Fergus Henderson's Eccles Cake Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Bake

by: Food52

April17,2017

4

4 Ratings

  • Makes 12 pastries

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Author Notes

"I stress the St John in our Eccles cake, as I am sure Eccles cake bakers in Eccles will not recognise them as an Eccles cake they know. Oddly enough, for a restaurant with a carnivorous reputation, we serve a vegetarian Eccles cake, omitting the traditional lard in the pastry; instead we use puff pastry, so apologies to Eccles, but this recipe's results are delicious and particularly fine when consumed with Lancashire cheese. If you have pastry left over, it freezes very well."

Excerpted from Nose to Tail by Fergus Henderson (Ecco). Copyright © 2013. —Food52

  • Test Kitchen-Approved
Ingredients
  • For the puff pastry:
  • 1 pound2 ounces bread flour
  • 2 teaspoonssea salt
  • 4 1/2 ouncescold unsalted butter, diced, plus 1 cup cold unsalted butter, divided
  • 1 cupcold water
  • 2 teaspoonswhite wine vinegar
  • For the filling and assembly:
  • 1 3/4 ouncesunsalted butter
  • 4 ounces(scant) dark brown sugar
  • 7 3/4 ouncescurrants
  • 1 teaspoonground allspice
  • 1 teaspoonground nutmeg
  • 3 egg whites, beaten with a fork
  • Shallow bowl of superfine sugar
Directions
  1. For the puff pastry:
  2. To make the puff pastry, sift the flour into a bowl, then add the salt and the diced butter. Rub the butter in with your fingertips until the mixture looks like breadcrumbs. Add the water and vinegar, and mix to a firm paste. Shape into a ball, wrap in cling film, and leave in the fridge overnight.
  3. The next day, take the pastry out of the fridge and leave it to soften for 1 to 2 hours. The remaining butter should be at the same temperature as the pastry (if the butter is too soft, it will melt and ooze out of the pastry; if it is too hard, it will break out of the pastry and ruin your puff). A good way to achieve the correct temperature is to put the butter between a couple of sheets of baking parchment (or re-use your butter wrappers), beating with a rolling pin to soften it.
  4. When the butter and pastry are ready, roll out your pastry. First roll it into a square, then roll out each side in turn to extend the square into a cross. Leave the center thick, keeping the ends and sides square.
  5. Place the butter in the center of the pastry, molding it to the right size if necessary. Then wrap the arms of your cross over and around the butter: start by putting the left arm over the butter, then the right arm over the first arm, next the top and finally the bottom arm. The four arms of your cross should add up to the same thickness as the center of the pastry. Now you have butter in a pastry package.
  6. Turn your pastry so the top seam is on the right-hand side and roll it out on a floured surface into a rectangle about 8 inches wide and 28 inches long.
  7. Brush the excess flour off, then fold the rectangle in three, like a letter, with one end of the rectangle to the center and the other end over it.
  8. Give the pastry a quarter turn, so the seam is on the right-hand side, then roll out and fold again. Wrap in plastic wrap and leave to rest in the fridge for about 4 hours.
  9. Repeat twice more, so you have rolled out the pastry and butter six times total, resting it after every two turns (you'll have done 3 sets of 2 roll-outs). Finally, wrap it in plastic wrap and store in the fridge until ready to use. It also keeps well in the freezer.
  1. For the filling and assembly:
  2. To make the filling, melt the butter and sugar together, then add them to the dry ingredients, mix well, and then leave to cool before using.
  3. Preheat the oven to 375° F. Roll the puff pastry out to 1/3-inch thick and cut circles approximately 3 1/2 inches in diameter. Onto these spoon a blob of your filling mixture in the center of the circle, and pull up the sides of the pastry to cover the filling. Seal it with your fingers, then turn it over and slash the top. Paint the top with the egg white, then dip it into the sugar.
  4. The Eccles cakes are now ready to bake for 15 to 20 minutes; keep an eye on them so that they don’t burn. They can be eaten hot or cold and are particularly marvelous when eaten with Lancashire cheese.

Tags:

  • Bread
  • Cookie
  • Cake
  • Vinegar
  • Bake
  • Breakfast
  • Dessert

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • Alix Day

  • Kay

Popular on Food52

2 Reviews

Alix D. April 23, 2017

I love Eccles cakes!!! I was born in Scotland but now live in Canada. My biggest complaint about the Eccles Cakes that you can purchase at bakeries here is the lack of a decent amount of filling.

Kay April 21, 2017

This recipe sounds lovely! I will definitely try it. Hope to get the measures right, though (I'm from Switzerland and am not used to ounces).

Fergus Henderson's Eccles Cake Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Why are the round small cakes with currants called Eccles cakes? ›

Small currant-filled cakes originally from the small town of Eccles in Lancashire, where they have been made since the end of the 18th century. The recipe survived transportation to several of Britain's colonies and they remain deservedly popular today.

What is a 1234 cake Wiki? ›

A classic pound cake is made with a pound each of butter, sugar, eggs, and flour. Another type of butter cake that takes its name from the proportion of ingredients used is 1-2-3-4 cake: 1 cup butter, 2 cups sugar, 3 cups flour, and 4 eggs.

Why were Eccles Cakes banned? ›

When Oliver Cromwell gained power in 1650 A.D., both the wakes and the eating of Eccles Cakes were banned due to the Puritan belief that they both had pagan connections. On the other hand, maybe the powers that be in London, did not want their Northern subjects to have too much of a good thing!

When were Eccles Cakes banned? ›

When Oliver Cromwell gained power in 1650, both the wakes and eating of Eccles Cakes were banned because of the Puritan belief that they both had pagan connections. But the prohibition of both obviously did not hold.

What is a Sally Ann cake? ›

Sally Ann—Vanilla cake filled with vanilla whipped icing and iced in chocolate buttercream. Mary Ann—Chocolate cake filled with vanilla whipped icing and iced in chocolate buttercream with a star of vanilla whipped icing on top.

Why is it called Devil cake? ›

There are a few theories as to how it got its name. One, it's the decadent counterpart to angel food cake. Two, it's sinfully delicious. Finally, devil's food cake came about during a time when food that was spicy, rich, or dark was described as deviled, like deviled ham and deviled eggs.

What is a cake without cream called? ›

Oil Cake. Oil cakes follow the same principles as butter cakes, but use oil as the source of fat. Because oil is liquid at room temperature, oil cake recipes skip the step of creaming the fat and sugar; usually the oil is incorporated into the wet ingredients, which are whisked or folded into the dry ingredients.

What is the meaning of Eccles cake? ›

noun. Ec·​cles cake. ˈekəlz- British. : a rich cake with fruit filling (as currants)

What are those small round cakes called? ›

Petit fours are delicate little cakes that originated in France. Their name translates to “small oven” in English as petit fours were baked with the residual heat of brick ovens used for breadmaking in the past. The bakers would use the lower heat to make pastries, and thus their name was coined.

What cake is similar to Eccles cake? ›

The Chorley cake from Chorley is often seen as the most similar variant of the Eccles cake, however it is flatter, made with shortcrust pastry rather than flaky pastry and has no sugar topping.

What is the difference between an Eccles cake and a Banbury cake? ›

Most modern recipes seem to differentiate Banbury cakes and Eccles cakes purely by shape, with the former being oval, however I believe traditional Banburys were a lot more different.

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