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Cake Baking Tips
Submitted by: Jerseygirl
GENERAL DIRECTIONS.
In making cakes it is particularly necessary that the eggs should be well
beaten. They are not sufficiently light till the surface looks smooth and level,
and till they get so thick as to be of the consistence of boiled custard.
White of egg should always be beaten till it becomes a heap of stiff froth,
without any liquid at the bottom; and till it hangs from the rods or fork
without dropping.
Eggs, become light soonest when new-laid, and when beaten near the fire or in
warm dry weather.
Butter and sugar should be stirred till it looks like thick cream, and till it
stands up in the pan.
It should be kept cool. If too warm, it will make the cakes heavy.
Large cake recipes should be baked in tin or earthen pans with straight sides,
that are as nearly perpendicular as possible. They cut into handsomer slices,
and if they are to be iced, it will be found very inconvenient to put on the
icing, if the cake slopes in towards the bottom.
Before you ice a cake dredge it all over with flour, and then wipe the flour
off. This will enable you to spread on the icing more evenly.
Before you cut an ice cake, cut the icing by itself with a small sharp penknife.
The large knife with which you divide the cake, will crack and break the icing.
Large Gingerbread, as it burns very easily, may be baked in an earthen pan. So
also may Black Cake or Pound Cake. Tin pans or moulds, with a hollow tube in the
middle, are best for cakes.
If large cake recipes are baked in tin pans, the bottom and sides should be
covered with sheets of paper, before the mixture is put in. The paper must be
well buttered.
Sponge cake recipes, and Almond cakes should be baked in pans that are as thin
as possible.
If the cakes should get burnt, scrape them with a knife or grater, as soon as
they are cool.
Always be careful to butter your pans well. Should the cakes stick, they cannot
be got out without breaking.
For queen-cakes, &c. the small tins of a round or oval shape are most
convenient. Fill them but little more than half.
After the mixture is completed, set it in a cool place till all the cakes are
baked,
In rolling out cakes made of dough, use as little flour as possible. When you
lay them in the pans, do not place them too close together, lest they run into
each other.
When you are cutting them out, dip the cutter frequently in flour, to prevent
its slicking.
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