queen cake

Noun

 * 1)  A soft, muffin-sized cake, popular particularly in the 1700s,  containing currants, mace and sometimes flavoured with orange or lemon marmalade or shredded coconut and chocolate toppings.
 * 2) * 1725, Robert Smith, Court Cookery, Queen's cakes, p188 - "Take a Pound of dry'd Flower, a Pound of refined Sugar sifted, and a Pound of Currans washed, picked, and rubbed clean, and a Pound of Butter washed very well, and rub it into the Flower and Sugar, with a little beaten Mace, and a little Orange-Flower Water; beat ten Eggs, but half the Whites, work it all well together with your Hands, and put in the Currants; sift over it double-refined Sugar, and put them immediately into a gentle Oven to bake."
 * 3) * 1914,, The Girls of St. Cyprian's, (Google online books):
 * "I'm sure my brains work better when they're lubricated with tea," declared Bess Harrison, tilting back her chair at a comfortable though rather dangerous angle, and accepting the queen-cake which Lottie Lowman offered her.
 * 1) * 1914,, The Girls of St. Cyprian's, (Google online books):
 * "I'm sure my brains work better when they're lubricated with tea," declared Bess Harrison, tilting back her chair at a comfortable though rather dangerous angle, and accepting the queen-cake which Lottie Lowman offered her.
 * "I'm sure my brains work better when they're lubricated with tea," declared Bess Harrison, tilting back her chair at a comfortable though rather dangerous angle, and accepting the queen-cake which Lottie Lowman offered her.