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Mary
Berry's Ultimate Cake Book
by Mary Berry
Book
Description
Over many years, Mary Berry has perfected the art of
cake-making and her skills have earned her a reputation
as the queen of cakes. Now she has updated her classic
home baking bible, the Ultimate Cake Book, and once
again shares with you the secrets of her success.
With
over 200 classic recipes, Mary Berrys Ultimate
Cake Book includes recipes for every cake, biscuit and
bun you ever wanted to bake and many more. From the
traditional Victoria Sandwich Cake, Tarte Tatin or Millionaires
Shortbread to the indulgent Very Best Chocolate Roulade,
Swiss Wild Strawberry and Walnut Cake or Sharp Lemon
Cheesecake there is sure to be a cake or bake here to
suit everyone.
Ideal
for cake-making novices as well as more experienced
cooks, Mary explains the basic methods of baking and
gives advice on ingredients and equipment. Marys
easy-to-follow recipes are interspersed with baking
tips and solutions for the most common problems, making
it possible for everyone to bake their favourite cake,
whatever the occasion.
Cakes
to die for! (9 February 2006)
Reviewer: Rachel Pryer (Petworth, West Sussex)
I
bought this book a few months ago and have made several
different cakes from it, and each one has tasted wonderful!
My husband and children can't wait to see which one
I've made this week and my friends say that the chocolate
sponge is the nicest they've ever tasted! Easy to
follow recipes with not-over-fussy ingredients. Highly
recommended for those who like baking like me!
To
be or not to be perfect! (5 February 2006)
Reviewer: Mrs J E Wood (UK)
This
book has an amazing ability to produce not only the
ultimate cake, it calmly states(without oversatating)
that to follow a recipe in this book is to obtain
the ultimate perfect cake.
If
one tries to change, alter, add of substitute an ingredient,
believing that one may possibly improve on the result
either by taste or appearance, then one is sadly mistaken.
It is not possible, the perfect recipes given in her
book produce the perfect and most delicious cakes.
Mary
Berry's Ultimate Cake Book (20 October 2005)
Reviewer: "julie28069"
I
bought this book in January this year. I am at the
beginner end of the scale and have found it an extremely
good book with good explanations and helpful tips.
I am about to purchase a second copy for my nephew's
Christmas present as we have done quite a few recipes
from it so far, with great success. The millionaire's
shortbread goes down a storm every time and is very
straightforward and a new favourite is the chocolate
birthday cake, very rich and gorgeous. I would highly
recommend this book as the recipes do not talk down
to the reader at all but at the same time do not assume
that the reader has any prior experience. All recipes
have been successful first time and develops confidence,
especially for those like myself who are just starting
out. I am about to embark on my first Christmas cake
and wouldn't consider using any other recipe other
than Mary Berry's.
Not
the ultimate, but very good (31 March 2005)
Reviewer: Paul Lynch
I
bought this book a few weeks ago because it seemed
to be close enough to being an important reference
book for English cake baking. On that basis, it comes
close, but doesn't win. As a large compendium of English
baking, it is very good.
Since
then, I have baked my way through about a quarter
of the recipes, which is very good going. Most of
the results have been close to perfect: I can especially
recommend her Bara Brith recipe, which is utterly
delicious, and her carrot cake and rich brownies are
likewise almost perfect. The pictures are luxurious
and tempting, and cover the majority of recipes; they
are also very representative of what the recipes actually
will produce, and aren't overembellished.
I
have a few criticisms. Cooking times aren't always
precise, and I find that I have to check very carefully
to make sure that the cakes are really ready. Additional
sugar is a very popular topping on rock cakes, sponges
and other types, which I find excessive. Mary Berry
also invariably specifies margarine instead of butter,
except for one or two recipes where the taste of margarine
would be truly obnoxious. The chocolate chip cookies
were the only recipe so far to disappoint, with the
result being more like a sponge than a cookie. The
only sponge technique used is all-in-one, even for
the Victoria sponge, and examples of other traditional
sponge techniques would be appreciated. Most of the
cheesecake recipes relied on gelatine rather than
baking, which I felt was inapproriate for a book with
a full chapter on cheesecakes.
The
chapter division and sequence I found rather puzzling.
The first chapters are on chocolate cakes, meringues,
"traybakes", and celebration cakes. Most
books would have saved three of these more difficult
chapters for the end of the sequence. Then there are
separate chapters on celebration cakes, Bazaars, gift
cakes, continental cakes and then family cakes; although
this is feasible, I find it hard to decide in which
of these chapters some recipes should really belong.
Back
to the good; the beginning chapters on tools, ingredients
and techniques are brief but excellent, and the short
chapter at the end on problem solving is also very
good.
If
you want an easy to follow cake book with many British
traditional recipes, as well as a few surprises, where
90% or more will give excellent results - then this
is a book for you. It isn't complete, and doesn't
include many representative international recipes
- but that may not be a fault for you.
If
you want to order a copy of the book - click
here (USA)
If you want to order a copy of the book
- click
here (UK)
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