Rachel Roddy's Christmas recipe for cassata Siciliana cake | A kitchen in Rome (2024)

Learning to dip the knife in hot water before using it to spread the icing on the marzipan made me feel like a pastry chef. I must have been 10. Having spread the brilliant white and glossy royal icing like plaster, family tradition dictated it had to be roughed up for “a snow effect”, which everybody knows is a shortcut for families who can’t decorate properly. I don’t think we even had a piping bag.

While time has edited and airbrushed most Christmas memories into moments of harmonious commensality, this one has stayed defiantly vexing. I remember my disappointment at the snow effect, followed by my horror as my brother and sister competed with each other to press decorations (some of which still had the sugar-concrete residue from the previous year’s cake) into the royal snow. Tying a ribbon around the cake was a consolation of sorts, as was covering the whole thing with a glass dome, which made it look like we had a huge snow globe on the sideboard.

Icing was first defined (in the confectionery sense) in 1796 as “a coating of concreted sugar” . Thankfully, concretising takes time. Our cake was usually cut on Boxing Day, by which time the icing had an almost eggshell exterior, but was still soft inside, which is in no small part thanks to the disappointing peaks.

The airbrushed version of this story, which is entirely true, if incomplete, is that we all loved Mum’s Christmas cake. Which was, in fact, Jane Grigson’s: dense, dark and drunk, with a marzipan and royal icing fringe, the iced peaks of Christmas squashed between fingers. Last crumbs chased around the plate. Peaks that lasted well into January, by which time it was just my dad eating a finger at a time with his mid-morning cup of tea.

Our other Christmas cake is also iced, and has a marzipan layer, dried fruit and is soaked in alcohol; so much in common, and yet an entirely different creature. According to my friend, the cook Fabrizia Lanza, the name cassata probably comes from the Latin caseus, which means cheese, while others say it takes its name from the Arabic word qas’ah, a large steep-sided terracotta bowl that was used to shape this Sicilian construction of sponge, sweetened ricotta, marzipan, icing and a jewel box of candied fruit. It was certainly the Arabs who introduced sugarcane to Sicily, which revolutionised a confectionary industry that had previously depended on honey and the dark sweetness of grape must.

It was Fabrizia who taught me to make cassata. She calls it the summa – “the sum” – of all Sicilian culinary adventures, a culinary palimpsest in which you can see the layers of influence – Phoenician, Greek, Roman, Arab, Norman, French – all of which were assimilated into the Sicilian whole. It is also just a cake, Fabrizia says, laughing.

Standing behind the work table in the kitchen of her cookery school in the heart of Sicily, it was Fabrizia who demystified a cake I had only ever bought from behind glass cabinets in cake shops, who showed me how to line the sides of the tin with a strip of marzipan (then use a wallpaper edge roll to smooth them down), lay the sponge like floorboards, pour the icing and then dress the top as if I was Carmen Miranda. It was my Sicilian father-in-law, Bartolomeo, though – whose devotion to cassata is second to no man’s – who taught me to love its tender and outrageous sweetness. And not just at Christmas, although it does seem particularly appropriate.

Writing this now, nothing is fixed, although it seems very likely that we won’t be with either family this Christmas, at least not physically. It is the safest thing. I will be making two cakes, however, and decorating them. One is going to have the roughest peaks you have ever seen, and I am going to leave my son to press in the various decorations. For the other, I have bought a piping bag.

Cassata Siciliana

You will need a shallow cake tin of about 23cm in diameter, x 4cm deep, ideally with sloping sides. For best results, make the marzipan and sponge a day in advance.

Prep Overnight
Cook 30 min
Chill 1 hr
Set 30 min
Serves 8-12

For the marzipan
150g ground pistachios or almonds
150g icing sugar

1 tbsp lemon juice
Green food colouring

For the sponge
5 eggs
200g caster sugar
150g plain flour
2 t
sp baking powder
1 tbsp marsala or orange flower water

For the filling
400g ricotta,
drained in a sieve for an hour
150g caster sugar

For the icing
200g icing sugar
1-3 tsp lemon juice
Candied fruit
, to decorate

Make the marzipan (ideally a day in advance). Mix the ground nuts and icing sugar, then add 70ml water, the lemon juice and a few drops of green food colouring, and bring to a firm paste. Knead for a moment, then wrap and refrigerate.

Also a day in advance (if you can), make the sponge. Heat the oven to 180C (160C fan)/350F/gas 4. Separate the eggs, beat the yolks with the sugar until fluffy and light, then fold in the flour and baking powder. In a separate bowl, whisk the whites until they form firm, stiff peaks, then fold them into the rest of the mixture.

Pour the mixture into a 23cm-wide cake tin lined with parchment and bake for 20 to 30 minutes, or until the cake is firm, golden and a strand of spaghetti comes out clean when inserted into the centre. Leave to cool before inverting out of the tin.

Once drained, press the ricotta through the sieve so it’s very smooth, then beat in the sugar.

To assemble the cassata, line the tin with clingfilm, pressing it into the corners. Roll the marzipan into a long strip and use this to line the side of the cake tin, trimming it to size and pressing the strip into place (a bit of patchwork is not a problem).

Use a serrated knife to cut the cake into long, 1cm-thick slices, then – imagining you are laying floorboards – make a layer at the bottom of the tin (again, patchwork is not a problem). Sprinkle with marsala or orange flower water, smear over the ricotta, cover with another patchwork layer of cake, then sprinkle with more marsala. Cover and chill for at least an hour.

Invert the cake on to a plate and ease away the clingfilm. Using the flat of your hand, press the cake layer down so the marzipan edge is pronounced, thereby creating a sort of lip that will hold the icing (but don’t worry if it doesn’t). Mix the icing sugar with just enough lemon juice to make a thick, pourable icing, then pour the icing on top of the cassata and use a hot knife to spread it out. Leave the icing to set for 30 minutes, then decorate the cassata with candied fruit, using a peeler to take off strips, which can then be bent into decorative curls.

Fiona Beckett’s drinks match

It would seem rude not to drink a Sicilian wine with this traditional dish, especially when you can get a Passito di Pantelleria 2017 for just £11.99 at Lidl (14.5%).

Rachel Roddy's Christmas recipe for cassata Siciliana cake | A kitchen in Rome (2024)

FAQs

What is the meaning of cassata siciliana? ›

The queen of traditional Sicilian pastries, cassata probably takes its name from the Arabic qas'at meaning “basin”, perhaps because of its round shape, or from the Latin caseum meaning “cheese”, because of its rich ricotta-based filling.

What type of foodstuff would you eat in Italy eating cassata? ›

A cone-shaped pie made of soft sponge cake and a delicious ricotta cream enriched with candied fruit and chocolate drops: the Cassata Siciliana. The Cassata Siciliana is a traditional pie based on sugared ricotta (traditionally sheep), sponge cake, royal pasta, and candied fruit.

In which country is cassata both a type of ice cream and a traditional sweet cake? ›

Cassata or cassata siciliana (/kəˈsɑːtə/ kə-SAH-tə, Italian: [kasˈsaːta sitʃiˈljaːna], Sicilian: [ka(s)ˈsaːta sɪʃɪˈljaːna]) is a traditional cake from Sicily, Italy.

What does cassata mean in Italian? ›

1. gastronomy. cassata {f} cassata (also: Neapolitan ice-cream containing fruit and nuts, Sicilian cake containing cottage cheese, chocolate and candied fruit)

Why is it called cassata cake? ›

The cassata is un-moulded and topped with candied fruits before being served. The Italians would like us to believe that the name derives from the Latin word for cheese – casu. But this Sicilian dessert is supposed to have had its origins amongst the exotic Arabian cuisines introduced to Europe by the Moors.

What are 3 foods in Italy? ›

  • Pizza. Kicking things off with the big daddy of Italian cuisine, forget anything you once thought about pizza: here in Italy, pizza making is a form of art. ...
  • Pasta. ...
  • Risotto. ...
  • Polenta and cured meats. ...
  • Seafood. ...
  • Gelato and Dolce. ...
  • Coffee and famous tipples.

What are the 2 most popular foods in Italy? ›

Pizza. Besides pasta, pizza is perhaps the most popular and recognized Italian food. Pizza is considered a national symbol representing Italy to the rest of the world, so much so that UNESCO has acknowledged pizza as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

What is the difference between Cleveland Cassata cake and Cassata cake? ›

Cleveland cassata uses strawberries instead of candied fruit, custard instead of sweet ricotta and whipped cream instead of marzipan. In anticipation of the upcoming holiday, we visited -- and tasted -- 13 cakes from 12 bakeries in Northeast Ohio known for their cassata cakes.

Which country has the best cake in the world? ›

Austria is one of the top baking countries in the world. The market is saturated with a large number of bakery products retailers in the country.

How long is cassata cake good for in the fridge? ›

A traditional Sicilian sweet treat. Cassata cakes are round sponge cakes moistened with fruit juices and layered in ricotta cheese & candied fruit, all held together in a beautiful design. Each cake can be refrigerated for up to 4 days (preferably in an airtight container) or frozen for up to 6 months.

What is siciliana? ›

The siciliana [sitʃiˈljaːna] or siciliano (also known as sicilienne [sisiljɛn] or ciciliano) is a musical style or genre often included as a movement within larger pieces of music starting in the Baroque period. It is in a slow 6. 8 or 12. 8.

Is Cassata an Italian name? ›

Explore the Family Name Cassata

Italian (southern): from cassata denoting a sweet cake made with cheese and candied fruit (from a derivative of Latin caseus 'cheese'), hence a metonymic occupational name for a pastry cook, or perhaps a nickname for someone with a sweet nature.

What are Sicilian pastries called? ›

It's only fitting that most of our beloved Italian desserts originated in Sicily. Cannoli— that was the Sicilians. Granita—the Sicilians. Cassata, cassatelle, almond biscotti, zbaglione—all thanks to the Sicilians.

What does Tetrazzini mean in English? ›

Tetrazzini in American English

(ˌtetrəˈzini, Italian ˌtetʀɑːtˈtsini) adjective. (often lc) served over pasta with a cream sauce, often flavored with sherry, sprinkled with cheese, and browned in the oven.

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