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RecipeTin Eats x Good Food: Lamington fingers

RecipeTin Eats
RecipeTin Eats

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RecipeTin's lamington fingers.
RecipeTin's lamington fingers.Nagi Maehashi

Is there any cake more Australian? Making lamingtons in finger form is handy for eating on the go. Plus, it makes more – and there's a higher ratio of chocolate coating to cake, which is always a good thing!

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Ingredients

Butter sponge

  • 1¾ cups (260g) plain flour

  • 3½ tsp baking powder

  • 125g unsalted butter, softened, plus extra to grease the tin

  • 1 cup (220g) caster sugar

  • ½ tsp vanilla extract

  • 3 eggs, room temperature

  • ½ cup (125ml) full-fat milk

Icing

  • 4 cups (480g) icing sugar, sifted

  • ⅓ cup (22g) cocoa powder

  • 15g unsalted butter

  • 150ml boiling water

Coating

  • 4 cups desiccated coconut

Method

  1. 1. To make the butter sponge, preheat oven to 160C fan-forced (180C conventional).

    2. Sift flour and baking powder into a bowl.

    3. Grease a 20cm x 30cm rectangular cake tin with unsalted butter. Line with baking paper, leaving an overhang on all sides to make the cake easy to remove later.

    4. Beat butter, sugar and vanilla with an electric mixer on medium-high speed for 2 minutes until light and fluffy. Add eggs 1 at a time, beating well after each addition so the batter is smooth, not curdled.

    5. Add half the flour and gently fold to combine, then stir in half the milk. Repeat with remaining flour and milk.

    6. Pour the batter into the prepared tin and bake for 25 minutes, or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean.

    7. Stand for 5 minutes then use the overhanging baking paper to lift the cake out onto a wire rack and cool completely.

    8. Once cool, cut the cake in half lengthwise. Then cut each half into 12 batons, to make 24 in total. Spread on a tray and freeze for 1 hour – this makes them much easier to handle when coating in the chocolate.

    9. Combine the icing ingredients in a heatproof bowl and mix until smooth. It should be a syrup consistency, but not watery.

    10. Place coconut in a shallow bowl.

    11. Place a piece of cake in the icing and roll to coat using 2 forks. Transfer it into the coconut and quickly roll to coat all over in coconut. Transfer to a wire rack over a baking tray. Repeat with remaining sponges.

    12. Stand for 1 to 2 hours, or until set.

    Also try: RecipeTin's classic Aussie burger with the lot and crispy homemade fries

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RecipeTin EatsRecipeTin Eats aka Nagi Maehashi is a Good Food columnist, bestselling cookbook and recipe writer.

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Original URL: https://www.theage.com.au/link/follow-20170101-h219or