Easy Coffee Cake recipe

by Nik on March 16, 2009

in Recipes

Coffee cake

This recipe for coffee cake is so simple you can make it in about 10 minutes, bake it in 30 and be serving it 20 minutes later. It’s the perfect last-minute treat for unexpected guests.

It is also very easy to remember as you do everything in proportion to the number of eggs you are using, with 2oz each of butter, flour and sugar for every egg. The recipe here makes a round cake of 8in diameter, but you could easily use just two eggs and 4oz of the other ingredients for a smaller cake or four eggs and 8oz of the flour, sugar and butter for a larger one.

Ingredients
3 eggs
170g (6oz) self-raising flour
170g (6oz) butter or margarine
170g (6oz) caster sugar
1 teaspoon of baking powder
Strong black coffee
Equipment needed
Mixing bowl and spoon
(or electric mixer)
Round cake tin (8in / 20cm)
(or cup cake cases)
Scales
Kettle

Skill level: Beginner

Coffee cake

Method
Pre-heat the oven to 170 degrees Celsius (340 degrees Fahrenheit) and either grease your cake tin or line it with greaseproof paper. I prefer to grease it with butter as it means you have less waste at the end. If your tin is old and well used, though, paper may be the best way to go as it’ll have less chance of sticking.

Make a very small, very strong black coffee using two desert spoons of instant coffee granules and the smallest amount of hot water that you can to get it all to dissolve. Certainly don’t use more than half an espresso cup of water. The more water you use, the sloppier your cake will be, and it might not bake properly.

If mixing by hand, sift the flour, sugar and baking powder into a large bowl to make sure there are no lumps, then melt the butter and stir both that and the coffee into the dry ingredients. Mix well until it is a smooth paste and you can see no dry flour or sugar in the mixture. Beat hard, using a circular motion with the spoon that lifts the mixture up from the bottom of the bowl to introduce as much air into it as you can.

If using a mixer, instead sift the flour, sugar and baking powder into the mixing bowl, add the coffee, eggs and melted butter and them mix at high speed for a couple of minutes until you get a smooth, light mixture.

Spoon your mixture into your baking tin or individual cup cake cases and put into the oven. If baking a single cake, cook for around 30 minutes, then test by taking it out of the oven and gently pressing the top (use gloves as it will be hot). If it springs back and is an even brown colour, it is finished. If not, bake a little longer and try again. You shouldn’t need to cook for more than 35 minutes.

If baking cup cakes, cook for 15 minutes before testing in the same way, and then 5 minutes more if they are not cooked.

If icing your cake, allow it to cool and then combine as much icing sugar as you can with a third of a tea cup of very strong black coffee (again, two desert spoons of instant granules will be about right). Mix thoroughly to get rid of any lumps. Keep adding more icing sugar until you have a thick paste and then spread this across the top of the cold cake. Allow to harden and then serve.

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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

1 helen July 3, 2009 at 6:05 pm

I just made this recipe and cooked the cake for 40 minutes and it is still not cooked in the middle and the edges are burning.

2 Kirsty July 11, 2009 at 10:02 pm

Hi, I just made this recipe and it took over an hour to cook, even then, it wasnt cooked in the middle and the edges were burnt. The icing also didnt set.

3 Anon August 3, 2009 at 12:01 pm

Turn the oven down — it isn’t that difficult

4 Baker Girl January 25, 2010 at 6:20 pm

I just made this and it works. You need to get to know your oven. If making the bigger cake, turn down to 160 and cook for longer.

5 Nik January 25, 2010 at 6:58 pm

That’s a good tip, Baker Girl. Turning down the oven lets the insides cook evenly without the top and edges becoming burnt by the high temperature.

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