Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Fat rascal

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Alternative names
  
Turf cake (historical)

Region or state
  
Type
  
Place of origin
  
United Kingdom

Fat rascal wwwlavenderandlovagecomwpcontentuploads2015

Main ingredients
  
Currants and candied peel

Similar
  
Rock cake, Parkin, Yorkshire Tea, Singing hinny, Tea loaf

How to make fat rascals


A fat rascal, closely related to the historical turf cake, is a type of cake, similar to a scone or rock cake in both taste and ingredients. It originated in Yorkshire at least as early as the 1800s.

Contents

Fat rascal Home away from Home Betty39s Fat Rascals Recipe

Recipe bettys of york tea room fat rascals fruit buns


History

Fat rascal Home away from Home Betty39s Fat Rascals Recipe

Fat rascals were known in the Yorkshire region in the nineteenth century as a form of tea cake containing butter and cream. An 1859 Charles Dickens story identifies the fat rascal with the singing hinny of Northumberland. A fat rascal could also be baked as a turf cake, a buttery, flat cake baked in a covered pan among the ashes of a peat fire, and the terms fat rascal and turf cake are sometimes used interchangeably. A 1980 Yorkshire cookbook described fat rascals as a means of using leftover pastry, typically consisting of scraps of shortcrust pastry, sugared, sprinkled with currants and rolled into thick flat cakes before baking. Fat rascals, whatever their composition, do not appear to have been widely known outside the Yorkshire region until the 1980s, although there are occasional mentions in other regions, such as in Rye, Sussex in Ford Madox Ford's 1931 memoirs.

Fat rascal Fat Rascals Bettys

There is a recipe for Fat Rascals in a book called "The Presidents' Cook Book" by Poppy Cannon and Patricia Brooks published in 1968 by Funk and Wagnalls in the USA. They say " In Edith Roosevelt's most cherished cook book .... is this recipe for hot biscuits." This cook book now rests on a shelf in the parlour of Sagamore Hill.

Bettys

Fat rascal Gastrolad My Homage to Bettys The Fat Rascal

A widely recognised version of the Fat Rascal was introduced by Bettys Café Tea Rooms in North Yorkshire in 1983. This is a plump, fruity scone with a 'face' made from cherries and almonds based on a rock cake recipe, developed by Helen Frankel, then a buyer and marketing assistant at Bettys. Following its launch, the Fat Rascal quickly became Bettys’ best known and best-selling bakery product, selling over 375,000 per year. Bettys & Taylors of Harrogate own the registered trade mark for the name 'fat rascal'.

Fat rascal Gastrolad My Homage to Bettys The Fat Rascal

Fat rascal Fat rascal Wikipedia

References

Fat rascal Wikipedia


Similar Topics