The result is that we were now a core household of Granny, Aunts Alice and Hilda, Mum, Dad (most of the time, actually) and us kids.
It was a baking household and the Selby Cake was one of Auntie Alice’s regular standby recipes. If visitors were expected she’d bake a Selby Cake. If something was needed for a church evening, Selby Cake. If we were going to visit friends and a cake was required then a Selby Cake was always in order.
I never knew the origin of the name. My father often teased Auntie Hilda about an admirer called Michael Selby and perhaps he gave them the recipe. Nowadays I wonder if the name comes from the town of Selby in Yorkshire. There are a couple of recipes for Selby Tart on the internet and, although they do seem to be more tart than the cake that Auntie Alice used to bake, she always added some sort of parenthetical ‘(tart)’ to the name when she talked about it and her recipe (in the Baptist Women’s Association book of Budget-beating, Well-proven, Appetising Recipes, Port Shepstone Baptist Church 1981) is for ‘Selby Cake (Tart)’.
Selby Cake (Tart)
125g butter
1 well-beaten egg
125g sugar
400g flour
5ml Baking Powder
3ml salt
40ml Jam
Cream the butter and sugar. Add egg. Sift in flour, salt and baking powder. Reserve about a quarter of the mixture and spread the rest in a greased, floured 23cm pan. Spread the jam evenly and then cover the top with flakes of dough (squeeze them out between thumb and forefinger) so that they touch but don’t join.
Bake for 30 minutes at 180˚C (350˚F) Gas Mark 4
Notes