Apple Crumble Cake
This cake is easy to make, and the end result looks remarkably impressive.
“This light, delicious and easy cake merges a lot of my favourite flavours into one. A homemade crumble is so easy to make, it’s only three ingredients and it’s so worth it,” says baking whizz Jane Dunn, who you might know better as the brains behind Jane’s Patisserie.
“I always use cooking apples for this because by the time the sponges have baked, the apple has a wonderful texture and marrying that with the light spice of cinnamon and brown sugar is a dream. A spiced but sweet buttercream frosting sandwiching the two layers together finishes off this crowd-pleasing cake perfectly.
“Good to make for a crowd, so perfect for a relaxed dinner with friends or family.”
Apple crumble cake
Ingredients:
(Serves 15)
For the crumble:
120g plain flour
60g caster sugar
60g chilled unsalted butter, cubed
For the cake:
500g cooking apples (peeled/chopped weight)
350g soft light brown sugar
300g unsalted butter, at room temperature
300g self-raising flour
6 eggs
1tsp ground cinnamon
For the buttercream:
250g unsalted butter, at room temperature
500g icing sugar
1tsp ground cinnamon
Method:
1. Preheat the oven to 180ºC/160ºC fan and line two deep 20-centimetre cake tins with parchment paper.
2. Add the flour, caster sugar and butter to a bowl and rub together with your fingertips until the mixture resembles breadcrumbs. Set aside.
3. Cube the apples into two centimetre pieces and pour into a new bowl. Cover with 50 grams of the soft light brown sugar and mix.
4. In a new bowl, beat the butter and remaining light brown sugar together until combined. Add the flour, eggs and cinnamon and mix until smooth. Fold through the apples. Divide evenly between the two lined tins, then sprinkle a layer of crumble onto each cake (about half a centimetre deep). Bake in the oven for 40-45 minutes. Leave to cool fully in the tins.
5. Sprinkle any spare crumble mixture onto a lined tray and bake in the oven for 15 minutes. Leave to cool.
6. Beat the butter on its own for a few minutes, then add the icing sugar and cinnamon and mix until fluffy. Transfer to a piping bag with the piping nozzle of your choice fitted and pipe half onto the first sponge. Top with the second sponge. Pipe on the rest of the buttercream and sprinkle with the baked crumble.
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