The National Mark was a government scheme in the 1930’s, a laudable scheme to improve the quality of food for the nation, and to encourage farmers and producers to keep a high standard, and the housewives to buy only National Mark goods because of that… I say housewives, because that is who the National Mark Calender of Cooking was aimed at.
Easter is approaching, so my thoughts are turning to traditional fare… such as Simnel cake
- ¾ lb National Mark flour
- 4 National Mark eggs
- 8 oz butter
- 8 oz sugar
- 12 oz currants
- 8 oz sultanas
- 6 oz mixed peel
- 4 oz raisins
- ½ teaspoonful grated nutmeg
- pinch of mixed spice
- 1 teaspoonful baking powder
- almond paste
- salt
- line an 8″ cake tin with well-greased paper
- prepare the dry ingredients in the usual way by cleaning and picking the fruit, stoning the raisins and cutting them in half, and chopping the peel
- sieve the flour on a clean paper with the grated nutmeg, baking powder, mixed and a pinch of salt
- put the butter and sugar into a basin, working them together with a wooden spoon until they resemble whipped cream
- beat each egg separately into the butter and sugar
- stir in the flour gradually, adding some of the mixed fruit alternately with the flour
- when the mixture id of the right consistency – a little milk can be added if necessary – and all the ingredients are thoroughly mixed, put half the mixture into the cake tin
- roll out some of the almond paste until it is ½ inch thick, place the cake tin on top of the paste and cut out a round slightly smaller than the tin. Place the almond paste on top of the mixture in the tin, and then add the remaining mixture
- bake in a moderate oven at a temperature approximately 340°F for about 3½ hours.
- When cold decorate the top of the cake with almond paste, and brown it lightly under a grill
How interesting – we no longer have to clean or pick our dried fruit, nor take out the pips from raisins; I can’t understand why the flour is sieved onto a paper, and these days we would use an electric beater for the butter and sugar – they must have had amazing arm muscles! We always decorate our cakes with eleven balls of marzipan for the eleven true disciples… I wonder when that custom started?

I made it once, it was fiddly but delicious. Bit to
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I always eat too much of it, that’s the problem with simnel cake for me!
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