The roots of the fruit cake or Christmas fruit cake lie with the Twelfth Cake, the last cake eaten on the final or 12th day of Christmas festivities, 5th January. This was back in medieval times when the final feast held more significance than the actual Christmas feast. So, technically the Twelfth Cake is the ancestor of the Christmas fruitcake we know today. This practice was widespread in most of Europe, mostly the UK, where Christianity flourished like the river Nile in Egypt. The cakes were generally round with fruits in them, this sounds very demure and very mindful, doesn't it? That is hardly the case.
The simplicity didn’t last long and the class divide cemented itself in the UK, as the richer families, especially pro bakers, would frost their cakes with royal icing that settled on the cake like a semi-soft but firm helmet. To support a helmet of icing with sugar adornments, that was no less than a work of art, the cake needed to be heavy, so, more fruits were used inside the cake to make it sturdier. A pea or bean would be baked with the cake for whoever discovered it would be proclaimed king or queen for the day. Not only that, it started out as a simpler cake which was a plain yeast-leavened bread, studded with dried fruit and ale. But as the icing was added, the cakes upgraded to using rum or brandy, and sugar and leavening agents were introduced to plump up the cake too.
Now the Christmas cake is synonymous with modern society which started taking shape as the Industrial Revolution began in England, in the 17th century. More work hours meant less time to relax and the 12-day grand celebration dwindled to shorter celebrations, as workers returned to work right the day after Christmas. So, the Twelfth Night Cake was eaten on Christmas Day instead and the term “Christmas Cake” came outside of the UK for a change. While most countries love their plain, minus icing, the UK still likes its icing even now. As for its debut in India, a Britisher, Murdoch Brown, brought it to India’s Thalassery, Kerala, as late as the late 1800s, where he asked a local baker to replicate a plum cake.
To honor grandfather fruitcake, we picked a cake close to the original one, not the Twelfth Cake, with a glaze and liquor-soaked dry fruits.
Ingredients
Cake batter:
Extras:
For the Glaze:
Instructions