Preheat your oven to 180°C (350°F)
Draw out 11 x 8 inch rounds on baking paper. I usually do this by tracing my cake tin with a pencil on baking paper (just remember to flip the paper over so that the pencil is not on the cake side) I then like to trim the baking paper into circles, just slightly bigger than my rounds – this helps me to fit more on each baking tray and makes it a little easier to handle each cake layer once baked.
Quarter-fill a medium saucepan with water and bring to a simmer. Meanwhile, In a large glass, heatproof mixing bowl combine 1/4 cup burnt honey, 3/4 cup regular honey, butter, vanilla extract and sugar in a large bowl, and place over the simmering water as a ‘double boiler’ – be careful that the bowl doesn’t touch the water. Gently Stir occasionally until the butter is completely melted, and whisk well to combine.
Crack your eggs into a bowl, and set aside. In another small bowl, mix salt, cinnamon and baking soda.
When the butter and honey mixture is warm to the touch, add your eggs whilst whisking constantly so everything combines well. Continue to whisk gently until the mixture is warm to the touch again, and then add the cinnamon and baking soda mixture. Continue to whisk for a minute or so. The batter will become quite billowy – and at this point, you can remove the bowl and leave to cool down very slightly.
Place the flour in a fine mesh sieve and slowly incorporate the flour into the mixture until smooth. You can place the bowl back on the simmering saucepan on the lowest heat – so that the batter keeps just warm – you don’t want this batter to cool completely.
Spoon around 1/3 of a cup of batter on each of your baking paper rounds, pushing the batter right to the edges, and making sure that the batter is an even consistency over the round. You can add a drop or two more batter to any parts that might need ‘filling’ – repeat this step until you have 11 rounds of batter layers.
Bake in the preheated oven for around 5 minutes or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean, the layer should be thin, and a little spongey when cooked – it should bounce back a little when you touch it. Important to not over-bake.
Remove the layers from the parchment paper before completely cool, and leave on a wire rack to cool completely.
Reduce the oven temperature to 120 degrees celcius. Once the cake layers are completely cool, you can use pair of scissors to trim off any ends that might have crept out of your 8 inch circles, and set aside your least attractive layer – these trimmings and spare round should be spread out on a baking sheet and toasted in the oven for 5-10 mins, watching carefully, until a deep red-brown colour and dry. Allow to cool completely, and then crush to a fine sand – I usually whizz this up in my blender. This will be your cake crumb.