Home | Cookbooks | Diary | Magic Menu | Surprise! | More ≡

Uxbridge Cakes

Breads
Historic
Middlesex

Very high dried fruit content sweet rich bread cake. Glasse 1747 uses seven pounds of currants to one pound of flour, plus nutmeg and butter.


Original Receipt in ‘The Art of Cookery, Made Plain and Easy‘ by Hannah Glasse, 1747 (Glasse 1747);

How to make Uxbridge cakes
TAKE a pound of wheat flour seven pounds of currants half a nutmeg four pounds of butter rub your butter cold very well amongst the veal [?]; dress your currants very well in the flour, butter and seasoning and knead it with so much good new yeast as will make it into a pretty high paste, usually two pennyworth of yeast to that quantity, after it is kneaded well together, let it stand an hour to rise; you may put half a pound of paste in a cake.






MORE FROM Foods of England...
Cookbooks Diary Index Magic Menu Random Really English? Timeline Donate Royalty English Service Food Map of England Lost Foods Accompaniments Biscuits Breads Cakes and Scones Cheeses Classic Meals Curry Dishes Dairy Drinks Egg Dishes Fish Fruit Fruits & Vegetables Game & Offal Meat & Meat Dishes Pastries and Pies Pot Meals Poultry Preserves & Jams Puddings & Sweets Sauces and Spicery Sausages Scones Soups Sweets and Toffee About ... Bookshop

Email: [email protected]


COPYRIGHT and ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: © Glyn Hughes 2022
BUILT WITH WHIMBERRY