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If you like Turkish delight you’ll love this Strawberry Chocolate Cake smothered in thick milk chocolate ganache and fragrant rose flavour!
Pairing traditional English flavours with something more exotic: tea, strawberries, milk chocolate, English rose and a Turkish Delight twist!
Not all English people drink tea
Tea, sacred revitaliser of the nation. Putting the kettle on for a cuppa forms no part of my own relaxation, the snap of a diet coke tin or popping of a prosecco cork being more likely. Throw chocolate into the mix however and you’ve got my attention.
I realised lately that it was not necessarily tea I didn’t like, but it’s opaqueness (or should that be opacity? Answers below please). Furthermore, it’s full fat milk with swirly stuff happening on the surface that worries me. A hangover from forced drinking of third pint bottles with thin green straws at school.
Nasty milk, ick. Slurped brown stuff with steam coming off it, double ick. Crisp clear green tea or a lapsang souchong? Much nicer. I like tea that is fragrant and light, not that horrid builder’s stuff that spoons stand up in.
Tea and strawberries. Quintessentially British, I associate both with my grandparents. During a morning snuggle in grandma’s bed, I’d ask why on earth grandad took so long to make the tea downstairs. “Because,” my grandma would reply convincingly, “he goes all the way to China to fetch it.” They tried in vain for years to make me drink it.
Fresh strawberry picking – a very English ritual
Strawberry picking too was a regular event each summer. Cardboard “pick your own” boxes with metal handles that today I only ever see at farmers’ markets always make me nostalgic for those carefree afternoons, a picnic in the back of an Austin Maxi and a ride on the slide made out of a giant fibre glass teddy bear.

This Nigella Lawson chocolate cake recipe originally using marmalade is a firm favourite of mine, not least because you can make it all in one pan and there’s barely any washing up. She suggests using other flavours of jam although I’ve taken this a bit further with some Turkish delight too – chocolate or sugar coated, either would work. If you don’t have a double boiler to mix it in one go you could substitute using a small sauce to melt the butter and chocolate and then tip these into a large mixing bowl before adding the remaining ingredients.

The ganache I confess was a problem. I blame my own impatience before holiday. Lack of time to refrigerate meant mine was more of a sauce. I like it that way but you can decide whether you want sauce or chilled ganache. Incidentally, Nigella advocates serving the cake straight from the oven with creme fraiche so maybe my warm sauce is not so far off the mark.

A quick word about two ingredients; I used chocolate coated Turkish delight, discovered After Eight style in Morrison’s and some Baxter’s strawberry jam. The chocolate was Green and Blacks. I received the jam at an afternoon tea event run by Baxter’s from which I have several other recipes to share with you very soon.
I am sending this cake post to Meeta of What’s for Lunch Honey‘s Monthly Mingle which this month is hosted by Erin of The Apartment Kitchen with the theme “Sweet Treats”.

Strawberry Chocolate Cake with Rose Tea Ganache
Adapted from Store-Cupboard Chocolate Orange Cake from Nigella Lawson
Serves 8-10

Ingredients
For the cake
125g unsalted butter
100g dark chocolate, broken into pieces
200g strawberry jam
100g Turkish delight
150g caster sugar
pinch of salt
2 large eggs, beaten
150g self-raising flour
20cm round Springform tin, buttered and floured or lined with baking parchment
For the decoration
12-15 chocolates or pieces of Turkish delight. Or real strawberries. Or nothing. As you wish.
For the chocolate sauce/ganache
80ml single cream
1 tbsp rose tea leaves
125g milk chocolate, broken into pieces

Method
1. Preheat the oven to 180c or gas mark 4.
2. Using a double boiler, melt the butter over a low heat and then stir in the chocolate pieces until both combined and smooth.
3. Turn off the heat and using a wooden spoon, stir in the jam, Turkish delight, sugar, salt and eggs. When just about combined, beat in the flour a little at a time.
4. Pour into the prepared tin and bake for around 50 minutes or until a cocktail stick comes out clean. Cool in the tin for 10 minutes before turning out onto a wire rack.
5. For the sauce/ganache, warm the cream in a small saucepan on a low heat. Place the tea leaves in either a metal snap-shut tea strainer or a small muslin bag on a string and place in the warm cream leaving to infuse for 10 minutes.
6. Remove the tea leaves from the infused cream and drop in the milk chocolate squares, stirring gently until they melt. Allow to cool.
7. Place the cake on a pretty plate and spoon the cooled chocolate sauce over the top. Decorate the edge of the cake with chocolates, more Turkish delight or any other way you wish.

For a more conventional strawberry cake, take a look at my strawberry sandwich cake smothered in real fresh fruit. Perfect for getting through a giant punnet of pick your own strawberries!





a simply divine looking cake sarah! so perfect for the MM!
Turkish delight are the magic words. Cake looks amazing! I love to make proper mint tea in the summer, failing that jasmine tea. Failing that – pink champagne. x
I've only recently discovered your blog when I was searching for rhubarb muffins (I made the Rachel Allen ones and they were yummy). I also love the dinner with crayons posts since I've got a 2 1/2 year old and a 7-week old.
Can't pass up a chance to win chocolate! I'm an American and even after 5 years in London I'm more of a coffee than tea girl, so my favorite summer beverages are iced coffee and Pimm's and lemonade if I'm indulging (one British tradition I have embraced).
Gosh that take looks seriously rich and delicious! I love all kinds of tea but haven't used it in a ganache before… great photos too Sarah! ps – enjoy the Matcha Chocolat, please don't include me in the comp as I've tried the Jade Selection already so let's share the love with others! 🙂
I want those chocolates!
My favourite tea in summer is either iced Lady Grey, or iced jasmine tea. I stick a jug iof cold water in the fridge over night, with the tea leaves in, and in the morning it's perfect. Lots of ice – perfection!
You get a better flavour if you don't use hot water for iced tea, and the long slow method means the tea isn't cloudy.