AWW FOOD • ISSUE TWENTY SEVEN
BANANA COFFEE CAKE
WITH SALTED CARAMEL
FROSTING
PREP + COOK TIME 3 HOURS
(+ REFRIGERATION & COOLING) SERVES 12
395g can sweetened condensed milk
300g butter, chopped, softened
¾ cup (165g) firmly packed
brown sugar
2eggs
1½ cups (225g) self−raising flour
½ teaspoon bicarbonate of soda
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1½ cups (360g) mashed ripe banana
(see tip)
½ cup (120g) sour cream
1 cup (100g) walnut halves, roasted,
chopped
3 teaspoons instant espresso coffee
granules
¼ cup (60ml) boiling water
1 teaspoon sea salt flakes
1 Preheat oven to 220°C/200°C fan.
Grease a deep 20cmround cake pan;
line base with baking paper.
2 Pour condensed milk into a 2−litre
(8−cup) ceramic ovenproof dish. Cover
dish with foil;crush excess foil upwards.
Place ceramic dishin a larger baking
dish; add enough boiling water
to the baking dish to come halfway
up the side of the ceramic dish. Bake
for 1 hour. Stir the mixture; cover,
bake for a further 30 minutes or until
mixture is a golden caramel colour,
adding extra boiling water to baking
dish as needed to maintain water level
during baking. Remove ceramic dish
from water. Whisk in 170g of the butter,
piece by piece, until melted and
caramel is smooth. Cover; refrigerate
for 1 hour, stirring occasionally until
mixture is cold and firm.
3 Reduce oven temperature to
180°C/160°C fan.
Mum’s The Word Entertaining
4 Beat remaining butter and the
sugar in a small bowl with an electric
mixer until pale and fluffy. Beat
in eggs, one at a time, until just
combined. Transfer mixture to a large
bowl. Stir in sifted dry ingredients
with mashed banana, sour cream,
nuts and combined coffee and water.
Spread mixture into pan.
5 Bake cake for 1 hour or until a
skewer inserted into the centre comes
out clean. Stand cake in pan for
5 minutes before turning, top−side
up, onto a wire rack to cool.
6 Beat cold caramel mixture in
a small bowl with an electric mixer
for 1 minute or until paler and fluffy.
Spread caramel frosting on top of
cooledcake. Just before serving,
sprinkle with salt.
“The trick I use when I’ve forgotten to soften
butter for cakes is to grate it on the coarse holes
of a box grater for instantly soft butter.”
Sophia Young, Style Director, AWW Cookbooks
60