toasted with jam or alongside (vegan) ice-cream for pudding. As you can probably tell, I could – and do – eat it morning, noon and night.

Jordan Bourke’s miso toffee crispies – and other twists

This and the three other bakes featured alongside it put a spin on a classic – chocolate cookies with tahini; coconut macaroons with cranberries; brownies with orange and spelt flour – and can be made in just 30 minutes.

Tamal Ray’s gluten-free orange syrup loaf cake

You will have a hard time finding Tamal’s preferred blood oranges right now, but you could make this with any citrus. It is also not unlikely that, given current shortages, flour eludes you – in which case, this recipe is for you. Polenta and almonds stand in for flour to bring body and bite to the batter, which, once baked, is soaked with orange syrup. The perfect damp bake that, like any good loaf cake, invites your delectation throughout the day.

Liam Charles’ pineapple upside-down cake

Tinned fruit bakes are everything right now: a cheap and easy way of shaking up the production line of banana bread and chocolate biscuits. I can’t confidently tell you whether tinned pineapple counts as one of your five a day, but its combination with dark rum and caramel sauce in this twisted school-lunch classic is transportive, taking you to sunnier climes or simply down memory lane (anywhere but home)!

Felicity Cloake’s perfect chocolate biscuits

Of all the underwhelming bakes out there, posits Felicity, shop-bought chocolate biscuits take the proverbial biscuit: they never really taste of chocolate. But these, her own version, created with the help of some of baking’s greats – Nigella Lawson, Dorie Greenspan – are not only extremely chocolatey, but require just seven ingredients and a mere 15 minutes in the oven. If teatime is all the time for you these days, this is a chocolate biscuit worth risking it for.

Topics

  • Food
  • Store cupboard recipes
  • Dessert
  • Cake
  • Baking
  • Biscuits
  • Vegan food and drink
  • Vegetarian food and drink
  • recipes
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A feast of quick cake and cookie recipes | Food (2024)

FAQs

What are the 10 ingredients of cake? ›

Top 10 Baking Essentials Ingredients For A Cake
  • Flour.
  • Sugar. What is this? ...
  • Butter. When you bite into a delicious cake or a perfect cookie, it's usually very tender and moist, right? ...
  • Eggs. What is this? ...
  • Leavening Agents (Baking Soda, Baking Powder & Yeast) What is this? ...
  • Cocoa Powder. What is this? ...
  • Dried Fruits. ...
  • Nuts.
Jan 4, 2024

Is a cookie cake a cake or a cookie? ›

A cookie cake is a dessert that consists of a large cookie, which is baked similarly to a batch of regular-sized cookies and usually decorated with frosting. Cookie cakes are made with cookie dough, generally by adjusting the portions of existing cookie recipes to match the size of the pan used for baking.

What is the purpose of milk in a cake? ›

One of the main roles of milk in baking is to provide moisture. It can help to keep baked goods from becoming too dry and crumbly, and can also add tenderness to the texture. In addition to adding moisture, milk can also help to create a softer crumb in breads and cakes.

What is a secret ingredient for cakes? ›

Mayonnaise: The Hidden Gem in Cake Recipes

This unexpected addition can take your cake recipes to a whole new level. To incorporate mayonnaise into your cake batter, simply add a couple of tablespoons to the mix. The result? A tender and moist cake that will have everyone asking for seconds.

What are the 5 main ingredients in cake? ›

These basic ingredients for baking a cake are; flour, eggs, fat (usually butter), sugar, salt, a form of liquid (usually milk), and leavening agents (such as baking soda).

Is a brownie a cookie or a cake? ›

Brownies are not classified as cakes – this is a very interesting point about the brownie. The reason for this is that although the texture is similar to cakes, it is classed as finger food (whereas usually cake is eaten with a fork), therefore they are categorised as a cookie bar (in America).

Do you put cookie cake in the fridge? ›

You do not need to refrigerate your cookie cake.

It can stay at room temperature either wrapped well with plastic wrap or foil, or in an airtight container. An airtight container will keep the cookie cake the most soft. You can freeze your cookie cake after it is completely cooled and before it is frosted.

Does cookie mean little cake? ›

From 1808, the word "cookie" is attested "...in the sense of "small, flat, sweet cake" in American English. The American use is derived from Dutch koekje "little cake", which is a diminutive of "koek" ("cake"), which came from the Middle Dutch word "koke".

What happens if you use water instead of milk in cake? ›

Making your cakes with water instead of milk results in stronger, purer chocolate flavor. Water: the foundation of life, the substance that comprises 70% of our planet, and the thing that makes chocolate cakes even more chocolatey.

Can I put water instead of milk in a cake? ›

Water can be used in most recipes that call for milk.

What happens if I don't put milk in my cake? ›

Milk contains things that water doesn't, like sugar and fat, which can also help with the taste and texture of the cake. Now, if it's a cake mix that calls for water, it will still turn out well if you just use water, but generally, you could substitute milk for the water and make it even better.

What are the 10 steps of baking a cake? ›

What are the 10 Steps of Baking a Cake at Home?
  1. Step 1: Gather Your Ingredients. ...
  2. Step 2: Prepare the Cake Pans. ...
  3. Step 3: Measure and Sift Dry Ingredients. ...
  4. Step 4: Combine Wet Ingredients. ...
  5. Step 5: Gradually Add Dry Ingredients. ...
  6. Step 6: Pour Batter into Cake Pans. ...
  7. Step 7: Bake in Preheated Oven. ...
  8. Step 8: Cool and Remove from Pans.
May 13, 2023

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