I have a friend who is diabetic, so I decided to apply my ingenuity to making a cake she can eat.
3 over-ripe bananas
100g butter (or marge)
3 eggs
170g SR flour
1 level teaspn baking powder
100g chopped dried apricots
Mash the bananas, cream with the butter, beat in the eggs 1 by 1, adding a little of the flour with each.
Combine the rest of the flour with the baking powder, stir in, along with the apricots.
Line a tin with greaseproof or baking parchment (I used my loaf tin, can't tell you the size, it's 'the one I've got'), but 8" round tin or whatever is handy, as long as you are used to baking cakes in it) and pour in the mixture.
Bake as for a 3-egg Victoria Sponge/Madeira (according to the tin size and shape) but add an extra 10 mins per hour of the usual time. It's done when it is 'springy', like a Victoria sponge.
It was very popular with the intended recipent, and I plan on making another one this weekend.
3 over-ripe bananas
100g butter (or marge)
3 eggs
170g SR flour
1 level teaspn baking powder
100g chopped dried apricots
Mash the bananas, cream with the butter, beat in the eggs 1 by 1, adding a little of the flour with each.
Combine the rest of the flour with the baking powder, stir in, along with the apricots.
Line a tin with greaseproof or baking parchment (I used my loaf tin, can't tell you the size, it's 'the one I've got'), but 8" round tin or whatever is handy, as long as you are used to baking cakes in it) and pour in the mixture.
Bake as for a 3-egg Victoria Sponge/Madeira (according to the tin size and shape) but add an extra 10 mins per hour of the usual time. It's done when it is 'springy', like a Victoria sponge.
It was very popular with the intended recipent, and I plan on making another one this weekend.
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