Justine
Justine
Justine
Make A Cake
Subtitle
To get started right away, just tap any placeholder text (such as this) and
start typing to replace it with your own.
Heading 1
Many recipes require cake ingredients, such as eggs and butter, to stand at room temperature. This allows the butter to
blend easily with other ingredients, and the eggs will yield a higher cake volume. (For food safety reasons, don’t leave
the eggs at room temperature for more time than specified in the recipe.)
Step 3: Preheat The Oven
When a cake bakes too quickly, it can develop tunnels and cracks; too slowly, and it can be coarse. Allow your
oven to preheat for at least 10 minutes, and use an oven thermometer to be sure it’s reached the proper
temperature. If you’re using dark cake pans, you’ll want to reduce the oven temperature called for in your recipe
by 25°F.
Dry ingredients usually include flour, baking powder and/or baking soda, and salt. Rather than adding each dry
ingredient individually to the batter, whisk them together in a bowl beforehand. That way you’ll know the
ingredients will be equally distributed throughout the batter
Step 5: Combine the Butter and Sugar
Using an electric mixer (Target) on medium to high speed, beat the butter for 30 seconds. Generally, a stand mixer
requires a medium speed for this step, but a hand mixer requires a higher speed.
Add the sugar (and vanilla if the recipe calls for it) and beat the mixture on medium speed until it is combined and
has a light, fluffy texture. This will take 3 to 5 minutes. (Do not cut this short.) Scrape the bowl occasionally while
beating. Tiny bubbles will be created as the butter and sugar are combined, which will give your cake that light,
fluffy texture.
Add the eggs (or egg whites) one at a time, beating well after each. Their protein creates a structure around the air
bubbles that will maintain the texture
Step 7: Alternate Adding Dry and Wet Ingredients
Alternate between adding some of the dry mixture and some of the milk (or whatever liquid is specified in your
recipe) to the butter-egg-sugar mixture, beating on low speed after each addition until everything is combined.
Begin and end with the flour mixture, as when liquid is mixed into flour, gluten begins to form. Too much gluten
makes for a tough cake, so be sure to start and finish with the flour, and be careful not to overmix once you’ve
added liquid.
Divide the batter evenly between the baking pans. Use an offset spatula to spread the batter in an even layer. Be
sure to spread it to the pan’s edge. Bake your cake according to your recipe’s directions.
How To
Make A Cake
Subtitle
To get started right away, just tap any placeholder text (such as this) and
start typing to replace it with your own.
Heading 1
Many recipes require cake ingredients, such as eggs and butter, to stand at room temperature. This allows the butter to
blend easily with other ingredients, and the eggs will yield a higher cake volume. (For food safety reasons, don’t leave
the eggs at room temperature for more time than specified in the recipe.)
Step 3: Preheat The Oven
When a cake bakes too quickly, it can develop tunnels and cracks; too slowly, and it can be coarse. Allow your
oven to preheat for at least 10 minutes, and use an oven thermometer to be sure it’s reached the proper
temperature. If you’re using dark cake pans, you’ll want to reduce the oven temperature called for in your recipe
by 25°F.
Dry ingredients usually include flour, baking powder and/or baking soda, and salt. Rather than adding each dry
ingredient individually to the batter, whisk them together in a bowl beforehand. That way you’ll know the
ingredients will be equally distributed throughout the batter
Step 5: Combine the Butter and Sugar
Using an electric mixer (Target) on medium to high speed, beat the butter for 30 seconds. Generally, a stand mixer
requires a medium speed for this step, but a hand mixer requires a higher speed.
Add the sugar (and vanilla if the recipe calls for it) and beat the mixture on medium speed until it is combined and
has a light, fluffy texture. This will take 3 to 5 minutes. (Do not cut this short.) Scrape the bowl occasionally while
beating. Tiny bubbles will be created as the butter and sugar are combined, which will give your cake that light,
fluffy texture.
Add the eggs (or egg whites) one at a time, beating well after each. Their protein creates a structure around the air
bubbles that will maintain the texture
Step 7: Alternate Adding Dry and Wet Ingredients
Alternate between adding some of the dry mixture and some of the milk (or whatever liquid is specified in your
recipe) to the butter-egg-sugar mixture, beating on low speed after each addition until everything is combined.
Begin and end with the flour mixture, as when liquid is mixed into flour, gluten begins to form. Too much gluten
makes for a tough cake, so be sure to start and finish with the flour, and be careful not to overmix once you’ve
added liquid.
Divide the batter evenly between the baking pans. Use an offset spatula to spread the batter in an even layer. Be
sure to spread it to the pan’s edge. Bake your cake according to your recipe’s directions.