I used to dislike mangos up until I was sitting at breakfast one morning in Tenerife and had some fresh mango for breakfast, which was juicy, sweet and just divine! I have never looked back. Now, I don't know why, but I rarely see mango cakes. It is now probably my favourite fruit and I think there needs to be more mango recipes out there. I plan to experiment this week.
Ingredients:
170g butter
225g caster sugar
3 eggs
1/2 tsp. vanilla essence
180g self raising flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1 cup tinned mango puree (about 400g)
Set the oven to 160 C and line a greased loaf tin with greaseproof paper.
With a hand mixer, mix the butter and sugar on high until light and fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time and incorporate. Add the vanilla essence. Fold in the flour and baking powder and then stir in the mango puree to make a batter. Pour the batter into the prepared tin and cook for about 1 hour, checking occasionally. The cake is ready when you put a skewer in the middle and it comes out clean. Leave to cool in the tin for 10 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack to cook completely.
For the buttercream filling:
225g butter, room temperature
125g icing sugar
1/2 cup (about 200g) mango puree.
Beat first the butter and then add the sugar in, a bit at a time. Keep beating and then add the mango puree until incorporated. If it is too thin, add some more icing sugar. The buttercream will firm up in the fridge. (Notes on buttercream at the bottom of this page).
Cut the cake in half lengthways and spread the butter cream on both inside levels. Put in the fridge to firm up a little and then press the top gently onto the bottom, with the buttercream touching. Dust with icing sugar to serve.
Slightly ironically, the day after I made this I managed to snag a bargain of 8 large mangos for £2.79 in a local food store! So now I have to get my thinking cap on to use them up.
Note: Troubleshooting buttercream. If the butter won't incorporate, its probably because the butter is too cold. Scoop a few spoon of the mix and heat in the microwave. Then add that back to the main mixture and beat together. If the buttercream splits, it usually means you need to use a higher strength beater. Put the mixture into a tall pot and use a hand blender. You should get perfect smooth buttercream.
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