25 November 2012

Mudslide Cake


This is one of four cakes I made (well... assembled at least) over this weekend, all in the name of friendship.

You see, this week was the week in which four of my friends celebrated their birthdays, and last night culminated in a party for three of them. At some point in mid October, I had the insane and ambitious idea to create a three tier cake for P, M and D. After the incredibly organised and efficient way I managed to make my sister's eight layer cake in the dead of night, I thought a month would be more than enough time to plan and prep for this. Fortunately, I was right.

Two weeks ago, then, I spent a Friday afternoon doing nothing but making icing. The following Friday, I made four cakes (one was meant to be a chocolate loaf cake for me to eat but it fell apart when I turned it out of the tin). Yesterday, I finally assembled the cakes at my friends' house. The cake you see above consists of (top to bottom): Chocolate Beer Cake with cream cheese icing, Vodka Rainbow Cake with vodka icing and Mudslide Cake with chocolate Bailey's icing.

Today's cake is the Mudslide Cake, which is on the bottom layer. I made it for P because, well, he asked for a cake inspired by the mudslide cocktail,  in honour of our shared cocktail drinking habit. Mudslides traditionally consist of vodka, coffee liqueur and Bailey's. Fortunately I still had plenty of vodka and coffee liqueur left over from various baking sessions, and my mum and sister brought me a sample of Bailey's Amaretto from this year's Good Food festival in Birmingham. I'm not a massive amaretto fan and have only just got into Bailey's, so I never got round to using it until now.


Though in the end I thought it best to hide the cake away during the party, the cake got eaten this morning and even the most hungover people still enjoyed the odd bite. The Mudslide Cake, and particularly the icing, was delicious and moist. The bite of the alcohol was removed during the baking process, so all that was left behind was the flavours. I'd definitely make the cake again on its own and think it would look particularly good in cupcake form.

This cake doesn't need the two weeks of preparation I gave it; you could quite easily bake and decorate it within the space of a couple of hours.If you do need to make it in advance, though, the icing can be refrigerated for up to a fortnight and the cake can be tightly wrapped in cling film and frozen for up to a week. Don't bother to defrost the cake before decorating, as the sponge will defrost quite happily from underneath the icing and it will be easier to ice when it isn't crumbling everywhere. The icing is based on the recipe for Nutella Cloud Icing from the very talented Sweetapolita; make sure you bring it up to room temperature before using - if it's solidified put it in a bowl over a pan of hot water and break it up with a knife, stirring until it is soft enough to whisk.

Also, please note that this cake contains a fair amount of alcohol (I basically exchanged milk for booze) so I wouldn't advise that you give it to children. If you want to make a non-alcoholic version of this cake, you could replace the coffee liqueur with real coffee and replace the rest of the spirits with milk.



Ingredients
For the sponge:

  • 300g Caster Sugar
  • 300g Butter
  • 300g Self Raising Flour
  • 3 Eggs
  • 25mL Bailey's
  • 50mL Vodka
  • 50mL Coffee Liqueur
  • 1 Tsp Baking Powder
For the Bailey's Cloud icing:
  • 230g Butter
  • 190g Icing Sugar
  • 125g Milk Chocolate
  • 1 Tbsp Bailey's
  • Pinch Salt
Recipe
  • Preheat the oven to 200C/180C fan and line two 12" (9" if you aren't intending to make a three tier cake) cake tins with baking parchment.
  • Cream the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy.
  • Beat in the eggs, one at a time, until the batter is smooth.
  • Sift the flour and baking powder into the batter, then fold in until well combined.
  • Pour in the Bailey's, vodka and coffee liqueur and fold in until the batter is smooth. If the batter doesn't have a soft dropping consistency, add more of your alcohol of choice (don't worry - the alcohol bakes off and leaves the flavour behind).
  • Divide the batter between the cake tins and bake for 22 mins, or until a skewer comes out clean.
  • To make the icing, use and electric whisk to beat the butter and icing sugar together for 1 minute. 
  • Melt the chocolate and allow it to cool slightly before adding to the icing mixture and beating for 2 minutes.
  • Finally, add the Bailey's and salt before whisking for another minute.
  • When the cakes are cool, sandwich them together with the icing and smooth the rest over the top and sides. Decorate as desired.
To find out how to make this cake better for you, take a look at Healthy(ish) Baking.

As you may have guessed, this is part one of three posts about the three tiered cake. I'll post the next two throughout the week ahead, so keep your eyes peeled.


1 comment:

  1. I've never actually had a Mudslide, but it sounds perfect for making into a cake! This sounds delicious, and I'm so impressed at your three-tiered alcohol cake – definitely something for everyone. I didn't know that Bailey's make an Amaretto version. Not sure how I feel about that – I love Amaretto, but am not much of a fan of Bailey's (unless it's in icing).

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