Amarula Cake

Amarula Cake

October 16: National Liqueur Day

In one of the many bridal magazines that Islander reads, she once saw an ad for Amarula, a cream liqueur made from the marula fruit. It was touting Amarula as a unique alternative to champagne at wedding receptions.

Marula comes from a special, sacred tree grown in southern Africa and Madagascar, which is also referred to as the “marriage tree”. The tree is dioecious (meaning that there are both a male and female marula tree). When in season, the fruit grows abundantly from the female tree, symbolizing fertility in a marriage. Some use the fruit as part of a cleansing ritual before the wedding. And a few tribes (and tourists) exchange their marriage vows beneath the shade of the trees.

Having worked in a bridal shop, and currently serving as a marriage sponsor at church, Islander was sold on the Amarula ad in the wedding magazine. She immediately bought a bottle and we thought it would taste like Bailey’s Irish Cream liqueur. The caramel color is similar but Amarula is stronger/boozier! And the marula fruit notes are definitely different.

We actually used the marula fruit cream liqueur in our anniversary cake this past summer. It seemed appropriate to follow the “marriage tree” theme when celebrating our marriage milestone. Now we can bake an Amarula cake for our engaged couples when we host them in our home during marriage preparation sessions. Amarula cake is also perfect for preparing on National Liqueur Day.

Recipe

(Adapted from SA Promo Magazine)

For the Amarula cake

  • ½ cup butter
  • 1 cup sugar, granulated white
  • 2 eggs
  • 1 ½ cups flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • ¼ cup Amarula
  • ¼ cup milk

Directions

In a large bowl, cream the butter with the sugar. Beat in the eggs. In a separate bowl, combine the flour and baking powder.

Amarula Cake

Gradually add the flour mixture into the butter mixture, alternating with the Amarula and milk, until the batter is smooth. Divide evenly in two, greased round 6-inch baking pans. Bake at 350 degrees F in a preheated oven for 30 minutes or until done. Remove from the oven and let the cakes cool completely before stacking and frosting them.

Amarula Cake

For the Amarula buttercream frosting

  • ½ cup plus 2 tablespoons butter, softened
  • 3-4 cups powdered sugar
  • ¼ cup Amarula 
  • 2+ tablespoons heavy whipping cream (or milk)

Directions

In a mixing bowl, beat the butter until smooth. Gradually add the powdered sugar. After two cups of sugar, pour in the Amarula. Add the rest of the powdered sugar and mix well. Thin to a frosting consistency with cream or milk. Smear a little frosting on a cake pedestal or board to act as an adhesive to the bottom layer of the cake.

Amarula Cake

Place one of the cakes on the bottom. Spread a generous amount of frosting on top. Stack the other cake on top of the frosting. Spread more frosting on the top and sides of the cake until completely covered. Chill in the refrigerator to let the frosting set. Let the cake come back to room temperature before slicing and serving.

Amarula Cake

Notes

  • This recipe is originally for a dozen cupcakes. We made this into a double layer 6-inch round cake.
  • This is a denser and drier instead of fluffier and moist cake. The caramel-colored frosting reinforces the fruity flavor of the marula with a sophisticated and sweet “spirit”. This Amarula cake recipe is suitable for those who prefer a pound cake.
  • Learn more about the legends of marula from Marula.org

Chambord Macarons

(Raspberry Liqueur Macarons

with Raspberry Jam Filling)

Chambord Macarons

October 16: National Liqueur Day

“Pinkarons” for October’s MacTweets

Our Chambord macarons are a treat

Filled with raspberry jam so sweet

Pink and pretty enough to eat

Pray that breast cancer can be beat!!!

Chambord Macarons

A look into our liqueur cabinet might give the impression that we are lushes. But we bake with booze more often than we drink it—honest!  We have an assortment of alcohol on our shelves, but it is the raspberry liqueur in a little ball-shaped bottle that was our most pricey purchase. So we use the spirit sparingly—and splurge only to make special occasion foods. Packaged in a pretty orb, Chambord is the luxurious ingredient that we use to bake into brownies, cakes and now macarons.  It is worth using raspberry liqueur in a recipe for “pinkarons” to observe both Breast Cancer Awareness Month and National Liqueur Day.

Chambord Macarons

Recipe

For the Chambord (raspberry liqueur) macaron shells (Italian meringue method)

  • 1 cup almond flour/meal
  • 1 cup powdered sugar
  • 3 egg whites (fresh, unpasteurized and aged overnight at room temperature)
  • 1 cup sugar, granulated white
  • ½ cup water
  • red or pink food coloring
  • 1 tablespoon Chambord (raspberry liqueur)

Directions

Sift the almond flour/meal with the powdered sugar. Grind in a food processor in batches to remove any lumps (optional). Whip the egg whites until peaks form. Make a simple syrup to stabilize the egg whites by boiling the sugar and water together until it reaches a temperature of 245 degrees F on a candy thermometer (or until it reaches a soft ball stage). Pour into the egg whites and whip again until stiff and glossy.

Chambord Macarons

Mix in the Chambord (raspberry liqueur). Fold in the almond flour/meal-sugar mix until the consistency “flows like magma.” Tint the macaronage with red or pink food coloring until a desired shade of “light raspberry pink” color is reached. Pipe one-inch discs on a parchment paper on top of an insulated baking sheet.

Chambord Macarons

Let the discs air dry to develop a thin skin for at least 30 minutes. Bake in a preheated oven at 300 degrees F for about 15-20 minutes. Watch the “feet” develop, but be careful not to brown or burn the macarons. Remove from the oven and let cool for 15 minutes. Peel off the macarons from the parchment paper. Sort by size and match pairs.

Chambord Macarons

Spread raspberry jam as a filling (we used Smucker’s brand seedless red raspberry jam). Serve immediately as the jam softens the shells.

Chambord Macarons

Notes