Sicilian Lemon, Ricotta and Almond Cake Recipe
Sicilian Lemon, Ricotta and Almond Cake Recipe
by chetram nagar
Years ago I was travelling through a remote part of the india Outback. I stopped to refuel at a roadhouse in the middle of nowhere, and when I went inside to pay for my fuel I was overwhelmed by the smell of coffee. Good coffee. Long before there were baristas on every corner of the globe.
I mentioned to the middle-aged man who took my money that the coffee smelled divine. 'Do you want some?' he asked me. 'Mum's just made a fresh pot.'
Of course I said yes, and soon I was sitting at a table under a tree behind the roadhouse, with the man, his wife, and his very elderly Italian mother. She had brewed up her coffee in a stovetop espresso machine, the first one I had ever seen. The coffee was served in tiny glasses. No milk, but there was sugar if it was wanted. To accompany the coffee the old woman produced half a cake on a covered plate, still glistening with cold from the refrigerator.
She cut me a wedge, scooped a small serve of vanilla ice-cream onto my plate and then poured a drizzle of syrup over my cake from a glass jar.
The cake was delicious. Moist and dense but not heavy, full of sweetness and lemon that paired beautifully with the robust black coffee. I was in heaven!
Neither the old woman nor the man's wife could speak English, but I still managed to get the recipe for the cake, which I recorded on the back of a used envelope. I also had my first taste of limoncello, which this Italian family also made themselves.
Cake Ingredients
2 cups ricotta cheese
3 large eggs (or 4 small)
grated zest of 3 large lemons
2 and 1/2 cups almond meal (I used ground whole organic almonds - the texture is still a little coarse, and the skins give a good flavour and texture)
3/4 cup sugar (you can cut back to 1/2 if you are not a fan of sweet cakes)
1/3 cup flaked almonds
Optional but good - 2 tablespoons of limoncello
Syrup Ingredients
grated zest of one large lemon
1/2 cup lemon juice
1/2 cup caster sugar
Method
1. Preheat oven to 160°C/140°C fan forced. Grease and line base of a 20 cm deep round cake pan with baking paper.
2. Place ricotta, eggs, zest, almond meal and sugar in a large bowl. Using an electric mixer, beat until smooth. This only takes a minute or so. Pour into prepared pan. Sprinkle evenly with almonds. Bake for 55 minutes, or until cooked through.
3. Meanwhile, combine lemon juice, zest and extra sugar in a small saucepan over medium heat. Stir until sugar dissolves. Simmer for 5 minutes.
4. Use a fine skewer to poke some holes in top of cake. Pour limoncello over cake and then half the hot syrup. Keep extra syrup aside for serving. Syrup will thicken as it cools. Leave cake to stand in tin until cold. (unless serving warm - obviously!)
Serve warm or cold, with vanilla ice-cream, natural yogurt and a drizzle of extra syrup. I am a big fan of coconut yoghurt with this cake. That's what is in the pictures below.
My favourite cup measure gifted to me by my Nana!
Getting my ingredients together
When you grate your lemon zest, try not to get too much of the white pith, which has a bitter taste
The cake batter, thick and not over-beaten
The prepared cake mix, ready for the oven
The syrup, in all its lemony goodness
Hot cake, skewered and with syrup poured over
Cake is served! Afternoon tea on the veranda.
Sicilian Lemon, Almond Ricotta Cake. Let the eating begin
by chetram nagar
Years ago I was travelling through a remote part of the india Outback. I stopped to refuel at a roadhouse in the middle of nowhere, and when I went inside to pay for my fuel I was overwhelmed by the smell of coffee. Good coffee. Long before there were baristas on every corner of the globe.
I mentioned to the middle-aged man who took my money that the coffee smelled divine. 'Do you want some?' he asked me. 'Mum's just made a fresh pot.'
Of course I said yes, and soon I was sitting at a table under a tree behind the roadhouse, with the man, his wife, and his very elderly Italian mother. She had brewed up her coffee in a stovetop espresso machine, the first one I had ever seen. The coffee was served in tiny glasses. No milk, but there was sugar if it was wanted. To accompany the coffee the old woman produced half a cake on a covered plate, still glistening with cold from the refrigerator.
She cut me a wedge, scooped a small serve of vanilla ice-cream onto my plate and then poured a drizzle of syrup over my cake from a glass jar.
The cake was delicious. Moist and dense but not heavy, full of sweetness and lemon that paired beautifully with the robust black coffee. I was in heaven!
Neither the old woman nor the man's wife could speak English, but I still managed to get the recipe for the cake, which I recorded on the back of a used envelope. I also had my first taste of limoncello, which this Italian family also made themselves.
Cake Ingredients
2 cups ricotta cheese
3 large eggs (or 4 small)
grated zest of 3 large lemons
2 and 1/2 cups almond meal (I used ground whole organic almonds - the texture is still a little coarse, and the skins give a good flavour and texture)
3/4 cup sugar (you can cut back to 1/2 if you are not a fan of sweet cakes)
1/3 cup flaked almonds
Optional but good - 2 tablespoons of limoncello
Syrup Ingredients
grated zest of one large lemon
1/2 cup lemon juice
1/2 cup caster sugar
Method
1. Preheat oven to 160°C/140°C fan forced. Grease and line base of a 20 cm deep round cake pan with baking paper.
2. Place ricotta, eggs, zest, almond meal and sugar in a large bowl. Using an electric mixer, beat until smooth. This only takes a minute or so. Pour into prepared pan. Sprinkle evenly with almonds. Bake for 55 minutes, or until cooked through.
3. Meanwhile, combine lemon juice, zest and extra sugar in a small saucepan over medium heat. Stir until sugar dissolves. Simmer for 5 minutes.
4. Use a fine skewer to poke some holes in top of cake. Pour limoncello over cake and then half the hot syrup. Keep extra syrup aside for serving. Syrup will thicken as it cools. Leave cake to stand in tin until cold. (unless serving warm - obviously!)
Serve warm or cold, with vanilla ice-cream, natural yogurt and a drizzle of extra syrup. I am a big fan of coconut yoghurt with this cake. That's what is in the pictures below.
My favourite cup measure gifted to me by my Nana!
Getting my ingredients together
When you grate your lemon zest, try not to get too much of the white pith, which has a bitter taste
The cake batter, thick and not over-beaten
The prepared cake mix, ready for the oven
The syrup, in all its lemony goodness
Hot cake, skewered and with syrup poured over
Cake is served! Afternoon tea on the veranda.
Sicilian Lemon, Almond Ricotta Cake. Let the eating begin
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