Tunis cake

British Christmas dessert From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tunis cake

A Tunis cake is a Madeira cake topped with a thick layer of chocolate and decorated with marzipan fruits. It is traditionally eaten at Christmas.[2]

Quick Facts Type, Place of origin ...
Tunis cake
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Tunis Cake (Mary Berry recipe)
TypeMadeira cake
Place of originScotland
Region or stateGlasgow[1]
Main ingredientsChocolate icing, marzipan
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Cross-section of a Tunis Cake (Mary Berry recipe)

It is thought that the origins of the cake are Edwardian.[3] The Scottish bakery Macfarlane Langs produced commercial Tunis Cakes in the 1930s, and when they merged with McVitie & Price in 1948 to form a company called United Biscuits (which still owns the McVitie's brand), the recipe passed to the new company.[4] McVitie's produced a Tunis cake until the mid 1980s.[4][3] The updated recipe used by McVitie's is said to have been created by Elizabeth Ewing of Inverness, whose husband was a baker at McVitie's. Her husband had eaten a similar cake whilst stationed in Tunisia during World War II.[5]

It is now sold seasonally by some supermarkets in the UK. The cake is usually topped with marzipan fruits.[6][7] Some recipes, such as the BBC Good Food and Mary Berry recipe, top the cake with marzipan holly leaves and berries instead of marzipan fruits.[8][6] An early recipe does not include the chocolate and marzipan topping.[9]

The port city of Tunis was known for exporting North African fruits.[6] In March 1934 the Taunton Courier and Western Advertiser printed a recipe including the North African fruits dates, figs, walnuts and prunes.[6] In 1936 Garratt's Bakers of Lichfield included honey, dates and walnuts in their recipe, plus topping the cake with chocolate icing.[6]

References

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