Whenever I visit my relatives in Sicily they cannot do enough for me. They fuss and fuss over my well-being and happiness and like all Italians they are constantly preoccupied about food. For them, maintaining me in a blissful state has to include the constant preparation of food.
It is common for Italians in all parts of Italy to eat light cakes at breakfast and this light cake is a torta di mele (an apple cake). It was made by my cousin Franca who lives in Ragusa (in Sicily).
Cathedral in Ragusa in the photo below.
Franca made this in front of me and surprisingly on this occasion and for my benefit she weighed the ingredients (a bit of a rarity in an Italian/Sicilian kitchen where everything is done by estimation and touch, sight and smell.
The milk was not measured, but it was a splash, as she described.
When one encounters an Italian recipe for making cakes, listed as one of the ingredients is likely to be a proportion or a whole bustina of lievito. This is the leavening agent and each bustina (small envelope or packet) weighs 16g. In English lievito is translated as yeast, but the leavening agent in these packs is baking powder.
Italians use the same word (lievito) for yeast and baking powder – both are leavening agents but the way that they differentiate between the baking powder and dried yeast is that the packet of baking powder is likely to include a picture of a cake or/and include the phrase per dolci (for cakes). The bustina of dry yeast and will have a picture of bread or pizza on it or/and include per pane (for bread).
Fresh yeast is referred to as lievito fresco compresso (fresh compressed yeast) or lievito industrale (industrial) or lievito di birra (beer yeast).
The contents of each bustina di lievito is listed as being sufficient for 500g flour and for this cake Franca used a half of the packet.
Pears could also be used for this cake.
INGREDIENTS
250 g plain flour
8 g baking powder
150 g sugar – divided into three parts
2 eggs
75 g butter (melted)
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
2 apples (she used Delicious apples)
grated rind of 1 lemon
a pinch of salt
a little milk (she says, as much as it takes)
icing sugar to sprinkle on top.
PROCESS
Peel and cut one apple into small, thin pieces, add the lemon rind and about one third of the sugar and set aside.
Mix the eggs with another third of the sugar, add the butter and oil and beat well – Franca used a metal spoon. Gently fold in the flour, baking powder, salt and a little milk to make a stiff batter. Fold in the pieces of apple.
Slice the other apple into thin slices – leave the peel, cut the apple in half, then into quarters and then into slices.
Pour the batter into a buttered baking pan (in Australia I use a spring back tin covered with buttered parchment paper). Place the apple slices in a radial pattern on the batter and sprinkle with the rest of the sugar.
Bake at 180C for 25 minutes and at 150C for about 20 minutes or so.
Remove from oven and let the cake cool in the pan, then sprinkle with a little icing sugar.
Franca in her kitchen.
And some fabulous Melbourne autumn fruit below: