© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
The cake is beautifully moist, rich and super comforting and has a very earthy flavour thanks to the North African spice blend ras el hanout. The spice mix works surprisingly well in this sweet buttermilk cake and rose syrup icing complements the spiciness perfectly.
Ras el Hanout, meaning 'top of the shop', is a popular spice blend used in Moroccan, Tunisian, and Algerian cuisines. This vibrant, warm and comforting spice blend comes in many different varieties with different ingredients. Common ingredients include cardamom, saffron, cumin, clove, cinnamon, nutmeg, mace, allspice, dry ginger, chili peppers, rose buds, coriander seed, peppercorn, sweet and hot paprika, fenugreek, and dry turmeric, but ras el hanout can contain up to 100 spices. It is perfect for tagines, couscous & vegetables, as a marinade and much more.
Ras el Hanout Buttermilk Loaf Cake with Rose Icing
adapted from
Olive Magazine
| Batter | Topping |
- 175 g White spelt flour (German #630)
- 1 tsp Baking powder
- 1 heaped tbsp Ras el hanout
- 150 g Unsalted butter, melted and cooled to room temperature
- 3 Medium eggs at room temperature
- 175 g Erythritol or caster sugar
- 1 tsp Vanilla extract
- 120 ml Buttermilk, at room temperature
|
- 75 g Icing sugar, sifted
- 2-3 tsp Rosewater
- Dried edible rose petals
|
- Heat the oven to 180C/350F and butter and line a 23cm x 12cm loaf pan with baking paper. Sift the flour and baking powder together twice. Add in ras el hanout. Set aside.
- Put the eggs and sugar into a large mixing bowl and use an electric mixer to beat together until light and airy. Slowly beat in the vanilla, and cooled melted butter.
- Add in half of the dry ingredients and use a rubber spatula to gently fold into the egg mixture. Mix in the buttermilk, then the remaining dry ingredients. Mix until well-combined.
- Pour the mixture into the prepared loaf pan and bake for 50-55 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the centre of the cake comes out clean. Leave to cool in the tin.
- To make the icing, sift the powdered sugar in a small bowl and gradually add the rosewater until smooth and drizzle-able.
- Once the cake has cooled, remove from the pan and spoon the icing over the top. Sprinkle over the rose petals, to serve, if you like.
© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
© 2025 | http://angiesrecipes.blogspot.com
25 comments:
...Angie, I would like it without the frosting!
Que bonito y navideño se ve, debe desprender un aroma divino y saber mucho mejor.
glad to try the cake ....yummy.
Looks lovely und fragrant. I did use a lot of yoghurt and butter milk in cake baking while I was still baking cakes to fully replace eggs in them.
“This sounds absolutely enchanting — such a beautiful fusion of warm spices and delicate rose! Ras el Hanout in a loaf cake is so creative, and that buttermilk tenderness with rose icing feels like pure poetry. I can almost smell it from here. Truly a stunning bake!”
Perfect for the season!-Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com
Hello Angie,
Another delicious look treat! A yummy cake recipe, thanks for sharing.
Take care, enjoy your day and the week ahead.
I'm not a huge fan of sweets, but this one sounds really good!
What a mix of flavors!!......it looks awesome!!.....Abrazotes, Marcela
This looks pretty and tasty 😋
it looks really good and I love iced cakes... so pretty.
Perfect timing. I have some rose water I need to use!
What a beauty!!! It looks delicious too.
A delicious and very original cake.
Have a lovely afternoon. 😘
I don’t usually see a Moroccan spice blend in a sweet bake, but it totally works here, the earthy, warm spices against that tangy buttermilk and then topped with rose icing? That’s like bakery poetry.
As always Angie, a creative loaf and guaranteed to be delicious!
Você sempre me deixa com fome. Você faz Delivery? rsrsrsrs
Nova tirinha publicada. 😺
Abraços 🐾 Garfield Tirinhas Oficial.
Gracias por la receta. Tomó nota. te mando un beso.
Love the Moroccan (and, of course, other places in North Africa) flavors in this! ~ David
Boy could I go for that about now!
I would never have thought to use Ras el Hanout for a cake. Such a great idea and I might steal it.
Tandy (Lavender and Lime) https://tandysinclair.com
That does look very appetizing.
Angie, this loaf cake looks wonderful - warmly spiced, aromatic, and beautifully finished with that rose-infused icing.
Maybe just a small slice for me please ... it does look tempting :)
All the best Jan
This looks tasty. And the glaze and rose petals really make it festive. And I love how you used spelt, which is a really tasty flour.
As always, any thoughts, comments, and suggestions that you may have are welcome and greatly appreciated. Please remember to use the "Name/Url" when commenting rather than linking to your profile page for more exposure!