The Woolwich Observer

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Leading the way reporting about the people and places of home. Email: newsroom@woolwichob­server.com Report it: observerxt­ra.com/tips

One of the most attractive aspects of making a cake with oil rather than butter is the way it expedites the mixing process: There's no waiting for butter to come to room temperatur­e and then beating it with sugar before you even start to add the rest of the ingredient­s. The batter is ready to go into the oven in 5 minutes flat, and the cake comes out just 40 minutes later.

With many oil-based cakes, you simply whisk the dry ingredient­s in one bowl, whisk the wet ingredient­s in another, and then combine the

ۍ Ԇ ڂؗ؝ؿڏ cups all-purpose flour

ۍ Ԇ ڂͮɟǵ̵́́͝˱ڂ baking powder

ۍ ؿ؝ؗڂͮɟǵ̵́́͝˱ڂ salt

Ԇձ ڂ Adjust the oven rack to the middle position and heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9-inch springform pan. Whisk flour, baking powder and salt together in a bowl. ԇձ ڂ Using a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, whip eggs on medium speed until foamy, about 1 minute.

ɎɎ ڂ Ԇ ڂؗ؝ؽڏ ɂͽ̵͝ڂ͝ͽʄǵ̿ڂ ǵ˱Ɏ ڂ lemon zest, increase speed to high, and whip until mixture is fluffy and pale yellow, about 3 minutes. ԉձ ڂ Reduce speed to medium and, with the mixer running, slowly pour in oil. Mix until oil is fully incorporat­ed, about 1 minute. Add half contents of the two bowls. The dry ingredient­s were all-purpose flour, baking powder and salt, and the wet ingredient­s were eggs, milk and olive oil. Also on the list: sugar and lemon zest.

We wanted our olive oil cake to have a light, fine-textured and plush crumb, with a subtle but noticeable olive oil flavour. Whipping the sugar with the whole eggs, rather than just the whites, produced a fine texture that was airy but sturdy enough to support the olive oil-rich batter. To emphasize the defining flavour, we opted for a good-quality extra-virgin olive oil and supplement­ed its fruitiness with a tiny bit of lemon zest.

A bit of advice: Don't panic when it puffs. The cake will puff up during baking, but don't worry. This is just air released by the cake batter getting trapped beneath the layer of melted sugar, which adds a crackly-sweet crust for a touch of sweetness and sophistica­tion. The cake will settle once it cools.

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