As a surprise birthday treat, I decided to bake Chris his favourite Australian treat, Lamingtons. We ate Lamingtons the size of house bricks when visiting Australia. One particular Lamington stands out from our visit this year when we drove the Great Ocean Road and stayed in the seaside towns of Lorne and Apollo Bay to take in the sights (and the cakes and pies too).
I spotted a Lamington recipe in Marguerite Patton’s Everyday Cookbook and planned it all well in advance, purchasing an industrial sized bag of desiccated coconut, only for Chris to then ask for Lamingtons (and a Chocolate Roulade) for his birthday! My plan was discovered, but then again I’m not very good at keeping surprises secret and our tiny Tyneside flat doesn’t leave much to the imagination anyway…
I googled Lamingtons as they caused a bit of debate in the office. Many of us remember eating these chocolate, coconut, jam, sponge cubes as children, although others remember a pink version. They are also known by different names, such as Madelines, or pink Lamingtons. Some Australian Counsellor put me right. Apparently an Australian Lord loved cake. His maid accidently dropped his cake into chocolate. Despite being a Lord he didn’t want to waste his cake (Don’t blame him!). So he told her to roll it in coconut so he wouldn’t get messy fingers. Et voila! Lamingtons were born and Australians are very proud of their 100 year recipe. (Check out the Australian Lamington official blog for evidence of the City Counsellor of Queensland shovelling Lamingtons into his mouth and the record breaking Lamington).
I was a bit worried about how technical this recipe was and I didn’t actually own a square tin. I made a quick trip to visit my mam to borrow her tin. I’ve never baked one cake and sliced it in half before. It seems a bit dangerous. Is it difficult? What if I slip with the knife and ruin the entire cake?!
The sponge itself was pretty simple to make. A basic vanilla batter, which smelled gorgeous and tasted rather like a dense madeira cake.
I had to leave it to cool overnight and the next day chopped off the slightly domed top to create a flat surface instead. This was nerve wracking too as the last time I attempted this I cut my hand. I managed and kept all my fingers intact. This meant that I got a sneak preview and ate the lid before work. Hurrah! It was delicious!

Off with it’s dome
I set about creating the chocolate soup, from cocoa powder and icing sugar. I carefully sliced the cake through the middle widthways and had two perfect halves!!
The recipe was supposed to make 16 portions… I was a bit worried that this dinky square cake just wasn’t enough for the Australian cakes that we were accustomed too. So I baked another one. This time in a big roasting tin to make one flat cake, remembering this time to leave a bit of a dint in the top (pushing more mixture to the edges) so I didn’t get a dome finish.
Our guests were arriving for fish and chips and Lamingtons so I didn’t have much time for mistakes. I threw almost a full jar of strawberry jam onto the sponges and rubbed it in with the back of a spoon. (Excessive? Me?)
Then plonked one half on top of the other and decided that 4 big cakes were better than 16 little ones. I used the sharpest knife I could find and cut the sponge into quarters. Although they still didn’t look that ‘Australian sized’ to me.
The recipe suggests you use a skewer to pierce the cake and dip gentily into the chocolate soup before lovingly rolling it in desiccated coconut. Who has time for these things? I picked the cakes up with my bare hands and within 2 seconds was up to my eyes in chocolate and coconut. Everything stuck to me! My messy yet effective method.

Step two. Roll around in coconut (Do not try to a. answer the phone b. push your hair out of your face c. say hello to the cat until hands can be throughly washed.)
The cakes needed about an hour to ‘set’. I definitely used more coconut than suggested as the chocolate from my fingers kept leaking onto the pristine white finish and ruining the effect slightly.
When piled onto my new vintage cake plate, topped with candles, lit and then carried through the beaded curtain from the kitchen to the living room. (No fires were caused in the making of these cakes, don’t worry), They suddenly transformed into magnificent brick like beasts. I had made giant cakes. One cake was more than enough for two people and I still had an entire sponge cake left to assemble!
Happy Birthday Chris! I loved these cakes and was so impressed with how they turned out. The sponge doesn’t need to be the perfect shape, the coconut makes up for any inconsistencies and they are so very moreish.
I attempted some pink Lamingtons (or English Madelines as Nigel Slater informs me in his ‘Eating for England’ book) especially for Caroline at work as they were her favourite, using powdered jelly. Bizarre stuff but apparently they tasted excatly like the ones she had when she was little. Success!
Things that I used to make Lovely Lamingtons…
Sponge cake
- 5 oz butter
- 7 oz caster sugar
- splash of vanilla extract
- 3 eggs
- 10 oz self raising flour
- 4 tablespoons of milk
Filling
- strawberry/raspberry jam
Coating
- 7 oz icing sugar
- 1 oz cocoa powder
- 3 tablespoons of boiling water
Decoration
- 6 oz desiccated coconut (or as much as you need to coat the lamingtons liberally!)
Method
- Cream the butter, sugar and vanilla essence together
- add the eggs gradually
- fold in the sieved flour alternatively with the milk
- spread the mixture into a baking tin (8 inch square)
- bake for 50-60 mins at 350 degrees F/gas mark 4
- cool the sponge and store in an airtight container over night
- carefully slice the sponge through the centre to create 2 square sponges
- spread with jam
- sandwich the two sponges together
- mix the icing sugar and cocoa powder together in a shallow bowl adding the boiling water gradually to create your chocolate soup. Add more sugar/water as required.
- chop the sponge into equal sized squares (4 if you want big pieces or 16 smaller ones)
- dip each piece into the chocolate soup and then into a shallow bowl of desiccated coconut
- leave on a cooling rack to harden
- eat with a big cup of tea!
* Recipe lovingly adapated from Marguerite Patten’s Everyday Cookbook
I want to try this, as I love cake, chocolate and coconut, and the combo sounds fantastic!
Thank you so much for your lovely comment. I definitely recommend baking these. So delicious and moreish!
Fantastic work Lauren. You’ve inspired this Aussie to make some lamingtons for an upcoming work function. Obviously I will have to be organised, but worth the effort I can see. Yummo!
Hello Kribo! Hope you’re well. I think these will be one of my regular bakes from now on! Definitely worth the effort. Hope you enjoy baking them. If you have any other Australian suggestions (Yodit too!) please let me know. x
ooh they look gorgeous! I’d like one now with my cuppa!
Thank you! I wish I had some left now, they are perfect with a big cup of tea!
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Always great to find a new blog this fantastic I’ll be coming back here for sure
Thank you so much Dolma ! I’m so glad you like it. Thanks so much for your comment too. I hope you enjoy the next 41 bakes! Just hit my half way point!
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I just stumbled upon this blog while searching for a recipe for Lamingtons, and this is by far the best looking recipe I’ve found! Can’t wait to look at some of the other ones on here – I love the idea of baking dishes from around the world!
So pleased you found me! I’m over the moon that you like the recipe. Hope you enjoy around the world in 80 bakes.