This archive post may reference an old giveaway since closed.
Banana cake topped with Greek yogurt and Brittany honey
This is a post about banana cake – but first we must talk about croquembouche – for the French baker who made my wedding cake, was none other than Eric Lanlard, whose recipe I’m sharing today.
Inhaling bridal magazines by the kilo, I was on a quest for a specific type of cake; French croquembouche spun sugar-covered profiterole towers as seen at a family wedding in Lyon fifteen years earlier.
Today, I would probably find one easily, heh I might even be nuts enough to try and make a croquembouche. At London’s biggest wedding fair at Olympia, my enquiries were met with a sharp intake of breath and a comment about every French village having a baker who would effortlessly conjure one up… but in the UK, forget it.
Croquembouche, everyone said, need to be made at the very last minute. Nor can you drive them 100 miles up the M40 to our reception venue, because the cream inside the choux pastry buns will go soggy and collapse. Apparently.
So you can imagine my joy when at another stand I met my fantasy croquembouche and the UK-based French baker who made them; it was Eric Lanlard of Savoir Design, more recently known as “Cake Boy” and appearing on the Channel 4 series Glamour Puds.
“Mais oui,” he said with a confident Gallic shrug, scoffing at the notion of sogginess. He had even delivered cakes to virtually the same place before.
As it happened, my best woman and I toured the rest of the show and on our return to Eric’s stand, we came face to face with the splendid Tower of Desserts you see in the photo above.
Croquembouche-schmockombouche, pah, what we really needed was a chocolate tower of individual cheesecakes and chocolate fondant puddings wrapped in chocolate collars with printed patterns on them and decorated with flowers. As you do.
The cake, or Tower of Desserts, was without a doubt, the high point of our wedding day. Two guests even ordered a dessert tower from Eric for their wedding a year later.
With these happy cakey memories, I was delighted to be asked to review a copy of Eric’s latest book Home Bake.
Book Review: Eric Lanlard Home Bake
Home Bake is Eric’s second book, following on from Glamour Cakes. As the title Home Bake indicates, it offers more down to earth cakes to make at home.
In this latest practical selection, Eric shares recipes such as lemon drizzle, Victoria sponge, madeleines and apple charlotte. Food blog style, there are plenty of step by step photos to help you along.
To give you an idea what to expect, here’s what you find in the meringue chapter: Italian and Swiss meringues, Macaroons (oddly not referred to as macarons), Marshmallow Strings, Pavlova, Eton Mess, Baked Alaska and Lemon Meringue Roulade. As well as classic sponges, there are also chapters on muffins, cupcakes, traybakes and festive recipes.
It’s a good mix of standard recipes such as classics like Pear Tarte Tatin and Bakewell Tart, stalwarts in Eric’s own style – Classic “Cake Boy” vanilla or chocolate sponges – and more original treats such as Salted Butter Caramel Mousse with Mini Pears and Blondies with Peanut Butter. There are also several flour free cakes.
It’s a generous size, over 200 pages, although if you’ve already got a lot of baking books, possibly too much repetition of classics here to be worth adding it to your collection. But certainly there’s justification to make space for it since at least half of the recipes are more unusual and the photography and styling are attractive.
The preambles to recipes are very short, this isn’t a chit chatty book but it’s a very good looking one with solid content. I will definitely bake more things from this book and the Toffee and Apple Sauce Muffins are right up there on my list.
My first choice was to try was the banana cake from the sponges chapter. I didn’t have massive expectations since banana cakes tend to be pretty similar. This cake impressed me, it was a majestic size, rises heroically in the oven and slices into fat moist tranches without crumbling. You could walk into any bake sale proud with one of these under each arm.
Another reason for choosing this recipe was the suggestion that you accompany it with fresh Greek yogurt – handy since Total had just sent me a month’s supply of it – and maple syrup. Instead of maple syrup I opted for this dark honey you see above which I had bought on holiday in Brittany. appropriate as Eric is from there.
Banana Cake With Honey and Yogurt
Equipment
- 25 x 11 cm (10 x 4.25 in) loaf tin
Ingredients
- 125 g butter softened, plus extra for greasing
- 175 g soft light brown sugar
- 2 large eggs
- 300 g plain flour
- 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
- 150 ml milk
- 3 bananas very ripe, peeled and mashed
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 tsp poppy seeds
- 75 g walnuts chopped
- 50 g banana chips chopped
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 180c (fan 160c/350f/gas mark 4). Lightly grease a 25 x 11 cm (10 x 4.25 in) loaf tin with extra butter.
- Cream the butter and sugar together in a large bowl using an electric hand whisk until smooth. Add one of the eggs and beat in well, then add the second and continue to beat well. Sift in half the flour, then add the second and continue to beat well. Sift in half the flour with the bicarbonate of soda, and mix well. Mix in the milk, then the remaining flour.
- Fold the mashed bananas into the mixture along with the vanilla extract, poppy seeds and walnuts. Then tip the mixture into the loaf tin and level the top with a spatula. Arrange the banana chips on top of the mixture. (I missed these out)
- Bake in the preheated oven for around 1 hour until a skewer inserted in the centre comes out clean and not sticky. Cover the top with foil if it starts to brown too quickly.
- Allow to cool in the tin for at least 20 minutes before turning out. To serve, cut into thick slices and serve warm or room temperature.
Notes
Recipe reproduced with permission by Octopus Books With honey and yogurt is my own serving suggestion.
Eric photo and Home Bake book courtesy of Octopus books.











I’ve liked cake-boy! 😀