Biscoff Celebration Cake
This is for the Biscoff lovers - it makes a great birthday cake. Always handy to have a jar of Biscoff in the cupboard.
Ingredients:
200g self-raising flour
175g caster sugar (I use golden caster sugar)
200g butter, softened
4 eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste
Syrup:
100ml water
100g brown sugar
Icing:
300g butter softened
200g icing sugar'
200g biscoff spread (Supervalu now stock it and Dealz normally have it)
Method:
1. Prep your tins and oven
Line the base of two 8-inch tins with parchment paper. Preheat your oven to 160°C fan / 180C conventional.
2. Soften the butter
If it’s not soft, use the microwave on a really low heat - just 20–30 seconds at a time. Be careful not to melt it too much.
3. Cream butter and sugar
Beat the butter and sugar together until soft and pale. I use my Kenwood mixer, but a wooden spoon works too.
4. Add flavouring
Vanilla is the standard addition but I have added a few options above.
5. Sift flour and beat eggs
Sieve your flour into a separate bowl. Lightly beat the eggs in a jug.
6. Add eggs gradually
With your mixer on medium, add the eggs a little at a time. If the mix starts to curdle, add a tablespoon of flour to help bring it back together. Don’t worry - once the flour goes in, it usually sorts itself out.
7. Fold in flour
Turn the mixer to low and add in the rest of the flour gradually until the batter is smooth and creamy. Scrape down the bowl occasionally to make sure everything’s incorporated.
How to Know When It’s Done:
It’s not just about colour - cakes can look golden on top but still be raw in the middle.
Skewer test: Insert into the centre - if it comes out clean or just a little moist, it’s done.
Listen to it! Put your ear close to the cake - f it’s making lots of bubbling noises, it’s still cooking (I can’t remember where I heard this tip)
Edges pulling away from the tin is a great sign it’s done.
Don’t open the oven before 20 minutes or the middle may sink.
If it does sink? Don’t panic. I have on occasion padded a sunk middle with maltesers - it worked!
I think slightly overbaking is better than underbaking - I tend to add a syrup which keeps it moist.
Make your sugar syrup: Bring the water and sugar to the boil and boil for about 3 minutes.
Make your butter icing: Beat the softened butter with the sugar until nice and fluffy. Beat in your biscoff spread. Taste - if you think it needs a bit of extra sweetness add more biscoff or sugar.
When the cake has cooled - douse in the sugar syrup.
Fill the cake with your biscoff icing - layer the second cake on top and then cover the whole cake with icing.
When it is all set - melt some biscoff spread in the microwave or in a pan and use to drizzle over the side of the cake.
Pipe rossettes on top and fill in the gaps with biscoff biscuits.
Decorate the middle with crushed biscoff biscuits - enjoy :)