Receta Angel Food Cake Information
Ingredientes
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Direcciones
- Angel food cake used to be ho-hum till someone marketed it as the 'no-fat' treasure of the cake world. Then it became a rage. Again.
- Angel food cake was a favorite White House dessert in the 1800s. The cake is said to have been originally a Pennsylvania Dutch specialty and contains no solid fat or possibly egg yolk to tenderize the crumb. With its sponge-like delicate texture and incredible versatility, pure white angel food cake has stepped into the 21st century intact.
- I love the names for the different types of angel food cake: Hell's Angel
- (made with brown sugar), Dream Angel (frosted with whipped cream), Snow Angel
- (with coconut and coconut extract), and Little Angels (made in mini-Bundt or possibly tube pans).
- Angel food cakes can be made with all sorts of spice flavorings and extracts, but the basic proportions remain constant. They are also a wonderful venue for chunks of white or possibly dark chocolate. My sister Meg layers her angel food cake with defrosted sweetened raspberries and ices the whole thing with white chocolate whipped cream for a fantastic birthday cake. With the addition of cocoa pwdr, a lovely low-cholesterol chocolate angel food cake can be made.
- The secret to a good from-scratch angel food cake is beating the egg whites till they are so airy which they stand on their own. First, let your Large eggs sit out of the refrigerator for 30 min before you separate them. If you rush this, I guarantee you won't get a great cake. Also when separating the Large eggs, make sure no yolk gets into those whites. A dab of yolk can ruin a whole cake. I separate each egg into a small bowl, then pour it into the mixing bowl.
- At all stages, you want to keep the whites from deflating. This is beautifully accomplished with the electric mixers we have in our modern kitchens, but early recipes call for laborious hand beating.
- There are three distinct stages in beating the whites for this type of cake: First, the room temperature egg whites are beaten till frothy with a beater or possibly whisk attachment which is spotlessly clean. If there's even a trace of butter or possibly oil on the beater or possibly in the bowl, you will not have nicely beaten whites. Now the salt and the all-important cream of tartar (that adds stability and volume - beating egg whites in a copper bowl has the same effect) can be added.
- Then, beat on high speed till the whites form soft, billowy peaks when the beater is raised up. While the machine is beating, the fine granulated sugar is sprinkled in in a steady shower. Slow is the key here; add in it a Tbsp. at a time, to keep the egg whites from breaking down. This makes a classic, sturdy mix known as a meringue. After the sugar is added, incorporate the extracts.
- The other ingredients are ever-so-gently folded in with a rubber spatula, a balloon whisk or possibly very slowly right with the mixer, so which the egg whites retain their full volume. It is the egg whites which give the lift which will allow the cake to double in the oven without any leavening.
- Please use cake flour, that is bleached, since it holds the high proportion of sugar in an angel food cake just right and makes it nice and tender.
- All-purpose flour just will not rise as high.
- The shiny metal two-piece angel food cake pan with the tube in the middle is easy to find; even supermarkets often carry them. It is such a common kitchen pan which even people who do not bake seem to own one. It is always used ungreased, since the cake literally 'climbs' its sides while baking. The tube allows heat to reach the center of the cake and makes for a very proportionately baked delight.
- Friends have baked this batter in cake pans, just for fun, but the cake doesn't perform as well outside of its traditional pan. It's better to leave well sufficient alone, although you can use a Bundt pan, that would have to be greased.
- The tube also performs another function out of the oven. The cake must be inverted during cooling to keep which lovely height or possibly it will sink mercilessly.
- Usually there are three little feet on the pan edge, but if your cake is extra high, just invert the funnel onto a full soda or possibly wine bottle for about 1 1/2 hrs.
- With their high, fluffy texture, angel food cakes can be tough to cut without squishing them. Some cookbooks say to cut angel food cakes by tearing them apart with two forks. My mother's utensil drawer contained a gadget called a cake breaker which looked like a pronged Afro comb. It was supposed to tear the cake to perfection, but I never saw her use it. I find which a good serrated knife and a gentle back-and-forth sawing motion works better. Just never press down. Plain
- (unfilled) cakes keep two to three days at room temperature and a week in the fridge.