Teisen Lap With Welsh Whisky Sauce

"Teisen lap is a tradition spicy sultana puddding/cake from Wales. You can have the teisen lap by itself, but I think this Whisky sauce adds something special to the cake."
 
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Ready In:
1hr 5mins
Ingredients:
14
Serves:
4-6
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ingredients

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directions

  • Preheat the oven to 160C/140C fan. Grease and line a large rectangular baking tin.
  • Cover the sultanas in freshly-brewed tea and set aside to plump while you prepare the pudding batter.
  • Using a wooden spoon, cream the butter and sugar until pale and fluffy.
  • Slowly pour in the eggs and continue whisking, adding 1 tablespoon of the flour to prevent splitting.
  • Fold the rest of the flour and the mixed spice into the creamed mixture, followed by the drained sultanas, lemon and orange zest.
  • Transfer the mixture to the prepared baking tin and bake for about 40 minutes or until a sharp knife inserted into the middle comes out clean. While the cake is baking, prepare the sauce.
  • For the whisky sauce: put the butter and sugar into a small, heavy-based saucepan over a medium-high heat and stir until the butter is melted. Boil for 5 minutes, until the sugar is dissolved.
  • Pour in the cream, bring back to the boil, then stir in whisky, to taste.
  • To serve, cut the warm cake into wedges and accompany with a dollop of whipped cream and the whisky sauce.

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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

<p>Thanks in advance if you are making any of my recipes, and I hope that you like them as I do. <br /> <br />I grew up in the US, but I have spent most of the last few years in Europe now live in Germany, with my German husband. Much of the time that I have lived in Europe, I have lived in international student housing so I have lived with and cooked with people from all over world. I have also have had to learn to improvise a bit because it isn't always easy to get the foods I miss from the US here. <br /> <br />My husband is a good cook and likes to cook when he has time, but he quite often makes what he knows, mainly German food. So I am the one feeding him strange things. :D My husband has recently taken up hunting so I am having to learn how to cook game: wild boar, deer, hares and geese are the most common things hunted here. It isn't easy to find things for wild boar so I am trying to publish ones that I find that we really liked. <br /> <br />I like Recipezaar because I can easily find recipes for whatever I am in the mood, or whatever I happen to have laying around when I am too lazy to walk to the supermarket. :) I like trading tips with the people at the Asian and the German/Benelux forums, I lurk there mostly, but post when I have questions or think that I can help. <br /> <br />My reviews are mainly 4 or 5 stars because I won't try anything that I don't think that I will like. 5 stars is it was great, will make again, only very minor changes were made, if any. 4 stars is it was very good, will probably make again, made some changes to adjust to my taste. 3 stars is it was okay, probably won't make again but I didn't really mind eating it. I haven't had anything here that I thought was lower than that, which is good with how picky I am. I'll try most new things if it sounds good, but I am not afraid to say if I don't like it. I quite often make my own recipes out of some of the ones I find here, and don't post recipe reviews if I radically changed it.</p>
 
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