13 Ways To Ruin A Pound Cake 

>From Southern Living

 

Mistake 1: Not reading the entire recipe: Carefully read through the entire
recipe, and prepare any special ingredients, such as chopped fruits or
toasted nuts, before mixing the batter.

 

Mistake 2: Substituting store brands: Prepare the recipe as directed and use
name-brand ingredients. Store brands of sugar are often more finely ground
than name brands, yielding more sugar per cup, which can cause the cake to
fall. Store brands of butter may contain more liquid fat, and flours more
hard wheat, making the cake heavy.

 

Mistake 3: Not measuring accurately: Be sure to use dry measuring cups for
flour and sugar. Spoon flour into the cups and lightly level with the
straight edge of a small offset spatula or knife. Extra sugar or leavening
causes a cake to fall; extra flour makes it dry.

 

Mistake 4: Using ingredients straight from the refrigerator: For maximum
volume, have ingredients at room temperature. We like to premeasure our
ingredients and assemble them in the order listed. That way, if interrupted,
you're less likely to make a mistake.

 

Mistake 5: Beating butter too fast: Beat softened butter (and cream cheese
or vegetable shortening) at medium speed with an electric mixer until
creamy. This can take from 1 to 7 minutes, depending on the power of your
mixer. Gradually add sugar, continuing to beat until light and fluffy. These
steps are important because they whip air into the cake batter, so it will
rise during baking.

 

Mistake 6: Overbeating the eggs: Add eggs, one at a time, beating just until
the yolk disappears. Overbeating the eggs may cause the batter to overflow
the sides of the pan during baking or create a fragile crust that crumbles
and separates from the cake as it cools.

 

Mistake 7: Overmixing the batter: Always add the dry ingredients alternately
with the liquid, beginning and ending with the dry ingredients. This will
help to ensure that the dry and wet ingredients are evenly distributed
throughout the batter. Mix just until blended after each addition.
Overmixing the batter creates a tough, rubbery cake.

 

Mistake 8: Using the wrong type of cake pan: Pound cake recipes calling for
a tube pan won't always fit in a Bundt pan. (Tube pans have straight, high
sides, while Bundt pans are more shallow and fluted.) Although both may
measure 10 inches in diameter, each holds a different amount of batter. We
also found that some 10-inch tube pans hold 12 cups of batter while others
hold 14 or 16 cups. The same pound cake recipe rises and bakes differently
in each pan. When unsure of size, use a cup measure to fill the cake pan
with water to determine the pan's capacity.

 

Mistake 9: Greasing your pan with cooking spray: Grease cake pans with solid
vegetable shortening, such as Crisco, and always dust with flour-a slippery
surface keeps the batter from rising to its full volume. 

 

Mistake 10: Trusting your oven's temperature setting: Use an oven
thermometer to check your oven's temperature for accuracy. Many home ovens
bake hotter or cooler than the temperatures to which they're set.

 

Mistake 11: Opening the oven door before it's done: Place the cake pan in
the center of the oven, and keep the door closed until the minimum baking
time has elapsed. If the cake requires more baking, gently close the oven
door as soon as possible after testing to prevent jarring and loss of
heat-both can cause a cake to fall if it's not done.

 

Mistake 12: Taking the cake out of the oven too early or too late: Test for
doneness by inserting a long wooden pick into the center of the cake. It
should come out clean, with no batter or wet crumbs clinging to it. (Some
cakes will have a crack in the center that appears wet even when fully
cooked so avoid this area when testing.)

 

Mistake 13: Removing the cake from the pan too early or too late: After
removing from the oven, place the pound cake, right side up, in the pan on a
wire rack, and let cool for 10 minutes away from drafts. This allows the
cake to become firm enough to remove from the pan without breaking apart.
Cooling too long in the pan will cause the cake to be damp and stick to the
pan. Remove pound cake from pan to wire rack, and let cool completely.  

>From Blind Recipes

 

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