Saffron Cake, Traditional Cornish Recipe (2024)

Saffron Cake, Traditional Cornish Recipe (1)

Traditional recipes intrigue me. Saffron intriques me. Let’s just say I’m easily intrigued. But making a recipe that’s traditional, and an old recipe from a particular place doesn’t make me an expert. Obviously. I just wanted to make something with saffron in it. Something that wasn’t too sweet, but not a savory dish. This seemed to fit the bill. Even though it says “cake”, it’s sort of a cross between a cake and a loaf of bread.

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Except. I had to put off doing it for awhile, because it called for a fair amount of saffron, and saffron isn’t cheap. So I put this recipe to the side and decided to try it once I got hold of some cheap saffron to practice with.

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Enter Trader Joe’s. I’ve been shopping there more and more, since getting rid of our car, because there are a couple of them that are easy to get to, by foot, or by bus. Anyways, I noticed that they sell one gram of saffron for $6, which is roughly one third of the usual price at most grocery stores that sell saffron. Of course, the quality probably isn’t as good, but still. So I bought a few bottles.

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(This is what happens when you just throw un-activated dry yeast into the dough.)

The first time I made it, I used this recipe, which said to just dump the yeast into the dough and let it rise for a few hours. As soon as I dumped it in, I realized that they are probably referring to usefresh yeast, but it was too late to try and take the active dry yeast out, or start all over.It did rise, but very little, and it basically tasted and lookedlike a quick bread, but was very heavy, and after a day, not very good at all.

So I had to try it again, but maybe use a different recipe.

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This time, I think I got it right. This was a better recipe, and luckily, I still had all the ingredients I needed, including the saffron. The only thing that turned out different than what I was expecting was that it was a little lopsided at the top. Oh well. At least the dough rose, and it felt lighter and more like a yeast bread should feel and look, I think.

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(Once, I sliced it, it didn’t look as lopsided, as it does here!)

Saffron Cake (adapted from Baking For Britain)

ingredients:

1 and 1/2 gram of saffron threads
600ml hot milk
1000g unbleached white bread flour
2teaspoons fine sea salt
300g unsalted butter, diced
100g light muscovado sugar (I used dark brown sugar)
14g active dry yeast
160g dried currants

method:

1. Grease a large 14 inch Pullman pan, or two 9-inch by 5-inch bread loaf pans. Set aside.

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2. Heat the milk in a small stove top pan until very hot, but not quite boiling. Remove from heat and place into a heat-proof container. I used amasoncanning jarthat holds 600 ml almost exactly and has a lid. Stir to let the saffron threads start to impart their color and flavor to the milk. Let sit for a few hours. (The recipe said to let sit overnight, but I thought the flavor and color was enough after just a couple of hours! I did use more saffron, though.)

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3. After a couple of hours, stir milk/saffron mixture to blend again, and pour half of it into a bowl with a couple of tablespoons of the sugar and if milk has gotten too cold, heat up in the microwave to get it lukewarm, roughly 110 degrees. Place yeast into warmmilk/saffron mixture with the sugar and stir gently, then let sit until foamy. If not foamy, it means that the yeast is dead and you’ll need to start all over.

4. Add the flour and salt together into a bowl and stir with a whisk several times. Add the butter to this flour mixture and rub the butter together with your fingers, like making pie dough, until the flour resembles coarse sand. After yeast and milk mixture is foamy, add the remaining sugar into the flour mixture and whisk to blend the sugar thoroughly. Make a well in the center of theflourand pour the yeast/milk mixture, and the remaining milk/saffronmixture, and use a rubber or wood spatula to mix the liquid into the flour to make a dough. After a while, you may continue to knead using a utensil, or your hands, to work the dough until it is less sticky and more pliable, about 10 minutes.

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5. Add currants and mix thoroughly in bowl, again with your hands, or a utensil, to incorporate well, another minute or so. Put plastic wrap over the bowl and leave undisturbed in a warm place in your kitchen to rise, about 1-3 hours, until doubled.

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6. Punch down doubled dough, to remove air pockets and reincorporate ingredients. Shape into a loaf and place in tin, or tins. Bake at 350 degrees for about an hour. Top should be fairly browned, and bottom should sound hollow when tapped. Cool on a wire rack.

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As an aside, it snowed yesterday!! The last time it snowed in Seattle, several days before Christmas, it melted within a few hours. This time, it stuck around for about a day. I love snow!

Saffron Cake, Traditional Cornish Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the history of Cornish saffron cake? ›

The storied tradition of the Saffron Cake can be traced to the time when the Phoenicians traded spices for Cornish tin. Renowned for its rich hue and distinctive taste, the precious saffron spice, derived from crocus flower stigmas, was used to infuse bread and cakes with an exotic touch.

What cake is Cornwall famous for? ›

A Hevva Cake is a traditional treat enjoyed across Cornwall year-round: a spiced dough mixed with dried fruit baked into a warming, crumbly cake that's perfect with a cup of tea on Christmas afternoon.

What is Saffron Cake made of? ›

Cornish Saffron Cake is a rich, moist, and full-bodied cake made with butter, eggs, mixed candied peel, dried fruit and currants, and laced with saffron strands leavened with yeast. It has the texture of bread but is creamed like a cake.

How do you eat Cornish saffron buns? ›

They can be eaten on their own, or split in half and smothered with salted butter (Cornish!) or, of course, as we like them, with lashings of Cornish clotted cream!

What is the oldest cake in the world? ›

The Egyptians gave us the world's oldest known cake–and also the world's oldest Tupperware as it happens. During the reign of Pepi II from BCE 2251 to 2157, bakers mixed up a wheat dough for flatbread and filled it with honey and milk. The dough was poured into two pre-heated copper molds that fit tightly together.

Why is saffron popular in Cornwall? ›

Saffron was said to have found its way to Cornwall through trading tin. A valuable commodity across the world, tin was exchanged as early as 400BC for popular goods such as food and spices.

What was Queen Elizabeth's favorite cake? ›

Posted on www.today.com (Read original article here.) “This chocolate biscuit cake is Her Royal Majesty the Queen's favorite afternoon tea cake by far,” chef Darren McGrady, The Royal Chef and former personal chef to Queen Elizabeth II, told TODAY Food.

What is the national dish of Cornwall? ›

Cornish pasty

The pasty is regarded as the national dish of Cornwall, and an early reference is from a New Zealand newspaper: In Cornwall, there is a common practice among those cottagers who bake at home of making little pasties for the dinners of those who may be working at a distance in the fields.

What is the most eaten cake in the world? ›

The most popular cake worldwide is Chocolate cake. Chocolate, made from the cacao bean, is delicious and was first invented by the Olmecs, one of the original tribes of Mexico.

Is saffron cake Cornish? ›

Forget scones, saffron cake is arguably even more Cornish and takes pride of place in their unmissable cream tea.

How long is the shelf life of saffron cake? ›

Our Scones, Saffron Cake, Saffron Buns and Pasties are baked fresh, collected from the bakery each morning and have a shelf-life of 4 to 5 days at the point of dispatch.

Why is saffron so tasty? ›

Its earthy and slightly sweet flavor adds a unique zest that makes you crave more and more. Adding it to your cooking results in a beautiful golden color that makes for an eye-popping presentation. You may have guessed it: saffron.

Why are saffron buns Cornish? ›

It's thought that saffron came to Cornwall as early as 4000BC with foreign merchants bringing it with them when they were trading in tin. Ever since the Cornish have been cooking with it and the traditional saffron bun gradually developed.

How do you eat saffron cake? ›

A highly fruited, yeast-raised dough cake with an aromatic flavour, delicious eaten cold or toasted, liberally spread with butter, or add Cornish Clotted Cream for a special treat.

Why do people eat saffron buns? ›

As the procession carries forward, the children hand out saffron buns to symbolize the light of Christianity throughout the darkness of the world. These saffron buns are a Swedish custom that have become a permanent baked-good tradition during the holiday season and lead up to Christmas.

Is Saffron Cake Cornish? ›

A traditional Cornish yeasted cake recipe flavoured with delicate saffron and fruity currants. Serve the saffron cake sliced, spread with butter, or for extra decadence, clotted cream. Saffron cake is a rich and buttery cake that is infused with the unique flavour of saffron.

Is saffron Cornish? ›

Saffron has been highly prized and used in Cornish cuisine since early times when it was traded from the Phoenicians for locally mined metals and has long been the world's most expensive spice by weight. Cornish Saffron is available to buy on-line in 1g or 0.5g jars.

What is the origin of the saffron bun? ›

In the 19th century in western Sweden, young women on the large farms would dress as an angel with a wreath of candles in their hair and serve the breakfast before sunrise. It is thought this is where the origin of lussekatter, the saffron buns, came to be.

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