raspberry buttermilk cake
As much as I enjoy making extravagant three-tiered cakes, despite the fact that they’ve given me some of the most stressful moments of my life, you can’t just up and make a layer cake at the drop of a hat. There’s frosting involved and a crumb coat and the whole general waiting time. With layer cakes, you must plan in advance and particularly if your schedule is as busy as mine is, you’ll have to carefully plan ahead when you will bake the cake, when you will make the frosting, and so on, so that you can run errands in between and not sit in your apartment waiting for the next step. I learned that with my first layer cake – call it a lesson learned.
So even though I don’t have an option of always having cake on hand (this is for my own good as much as being busy at work) I’m also one of those people who enjoys to have something homebaked at the drop of a hat especially when friends drop by unexpectedly. Or on occasions when you’re making a book club dinner during weeknight for a group of young ladies with discriminating palates.
So when life throws you lemons, you make lemonade, naturally. And if life prohibits you from spending your mornings and afternoons fussing over a layer cake complete with piped frosting, there are some simple quick cakes that are well within your reach and can be made in under an hour using a maximum of two bowls. Edna Lewis referred to these cakes as “busy-day cakes”, and while the name suggests just messily throwing ingredients together, there is nothing harried about these cakes at all. In fact, for me, they evoke a kind of Southern tranquility and calm. The kind where you sit in a rocking chair sipping lemonade and eating cake. Easy to make yes, but you’d never think these were sort of thrown together. They’re lovely and delicate and kind of decadent in their own way.
I made this cake for the book club ladies and this is another one that will have to be made again and again. For picnics, and hostess gifts, for potluck suppers, for random last-moment get-togethers. And have I told you how much I love baking with buttermilk? It makes cakes lighter and more delicate. And since I am a fan of adding some tart to my sweet, berries make a great addition. Here I used raspberries, but blueberries or strawberries would have been equally lovely.
Lastly, one of the most winning traits of such cakes, for me personally, is that they’re not overly sweet, and can be eaten either as dessert or as coffee cake the next morning. Their simplicity is the kind of honest, low-maintenance appeal that I love about busy night meals, when you still take the time to cook a proper supper, but manage to strike a balance between homemade and practical. As all of us with office jobs know, cooking on a weeknight can appear to be an insurmountable challenge. And the lovely thing is that – it doesn’t have to be. Here’s proof!
Raspberry Buttermilk Cake
Adapted from Gourmet, June 2009
Ingredients:
1 cup (125 g) all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/2 stick (60 g) unsalted butter, softened
2/3 cup (135 g) plus 1 1/2 tablespoons sugar, divided
1/2 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 large egg
1/2 cup (120 ml) well-shaken buttermilk
1 cup (150 g/50 oz) fresh raspberries
Preparation:
Preheat oven to 400°F with rack in middle. Butter and flour a 9-inch round cake pan.
Whisk together flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt.
Beat butter and 2/3 cup sugar with an electric mixer at medium-high speed until pale and fluffy, about 2 minutes, then beat in vanilla. Add egg and beat well.
At low speed, mix in flour mixture in 3 batches, alternating with buttermilk, beginning and ending with flour, and mixing until just combined.
Spoon batter into cake pan, smoothing top. Scatter raspberries evenly over top and sprinkle with remaining 1 1/2 tablespoons sugar.
Bake until cake is golden and a wooden pick inserted into center comes out clean, 25 to 30 minutes. Cool in pan 10 minutes, then turn out onto a rack and cool to warm, 10 to 15 minutes more. Invert onto a plate.
the cosmic cowgirl
this really is a lovely cake–very old fashioned. i made it with blackberries. your photos are gorgeous!
Whitney
Beautiful cake. I bet is was lovely as well.
maggie (p&c)
Yum! Love the shot looking into the sliced cake!
maggie (p&c)
Yum! Love the shot looking into the sliced cake!
The Kitchenette
I love this cake. I may or may not have made it 3 times in the past 3 weeks, with different berries each time. I’m posting my fave variation tomorrow… looks like there will be an abundance of cake on the Internets this month, all due to that recipe. Your pics are beautiful, love the site.
Mandee
Let’s not talk about the fact that I made it Friday evening, had no company or even drop by visitors all weekend, and ate the last piece Sunday morning for breakfast. Oops.
Sarah
I can definitely appreciate a cake that fits someone on a schedule! I’ve seen this one around the blogs and bookmark it everytime! Think my mind is telling me something?
radish
cowgirl, whitney and maggie = thank you!!
kitchenette – lovely cake, right?
mandee – your comment cracked me up. that would have been me – and will be when i make this cake again! definitely a keeper.
Sarah – oh you must try – easy, breezy, delicious! and will impress everyone eating it.
Ciaochowlinda
I think I could make that cake again and again. And probably eat an entire one myself.
Mark Scarbrough
I’ll just echo everyone by saying, Holy cripes I love that shot looking into the cake. In fact, I love it enough that I dragged my butt out of my chair to see if we had buttermilk in the fridge. Eureka! And fat-free buttermilk, at that. So I’m going to give it a whirl tomorrow. Sounds just heavenly.
EB
Man oh man! You are one serious cake roll. I love it.
Nicole (Cooking After Five)
I made this a couple of weeks ago–such a great cake!
Laura [What I Like]
Ha! This recipe must appeal to a broad audience, I made something similar recently and was just over the moon about it. What a wonderful summer dessert!
Sweet Kitchen
With a cake like this who needs company? Absolutely lovely!
The Leftoverist
I love baking with buttermilk, too. Sometimes I feel like I’m cheating because it really imparts that magical something. I just started baking birthday cakes for a non-profit once a month, and am on the lookout for cakes that are easy, transportable, but still celebratory. I think this will be July’s cake.
Sues
Oh wow, this looks like a keeper!! I lovee buttermilk :)
Farmgirl Susan
Okay, I’ve had this page open for 3 days now. I just can’t get myself to close it down. Your cake looks so good! Beautiful photos. I don’t have any raspberries, but I do have a bunch of blueberries in the freezer that really should be put to good use. . . ; )
radish
Susan, i think blueberries would work beautifully here! Have fun with it.
jen jafarzadeh
raspberries + cake! the combination is so delicious. two of my favorite things.
Lisa (dinner party)
Gorgeous photos–I love how the raspberries made an even layer inside! I think this would be perfect for a picnic.
steph (whisk/spoon)
i love these simple “busy day cakes.” even on a lazy day, they are just perfect!