Baking the Perfect Cake - Why things go wrong! (2024)

Baking the Perfect Cake - Why things go wrong! (1)

Our very own ‘madeitwithlove’, has been extremely helpful in answering many baking questions posed on our and now kind enough to take the time to write a blog on her experience baking cakes, which makes very interesting reading….

I learned to bake as a tinytwelve year oldat school, in what appeared then, to be a massive kitchen come classroom. Teacher was a harridan when it came to following ‘HER’ recipes, and woe betide you if you waivered from her instructions!I hated domestic science classes with a vengeance,especially since in those days we had to beat all cake ingredients in a bowl with a wooden spoon. The school of thought at the time was to have all the ingredients straight out of the fridge, tocream solid block margarinewith sugar for a mere weakling like me was a daunting task.Years later, I began to appreciate the harridan’s constant nagging, and I wished I had paid more attention! Although thankfully today we have our ingredients at room temperature and have the assistance of marvellous kitchen aids.

I have never been what you might call an ace baker, other people however, for some reason, laud my efforts and I suddenly find myself having many, many friends, (I wonder why?). Throughoutmy baking journey, I’ve made, and continue to make, hundreds of mistakes in the endeavour to bakingthe perfect cake! (believe me, it doesn’t exist!). What I have learnedhowever, through scrimping and saving snippets of information,is why certain things dogo wrong, and I thought it might be fun to share.

So guys, if the recipe has been followed pretty much closely, ingredients weighed, tins properly greased and lined, the oven preheated and set to the accurate temperature, you’d think great! the cake will be baked perfectly. This is not always so, the most common complaints andfrequently asked questionsafter all that hard workare as follows:

My cake has sunk in the middle!What happened?

Most common reason is when the oven door is opened too soon and the cake hasn’t set up and baked properly. The mixture could be too soft due to not enough ingredients or if there is too much liquid added. Using too much raising agents can make the cake rise too much too quickly and it implodes on itself. It can often also be to do with the baking oven that you have used. We would always suggest using an external thermometer to double check the temperature.

My cake hasgot a dome bigger than St Paul’s Cathedral!!

Cakes which dome or peak and crack are usually as a result ofthe butter and sugar not being creamed together for long enough. Give the ingredients a good five to seven minutes of creaming, this incorporates air into the mix making it light and fluffy. Bakingin too small a tin restricts the expansion of the mix, so up it goes and pops!Alsobakingtoo close to the top of the oven will make the centre rise before the sides have had a chance to catch up. However, it is natural for madeira cake to dome and crack.

Now my cake is too dry

Maybe you’ve over baked it, or didn’t use enough liquid/ not enough eggs, if the recipe says use large eggs and you haven’t got large, use an extra egg,size matters! Using too much raising agents will also make for a dry cake.

Got holes in my cake

Again the culprit is not enough creaming, this time sugar, eggs and butter/marg. Oven temperature too high and too muchbaking powder will also cause holes andan uneven grainy texture. Add eggs into creamed butter/sugar mixone at a time,cream well so the mix is smooth and incorporated.If the mix starts to separate add a tablespoon of flourwith each egg.The rest of the flour should be carefully folded in with alarge metal spoon so as not to lose any of the air in the mix.

Why should a cake be heavy with a closed rubberytexture?

Over mixing cakebatter can result in a heavy, closed rubbery texture. Over mixing acts on the gluten in flour and will make cakes hard instead of the lovely softspongy texture we associate with a good cake. Insufficientcreaming of sugar and eggs will also make a tight texture because there isn’t enough air trapped in the mix to give it a lift.Adding too much liquid will make it dense and pudding like.Genoise sponge will become heavy if the melted butter istoo hot when addedand if it is not folded in evenly.

Sugary crust?

This is usually anindication that sugar and fats have not been adequately creamed but it may also be caused by usinggranulated sugar whichdoesn’t dissolve as well as caster.Too much sugar in the recipecan also make asugarycrustand speckling on the top, in which case try reducing the amount of sugar by approx 60/70 gms. I’ve done this withoutcompromising the quality of the cake. In fact, I forgot to put any sugar at all in one of my chocolate cakes, it didn’t rise but was perfectly edible with a dash of liqueur and a dollop of clotted cream!

Last, but my no means the least is the fruit cake which has it’s own problems. As with all cakes, the methods of incorporating ingredients into fruit cakes is the same, the only difference being that fruit should be of good quality, washed and dried if the recipe asks for this, and sticky fruits such as glace cherries, andangelica should be washed, dried, and floured before adding to the batter other wise they just sink to the bottom. Dried fruit can be plumped up bysoaking overnight ina couple of tablespoonsof liqueur or warm water. I soak dried fruit for three days, but that’s personal choice. Adding too much liquid to fruit cakes can also result in the fruit sinking to the bottom and can cause acreamy wetstickiness to the baked cakewhich can’t be remedied.Following the recipe and a little common sense will pay big dividends. Different fruit cake recipes have their own method of how to bake. Some will advise baking at a higher temperature for the first hour and then reducing the temperature for the remaining baking period. Others will bake at an even temperature throughout the bake time, this advice should be adhered to for a successful result.

Obviously these are just a few things which can go wrong in cake baking.Most mistakes can be remedied, but in my book there is no such thing as a baking failure, just a learning curve. More experienced bakers will have come across all these problems through their baking journey. For the less experienced baker, those who are starting out, baking can be a mystery and some disappointment is inevitable. Baking is a science, ingredients all have an interactiverole to play although small discrepancies in weights and measures won’t affect the overall quality of your baked creations, it is advisable to follow recipes accurately and enjoy your baking!

Thanks for taking the time to read this article.

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Baking the Perfect Cake - Why things go wrong! (2024)

FAQs

Baking the Perfect Cake - Why things go wrong!? ›

Most common reason is when the oven door is opened too soon and the cake hasn't set up and baked properly. The mixture could be too soft due to not enough ingredients or if there is too much liquid added. Using too much raising agents can make the cake rise too much too quickly and it implodes on itself.

What happens if you add too much flour to a cake? ›

Any baked good — especially cake —with too much flour will be dry, hard, crumbly … take your unhappy pick. For best results, please weigh your flour (and other ingredients).

Why is my cake not baked properly? ›

It could be that too much fat has been used to grease the tin; the cake tin wasn't lined sufficiently; the oven was too hot; the cake was left in the oven for too long or a fat that is not suitable for baking has been used. Feeling confident to tackle a delicious cake or bake? Visit our recipe hub for inspiration...

Why is my cake pale yellow and not golden brown? ›

Likewise, if your cake isn't brown enough it is likely because it is under-cooked or the recipe used insufficient egg or sugar.

What happens if you add too much butter to a cake? ›

As a commonly used fat, butter is largely responsible for the amount of moisture in your cake, cookies, cupcakes, and so on. So, the more butter you add, the closer you'll get to that ultra-soft texture of your sheet cake dreams. Less butter results in a drier, chewier cake.

What happens if you put too much batter in a cake pan? ›

"If too much batter is put in a pan, then it will overflow during the baking process and make a mess of your oven," Stewart explains. "If too little batter is put in the pans, then the cakes will not be tall enough or may over bake if you strictly adhere to the listed baking time."

What makes a cake moist and fluffy? ›

Adding a tablespoon or two of sour cream to your cake batter can help make it more moist. Sour cream's creamy and light texture can help keep your cake from becoming dense and dry. Sour Cream Coffee Cake is a great example of how sour cream can enhance the flavor, texture and moisture of a cake.

What happens if you put too many eggs in a cake? ›

Eggs also contain a variety of proteins that create the structure of a cake, and when beaten, they can act as a leavening agent by adding air to the cake batter. However, if you add too many eggs to your cake batter, then your end result could be spongy, rubbery, or dense.

What makes a cake dense vs fluffy? ›

If a recipe includes a lot of acid such as lemon juice and buttermilk and isn't lifted with enough baking powder, the cake will taste dense. In that case, you may need the addition of baking soda which will react with the acid and create a fluffier crumb.

What causes a cake to break after baking? ›

The oven temperature is too high. If the top crust forms and sets before the cake has finished rising, the middle will try to push through the crust as it continues to bake, causing it to crack and possibly dome.

What causes a cake not to rise properly? ›

Be careful with the cake batter. We advise folding the ingredients together, not beating them, as this will keep the mixture aerated. Check your oven is at the correct temperature. If it is too hot, the cake doesn't have time to rise, and if it is too cold it will rise too high and then sink at the end.

What causes a cake to fall while baking? ›

It seems counterintuitive, but too much leavening can actually cause your cake to fall. This is because the leavening activates too quickly during baking, which causes a turbocharged, too-fast carbon dioxide reaction.

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