Sesame, Date and Banana Cake

- Total Time
- About 2 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 3tablespoons/50 grams tahini
- ⅓cup/75 milliliters orange juice (from 1 large orange)
- 5ounces/140 grams medjool dates, pitted and quartered (about 8 dates)
- 2 to 3very ripe peeled bananas (8 ounces/240 grams), thinly sliced
- 2tablespoons toasted sesame seeds
- ½cup/113 grams unsalted butter (1 stick), at room temperature and cut into ¾-inch/2-centimeter pieces, plus extra butter for the pan
- ¾cup/150 grams granulated or superfine sugar (caster sugar)
- 2large eggs, beaten
- 1⅔cup/200 grams all-purpose flour (plain flour), sifted
- 2½teaspoons baking powder
- ⅛teaspoon salt
- ½cup plus 1 tablespoon/130 grams cream cheese, preferably at room temperature
- ½cup plus 1 tablespoon/130 grams mascarpone cheese, preferably at room temperature
- 3tablespoons/35 grams lightly packed light brown sugar (soft sugar)
- 3½tablespoons/55 grams tahini
- 1ripe peeled banana, cut into ½-inch/1-centimeter-thick slices
- 1tablespoon Demerara sugar
- 1½teaspoons date syrup, for drizzling
For the Cake
For the Tahini Cream-cheese Icing
For the Caramelized Bananas
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit/200 degrees Celsius. Grease an 8-inch/20-centimeter aluminum springform cake pan with butter, and line the base and sides with parchment paper.
- Step 2
Make the cake: In a medium bowl, whisk together tahini and orange juice, and then stir in dates, bananas and sesame seeds, separating the date and banana pieces as you add them to the bowl so they don't clump together. Set aside.
- Step 3
Put butter and sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, and mix on medium-high speed for 2 to 3 minutes, until light and fluffy. Add the eggs, in two additions, until combined, scraping the bowl down as needed.
- Step 4
In a small bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder and salt, then add to the stand mixer bowl and mix on low speed for about 30 seconds, just to combine. Add tahini-date mixture with the speed still on low and mix until blended, then spoon the batter into the cake pan and smooth the top.
- Step 5
Transfer cake to oven and bake for 30 minutes, until golden brown. Without removing it from the oven, carefully cover the cake loosely with aluminum foil. Continue to bake for an additional 25 to 30 minutes, or until cake is cooked through and a skewer inserted in the middle comes out clean. Remove from oven and set aside to cool in the pan on a wire rack.
- Step 6
While the cake is baking, make the icing: Place all the ingredients in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment. Whisk for 1 to 2 minutes, on medium speed, until combined and airy, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed to mix thoroughly. Set aside until cake has cooled.
- Step 7
Make the caramelized bananas: Heat broiler on its highest setting, with a rack placed about 4 inches/10 centimeters beneath the heat source. Arrange banana slices closely together on a small baking pan and sprinkle generously with sugar. Broil bananas for 2 to 3 minutes, until sugar has melted and caramelized. Remove from oven and set aside to cool.
- Step 8
To assemble, remove the cake from the pan and transfer to a plate. Spread icing generously over the top of the cake. Arrange the caramelized bananas on top, then drizzle with date syrup.
Private Notes
Comments
Date syrup recipes online. Too easy not to make at home.
Ingredients
6 Medjool dates, pitted (about .3 lb)
1 cup hot water
½ teaspoon cinnamon
Place dates in a bowl and cover with hot water for at least 30 minutes until soft. Save the water.
Add dates to a powerful blender and blend, slowly adding in the water you soaked them in. Continue adding water until you achieve desired consistency (I use about ½ cup water).
The longer the dates are soaked, the smoother the consistency
For those of you whining about the date syrup, they have a new thing out. Perhaps you've heard if it? It's called the Internet, and you can find and order many great things on there, including date syrup! Heck, you could just hop in your car and tote your butt to a Middle East grocer or the international aisle of the grocery store. Or you can even look up recipes for date syrup online!! Imagine that! Still don't like my ideas?? Then MAKE A BOX CAKE instead of a NYT recipe!
Date syrup is a staple in my kitchen, along with pomegranate molasses, tahini, dates, sumac and all kinds of other Middle Eastern ingredients. I'm Anglo, my husband Italian. We love cooking Middle Eastern food and most ingredients easy to source either via ME markets or CoOps or even places like Cost Plus locally. Online otherwise. With respect to those "impatient" with recipes using ingredients new to them, isn't the point that it is fun to try new things as cooks?
I made this and was disappointed. In fact, we ate about 1/4 of it and threw the rest away. Just wasn’t a flavor that we could say was a keeper. The air-browned bananas on the top didn’t help the visual either.
Has anyone made this recipe but reduced the sugar amount?
Years ago NYT had an article by one of the cooks about serving his children pancakes with date syrup. I was curious about it and purchased- it’s absolutely more delicious, rich, and flavorful than maple syrup, my kid loves it too. Buy for the cake, keep buying it for pancakes!
@Melanie I have bought it for years because of the Ottolenghi recipe for Butternut squash and tahini dip - a staple on our house. It’s garnished with date syrup and black and white sesame seeds. Gorgeous and delicious.