PLUM CAKE
This plum cake and its related items can improve your baking skills if you make them. This is a verified recipe from Chef Masab Pasha. Please try it
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PLUM CAKE
This plum cake and its related items can improve your baking skills if you make them. This is a verified recipe from Chef Masab Pasha. Please try it
Rich Plum Cake
In the Signature Style of Chef Muassab Pasha
1. Definition
Rich Plum Cake is a dense, fruit-laden celebration cake made with soaked dried fruits, warm spices, and brown sugar, baked slowly to develop depth and maturity of flavor.
Despite the name, modern plum cake does not necessarily contain fresh plums. The term “plum” historically referred to dried fruits such as raisins and prunes.
This cake is defined by:
• Pre-soaked dried fruits
• Warm spice infusion
• Brown sugar caramel notes
• Slow baking at low temperature
• Moist, tight crumb structure
In the philosophy of Chef Muassab Pasha, a rich plum cake is not simply mixed — it is matured.
The soaking process hydrates fruits.
Spices build aromatic warmth.
Brown sugar deepens caramel complexity.
Slow baking stabilizes structure.
The result is a cake that improves with time and slices beautifully.
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2. History
Plum cake originated in medieval Europe, particularly in England, where dried fruits and spices were symbols of luxury and trade wealth.
By the 16th century, fruit cakes became associated with Christmas celebrations. British colonization later introduced plum cake to South Asia, where it became a festive staple, especially during winter holidays.
Over time, regional variations developed — some soaked fruits in rum, others in fruit juices for alcohol-free versions.
Today, rich plum cake represents tradition, celebration, and craftsmanship in bakery culture.
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3. Recpie
Ingredients
Dried Fruits (Soaking Mix)
Black Raisins – 50g (⅓ cup)
Dried Prunes (chopped) – 50g (⅓ cup)
Chopped Dates – 30g (¼ cup)
Dried Figs (chopped) – 30g (¼ cup)
Dried Cherries – 50g (⅓ cup)
Candied Orange Peel – 25g (2 tbsp)
Mixed Nuts (Almonds, Cashews, Walnuts) – 50g (⅓ cup chopped)
For Soaking:
Orange Juice – 1 cup (240ml)
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Cake Batter
All-Purpose Flour – 2 cups (250g)
Baking Powder – 1½ tsp (6g)
Baking Soda – ½ tsp (3g)
Cinnamon Powder – ½ tsp (1g)
Nutmeg Powder – ½ tsp (1g)
Clove Powder – ¼ tsp (0.5g)
Unsalted Butter – ¾ cup (170g)
Brown Sugar – 1 cup (200g packed)
Eggs – 3 large
Milk – ½ cup (120ml)
Vanilla Essence – 1 tsp (5ml)
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4. Preparation
Grease an 8-inch round pan and line with butter paper.
Preheat oven to 160°C.
5. Method
1 – Soaking the Fruits
Combine all dried fruits and nuts in a bowl.
Pour orange juice over them.
Cover and refrigerate for at least 6–8 hours (preferably overnight).
2 – Prepare Dry Ingredients .Sift together flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon, nutmeg, and clove powder.
Set aside.
3 –Beat butter and brown sugar until light and fluffy.
4 –Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition.
5 – Mix in vanilla essence.
6 – Add dry ingredients and milk alternately in three parts
Dry → Milk → Dry → Milk → Dry
Mix gently. Do not overmix.
7 –Drain excess juice if necessary and gently fold soaked fruits into the batter.
8 – Pour batter into prepared pan.
Bake at 160°C for 60–70 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
If the top browns too quickly, cover loosely with foil.
9 –Warm apricot jam slightly and brush over the cake for shine.
(Alternative glazes may be used as preferred.)
6. Storage & Maturation
Room Temperature:
Wrap tightly and store for up to 3 days.
Refrigeration:
Up to 1 week.
Aging Tip:
Flavor improves after 24–48 hours of resting.
Freezing:
Wrap in cling film and freeze for up to 2 months.
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