You know how if you take a banana cake batter and pour it into a loaf pan, what comes out is “banana bread”? Well, I don’t get it. Why is it bread when technically it’s just cake in a different shape? And bread doesn’t sound as much of a guilty pleasure; cake is all comfort and happiness and sweetness and nothing bad can happen when there’s cake around. “Banana bread” sounds like it should be good for us; banana cake is the exact opposite.

Banana Cake

The idea of this cake started a while ago. One day, just out of the blue, Blai decided that he’d like some fried bananas. I, of course, thought he meant pisang goreng (fried battered bananas, Malaysian style) but he was thinking much more simply – he craved plain sliced bananas tossed with a bit of sugar and fried in a bit of oil, nothing more. I was skeptical (and now craving pisang goreng) but went along with it and watched that night as he happily stirred together his banana slices at the stove, cooking them into a mush (that was a bit unexpected but our bananas were very ripe). But that mush, which he’d let caramelise in the pan, was utterly delicious!

Banana Cake

How marvellous for this fried banana to be incorporated into a cake, I thought, and here we are. I think it would be splendid with a couple handfuls of chocolate chips or chopped candied ginger or walnuts or pecans tossed in but Blai accuses me of over-complicating things. Ok, ok, perhaps I do overthink things so the cake was kept very simple here. (And do toss in any of the above if you like the sound of them!) I’m not sure if the flavour of the caramelised bananas does come through but I do know that it’s a delicious cake.

Banana Cake Slice

Oh, and I’m pretending that this was the beginning of my Chinese New Year baking, which is still nonexistent otherwise!

Banana Cake
Adapted from this recipe.
Makes one cake, 9×5 inches in size

2 tbsps butter
sunflower oil
1/2 cup white sugar
1/4 cup brown sugar
1/2 tsp salt
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
1-1/2 cups plain flour
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp ground cinnamon
4 small or 4 large bananas
1 tbsp white sugar

Preheat your oven to 175C.

Melt the butter in a frying pan and pour it into your measuring cup. Top up with oil until you have a 1/4 cup. Pour all into a large mixing bowl. (Feel free to change the ratio of melted butter-oil. You could even use all of one.)

Peel the bananas and slice them thinly. Toss them into the pan in which you melted the butter (no need to wipe it down) along with the 1 tablespoon of sugar and set on a medium heat. Cook, stirring often, until the bananas have gone to mush and are starting to caramelise. Turn off the heat and let cool. (If you don’t feel like doing this step, just peel and mash the bananas with a fork or potato masher.)

Add the rest of the sugars to the bowl with the oil and butter and stir well. Break in the eggs and add the vanilla extract and continue stirring. Add the flour, baking soda, baking powder and cinnamon and combine. Finally, add the banana mixture and stir through to combine once more.

Grease a 9″x5″ loaf pan (you might want to line the bottom too – ours popped out but with a bit of banging!). Pour the batter in and level it with a spatula. Bake 40-50 minutes, check after 40 – a skewer should come out clean. Let cool a bit and then turn it out onto a rack to cool fully. Tuck in!

Mmmm… cake. I was very much on a baking kick a couple weeks ago, the result being that we gain weight and the blog gains a few recipes. When I went to our local market one Saturday, as soon as I laid my eyes on these fat, glossy, juicy blackberries, I knew they’d end up in a cake. Of course, then Blai asked if they were the same berry that we ate off a wild bush on a recent bicycle ride. Yes, doh! I could’ve just ridden up there and picked some wild blackberries; if you have access to a wild bush, pick them there!

Slice of Cake

Coffee cake was what I had in mind – and no, there’s no coffee in it; instead it’s a snack cake meant to be eaten while having coffee. Confused? Yes, why can’t it just be called cake?! Or snack cake? Quite often, they have a crumbly topping, as mine did, so why not just… crumble cake? The original recipe I based my cake on made use of sour cherries and I reckon any tart berry would be a good substitute. I reduced the sugar in the original recipe as we tend to find a lot of North American recipes to be too sweet and I thought the sweetness level what resulted was just right.

Blackberry Coffee Cake

I love fruit in cakes: the sweet-tartness of the berries burst through the butteriness of the tender cake and the crumbly shortbread-like topping, creating an incredibly moreish snack cake. Heck, late the next evening, we ate over half of the cake for dinner, with Larb Pretz on the side.

Blackberry Coffee Cake
adapted from Martha Stewart Living, via Lottie + Doof

For the topping
50g unsalted butter, melted
3/4 cup plain flour
1/4 cup caster or granulated sugar
1/4 cup light brown sugar
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp ground cinnamon

For the cake
1 1/2 cups plain flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp salt
50g unsalted butter, softened
1/2 cup caster sugar
2 large eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 cup milk
1 punnet of blackberries

Preheat your oven to 180 Celsius. Butter and flour an 8-9 inch square baking pan (or equivalent area pan).

Mix the topping together. In a bowl, mix together the flour, sugars, salt and cinnamon. Drizzle in the melted butter and stir together until mixed together and lumpy. Set aside.

Now mix the main cake batter together. Mix together the flour, salt and baking powder and set aside. In a large bowl, cream the butter and sugar together until light and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time, mixing until smooth. Add the vanilla and stir in. Add half the flour mixture, stir until just combined, add the milk, stir again, add the rest of the flour and stir until just combined again. Spread the batter in the prepared pan. Dot the batter with the blackberries and then sprinkle the topping evenly over it all.

Blackberries and Batter And a Crumble Topping

Bake in the preheated oven until a skewer comes out clean when poked in the centre of the cake – this should take about 50 minutes to 1 hour. Let cool a bit and serve.

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