Rhubarb Custard Cake, except with peaches

Marg CDN

Well-known member
Just a reminder of this really simple dessert. (not at all like frosting a cake)

I make it with peaches. It is so simple, a bit like a baked clafouti. I love all the peaches of the season and pray for the forest fires to shut down. The fruit that this beautiful countryside produces, or used to, is becoming so scarce.

Rhubarb Custard Cake Bon Appetit

This cake is designed to be mixed by hand. Using an electric mixer works more air into the eggs, which lightens the batter and makes it less dense, so the fruit is more prone to sinking. Also, make sure you leave the stalks whole, as chopped rhubarb is more likely to be swallowed up by the batter and sink to the bottom. 8 servings

4 Tbsp. melted unsalted butter, cooled, plus more room-temperature for pan

1 cup all-purpose flour, plus more for pan

¾ tsp. baking powder

½ tsp. kosher salt

2 large eggs

1 large egg yolk

1½ cups sugar, plus more for sprinkling

¼ cup sour cream

2 Tbsp. dark rum

2 tsp. finely grated lemon zest

13 oz. rhubarb stalks, halved lengthwise if thick

A 9"-diameter springform pan

Preheat oven to 350°. Butter and flour pan. Whisk baking powder, salt, and 1 cup all-purpose flour in a medium bowl. Whisk eggs, egg yolk, and 1½ cups sugar in a large bowl until very pale and thick, about 1 minute. Whisk melted butter, sour cream, rum, and lemon zest in a small bowl. Whisk butter mixture into egg mixture just to combine. Add dry ingredients and fold in until batter is smooth; scrape into prepared pan. Chill 10 minutes to let batter set.

Arrange rhubarb over batter however you like, trimming as needed. Don’t press fruit into batter—just place over top and let it rest on the surface. Sprinkle with more sugar and bake until cake is golden on top and browned around the sides, 45–55 minutes. Transfer pan to a wire rack and let cake cool in pan 10 minutes. Slide a knife around sides of cake to loosen and unmold. Slide directly onto rack and let cool completely.

Do Ahead: Cake can be baked 1 day ahead. Store tightly wrapped at room temperature.

Me: Works with peaches. 3 Too dense done by hand. 10" pie pan
 
Good morning, Marg! Do you make any adjustment on the amount of sugar when you use peaches instead of rhubarb? I assume you substitute roughly the same amount, i.e., 13 ounces of peeled and sliced peaches? Does your note--Too dense done by hand--mean you mix this together with a hand mixer instead of folding by hand? Thanks! This sounds delicious. Wigs
 
Good morning, Marg! Do you make any adjustment on the amount of sugar when you use peaches instead of rhubarb? I assume you substitute roughly the same amount, i.e., 13 ounces of peeled and sliced peaches? Does your note--Too dense done by hand--mean you mix this together with a hand mixer instead of folding by hand? Thanks! This sounds delicious. Wigs
THe 3 peaches I use are decent-sized, sliced. They are tending to be smaller as I get older, unlike some other things. So if they are tiny, go for 4. And I am a sugar freak so I use the same amount of sugar. I use the stand mixer. I still prefer the 10" pie pan over the springform.

Now that I've said all this, I'm on my way out to get more peaches (next to Christmas, my favourite time of the year). I remember visiting my grandparents' peach farm in southern BC when I was about 4. The whole area screamed the scent of peaches, like the south of France with lavender, or Alba in truffle season.
 
THe 3 peaches I use are decent-sized, sliced. They are tending to be smaller as I get older, unlike some other things. So if they are tiny, go for 4. And I am a sugar freak so I use the same amount of sugar. I use the stand mixer. I still prefer the 10" pie pan over the springform.

Now that I've said all this, I'm on my way out to get more peaches (next to Christmas, my favourite time of the year). I remember visiting my grandparents' peach farm in southern BC when I was about 4. The whole area screamed the scent of peaches, like the south of France with lavender, or Alba in truffle season.
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Thank you for your hints, Marg. I will pull this recipe out to try during next year's peach season. (What a L-O-N-G time to wait!) Wigs
 
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