My favourite "let's see whats in the kitchen drawers" cake recipe:



This is my favourite cake recipe. The outcome varies depending on time and place of fabrication, so you'll never get bored eating this cake. I've done this cake at least four dozen times and I can promise you will have lot's of fun too. It's not only standing in the kitchen and baking it, it's the whole surrounding that makes it so much fun. The measurements are in metric units, after all, we're trying to be international here. It is also a good idea to have a bunch of hungry people hanging around, at least for your first tries. You know, someone has to eat this, and if they're hungry enough, they won't mind if it doesn't taste so perfect.

Step 1: Find a reason to bake a cake.
This should be an easy one. Two of my favourites are: I try to avoid having to do something that is really important (like studying for an exam). Or I start betting with some nice girl that I want to get to know better (the loser has to bake a cake and invite the winner over for coffee/tea. You can even take on risky bets, because you don't mind making the cake). Do not omit this step lightheartedly, the reason is important because it puts you in the right mood, and the outcome of your cake may vary widely depending on this.

Step 2: Organise some entertainment for yourself while being in the kitchen.
This is important too, for it will keep you in the right mood once you started. If you are a routined baker, you can invite the already-mentioned girl to come over to your place a little earlier, so you can chat with her while you are working (and even better, while it's baking). If this is your first try and you'd rather not be observed, bring your ghettoblaster and some of your favourite music. Personally, I prefer both (nice girls and good music). Watching TV while doing this is not advisable. You need to look at your hands, so distracting yourself can be dangerous.

Step 3: Make sure you have the necessary tools.
You need something to prepare the dough in, a scale, a baking form and an oven that heats up to 175 degrees Celsius.

Step 4: Check that you have the necessary ingredients.
Although the cake can be varied, there is a basic mixture that always stays the same (more or less). You will need 250 grams of flour, 125g of sugar, 125g of margerine or butter, 2 eggs, baking powder, a sip of milk and a pinch of salt. Sweet (not salted) butter tastes best, but margerine is softer and easier to stir.

Step 5: Prepare the basic dough.
Mix the eggs, sugar, butter and pinch of salt real well. Mix flour and baking powder in an extra bowl. Then add flour and milk to the egg/sugar/butter bowl and mix it well. You can double the amounts to make for a large cake. More baking powder makes the cake grow ("fluffier"), but less firm, less baking powder makes it sit in the form but more of a satisfying bite. Now add extras.

Step 6: Add extras, the fun part.
Open all kitchen drawers and throw in whatever you find and expect to have a cool taste. Anything goes. MandMs, peanut butter, cocoa powder, pineapple pieces. Just make sure that the stuff has a strong taste (otherwise the cake will taste boring). When adding fruit keep in mind that it "sweats" out moisture, so you may want to add some more flour than usual for compensation. Some of my favourite combinations are:
-nut/poppy seed: Add 100-200g of ground nuts (hazelnuts or almonds), 100g of poppy seeds and a good swig of Amaretto.
-banana: Add 2 chopped bananas and some banana sirup (the stuff also used for cocktails).
-punk: Add lemon/orange aroma and a good swig of Bols Blue Curacao (makes fancy colors).
If you have found a cool combination please mail it to me.

Step 7: Bake it.
Use some extra butter/margerine to grease the form before you pour the dough in. Bake 50-60 minutes at 175 degrees Celsius, depending on dough moisture. Poke it with a wooden stick (like a large toothpick) to test if it's finished yet. If nothing sticks to the toothpick, the cake's ok.

Step 8: Let it cool down. Then eat. Mjam!


Eternally grateful to Mark "the Quark" Kamla, for introducing me to the art of cake-baking (remember the Mohnschnittentrick).