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Mma Ramotswe?s Banana Cake
Bush Tea Beginnings Cake, of course, goes so terribly well with tea and has a universality that straddles the bush/China divide. Mma Ramotswe’s Cookbook (Stuart Brown)
I settled for Motholeli’s Disappearing Banana Cake, and, trust me it isn’t named ‘disappearing’ for nothing. This cake was hoovered up within 24 hours, not all by me I hasten to add, although it would have been no hardship. The smell wafting from the oven as the cake baked was enough to make my mouth water. I just couldn?t bring myself to put the extractor fan on, I had to trap this smell, under no circumstances could I aid it escaping.
A huge bonus of this cake is that it contains no added fat, although it does have a hefty dose of sugar. The sugar quantity could I’m sure be reduced with no adversity. For a fat free cake this is extremely moist and flavoursome. Perfect for that guilt free mid morning snack or afternoon ‘pick me up’. According to the book this is a cake best enjoyed warm, fresh from the oven, preferably served with butter. I’d go so far as to agree it is at peak point when warm but to add butter? No, for me it would ruin the taste. My only essential added extra would be a glass of redbush tea.
For centuries, rooibos tea was drunk by the Khoisan tribe of South Africa, who used it as a herbal medicine. In the 18th Century, a botanist named Carl Humberg reported its use and it began to be enjoyed by South Africans. In 1904, a Russian immigrant called Benjamin Ginsberg began to offer Rooibos to a worldwide market, calling it ‘Mountain Tea’. Farmers began to cultivate the crop, and it increased in popularity, especially in the West during World War II, when traditional black tea from Asia was very hard to get hold of. In 1968, a South African mother named Annique Theron accidentally used some leftover rooibos tea in her baby daughter’s bottle and discovered that it had a calming and soothing effect, relieving the baby’s chronic restlessness, vomiting and stomach cramps. She advertised in her local newspaper and found other mothers whose infants had similar problems, and these provided a testing ground for her theories about the healing properties of rooibos tea. Wanting to share her discovery with the rest of the world, she wrote a book on the anti-allergic qualities of the Rooibos plant called Allergies: an Amazing Discovery. She later created a range of skincare products containing rooibos extract, which are used to treat dry, irritated and allergic skin. In 1997, the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) awarded rooibos a gold medal for its anti-allergic properties, and in 1998 it awarded Annique Theron ‘Woman Discoverer of the Year’.
Motholeli’s Disappearing Banana Cake 3 bananas (quite ripe ones work best) 2 eggs 6oz caster sugar 8oz plain flour 1 teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon bicarbonate of soda Demerara sugar (to sprinkle on top) Preheat the oven to 160C or the equivalent. Squish the bananas in a bowl and mix in the beaten eggs. Add the caster sugar, flour, salt and bicarbonate of soda and stir in well. Pour into a buttered loaf tin and sprinkle demerara sugar over the top. Bake at 160C for one hour, (test by putting a skewer in to test if it comes out clean, beware of hitting banana chunks though). Leave to cool in the tin for about five minutes before turning out on to a wire rack. Best served slightly warm, plain or with jam/butter.
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