
My lardy cake adventure began with a tiny cottage loaf.
I tweeted the photo below and asked my English friend Matthew if he’d eaten this style of bread as a child…

Matt replied that he’d actually grown up eating lardy cakes.
And after some discussion, I thought it might be fun to try making one. I remembered reading a recipe in Dan Lepard’s The Handmade Loaf…

Having previously had a bad experience with supermarket lard, I thought it might be worthwhile trying to make my own. After all, if I had a stash in the freezer, I might be able to make a slightly less ludicrous attempt at tamales.
Ideally, leaf lard (made from the fat surrounding the pig’s kidneys) should be used in sweet pastries, but the butcher told me that it’s a very difficult product to source in Australia. So I came home instead with a one kilo block of frozen free range female pork fat (which he insisted would be far less smelly than boar fat)…

I chopped up the fat and scraped it into my Emile Henry casserole pot with half a cup of water. The photos below show 300g of the pork fat being rendered. The pot was simmered very gently over a low heat until the pieces had crackled up and sunk to the bottom. The fat and solids were then poured through a Chux-lined sieve. The liquid lard was a light brown colour, but set to a snowy white in the fridge…

The following day, I attempted the lardy cake. I based it on Dan’s recipe, but I simplified the methodology a little, added currants and raisins, changed the spice, and used dried yeast instead of fresh…
- 500g bakers/bread flour
- 8g fine sea salt
- 200g active sourdough starter (Dan’s recipes use an 80% starter, so feed a small portion of starter with 100g bakers flour and 80g water)
- 250g water
- 1¼ teaspoons dried yeast
- 150g pork lard (cold from the fridge)
- 150g caster sugar
- dried fruit – I used a mix of currants and golden raisins
- pinch of cinnamon
- extra caster sugar for topping
1. Grease a 23cm springform cake tin, and line the base with parchment paper. Wrap the outside of the tin with foil to prevent leakage.
2. In a large mixing bowl, stir together the starter, water and dried yeast. Add the flour and salt, and squelch the whole lot together with a clean hand to form a fairly stiff dough. Scrape off your fingers and cover the bowl with clingfilm. Allow to rest for 15 minutes.
3. Uncover the dough and give it a quick knead in the bowl, working the dough until smooth. It should only take a couple of minutes. Cover the bowl again and allow to prove until doubled in size, about an hour.
4. This is the fun bit. Turn the dough onto a clean floured surface and using your fingers, press it into a rectangle. Smear the lard over two-thirds of the dough, then scatter 150g of caster sugar over the top. The photos are a bit dodgy from here on, as I was manoeuvring the iPhone camera with my un-larded hand…

5. Fold the uncoated third over the middle third, and then flip it over the remaining third to enclose all the lard and sugar. Carefully flatten the dough again with your fingers or a rolling pin, and fold it over itself in thirds again. The aim is to encase the lard and sugar, and to build up layers of dough. Now cover the dough and let it rest for half an hour or so.
6. Uncover the dough and roll it out into a rectangle. Be gentle, or the dough will tear and lard will ooze out everywhere. Scatter over the currants and raisins…

7. Roll the dough up, encasing the dried fruit, then cover and allow it to rest briefly…

8. Slash across the top of the dough, cutting about a third of the way into the log…

…then swirl the dough into a snail shape. Pick it up carefully and place it into the prepared cake tin. Cover and let it rise until it’s puffed up and well-risen, which should take about an hour…

9. After 45 minutes, preheat the oven to 200C or 190C with fan. When the dough is ready, sprinkle with a little cinnamon and scatter over a couple of tablespoons of caster sugar…

10. Bake the lardy cake in the oven for 20 minutes at 190C with fan, then reduce the temperature to 170C with fan and bake for a further 40 minutes or so until well browned. Keep a watchful eye on it, to ensure it doesn’t burn. Allow to rest in the tin for 15 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to finish cooling.


So what was the verdict?
Pete wasn’t a huge fan (he’s a butter man), but Big Boy adored it. So much so that he asked me to hide the last bit as he couldn’t stop eating it. I took half the cake to Kevin and Carol’s house that afternoon, where it was consumed with great gusto.
It’s not overly sweet, it’s not at all porky and it has an irresistibly crispy sugary topping. It reminds me a little of brioche, and a little of Portuguese sweet doughs.
Definitely an adventure, and one I’ll have to repeat when our friend Matthew comes over!
Perfecting the recipe: our further lardy cake adventures here…

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