Mary Berry’s been making her traditional Christmas cake recipe for as long as Paul Hollywood’s been alive. She knows what she’s talking about.
The last Sunday before Advent is known as Stir-up Sunday, when families traditionally gather to prepare the mix for the festive pud. It is also the best time to start soaking the cake’s fruit in booze so it matures properly.
Mary said: “I’ve made Christmas cake to this recipe since I have been married – which is 1966.
“It is essential to make it at least three weeks to a month ahead. If you bake and eat it within a couple of days it all crumbles. If it is left to mature, it firms up and has a nice neat slice. We have it with tea when we get back from our traditional Christmas Day walk. It is also fantastic with a glass of champagne!”
Here’s Mary’s step-by-step guide.
Prep time: Overnight
Cook time: 4 hours
If you like, you can replace half of the glacé cherries with dried apricots. You can also replace up to 75g of the currants with mixed candied peel. For a zestier flavour, use half orange zest and half lemon zest.
Each serving contains
Energy
1272kJ
304kcal
15%
Fat
11g
16%
Saturates
5.9g
30%
Sugars
41.1g
46%
Salt
0.1g
2%
Carbs
47.1g
18%
Fibre
1.9g
6%
of an adult's reference intake