No matter how much I want to.
A couple weeks ago I baked a cake, as a practice run for the birthday cake I planned to make for ACat's birthday this weekend. It baked fine, but came out of the pans VERY badly, which I figured was because I didn't flour the pans enough. Ok, stupid mistake but easy to fix - I never tried baking a cake before.
Today, I decided to bake a cake for his birthday to take along to dinner with friends tonight. If it turned out well, I'd make another tomorrow for just us. Well, I greased the pans and floured the pans until they were nice and floury white on the insides. I baked two layers in them, and they smelled and looked lovely. I took them out and let them cool while we went out shopping, came home and took a short nap, work up cranky with a headache, and went to take them out of the pans, perfectly cool.
It was a fucking disaster. It wouldn't come out and it wouldn't come out. I whacked the pan, I beat on the pan, I tried to gently cut it loose with a knife, ACat tried whacking the pan, and finally tried to pry it out with a fork while I fumed and tried VERY hard not to act any more like a frustrated five year old than I already was. It ripped into several messy pieces, and came out in handfuls, with much of it visibly coated with flour on the bottom!
I haven't even tried to get the other one out - we're eating the ruined one with icecream and chocolate syrup to make lemonade out of my lemons, but can anyone tell me what the hell I did wrong? I was so sure I'd figured it out and fixed it, and I would REALLY like to try again and make him a proper birthday cake. The box does say to let them cool in the pans - is that wrong? I've even contemplated trying next time in the springform pans I have for cheesecake, but I don't think I have two the same size.
A couple weeks ago I baked a cake, as a practice run for the birthday cake I planned to make for ACat's birthday this weekend. It baked fine, but came out of the pans VERY badly, which I figured was because I didn't flour the pans enough. Ok, stupid mistake but easy to fix - I never tried baking a cake before.
Today, I decided to bake a cake for his birthday to take along to dinner with friends tonight. If it turned out well, I'd make another tomorrow for just us. Well, I greased the pans and floured the pans until they were nice and floury white on the insides. I baked two layers in them, and they smelled and looked lovely. I took them out and let them cool while we went out shopping, came home and took a short nap, work up cranky with a headache, and went to take them out of the pans, perfectly cool.
It was a fucking disaster. It wouldn't come out and it wouldn't come out. I whacked the pan, I beat on the pan, I tried to gently cut it loose with a knife, ACat tried whacking the pan, and finally tried to pry it out with a fork while I fumed and tried VERY hard not to act any more like a frustrated five year old than I already was. It ripped into several messy pieces, and came out in handfuls, with much of it visibly coated with flour on the bottom!
I haven't even tried to get the other one out - we're eating the ruined one with icecream and chocolate syrup to make lemonade out of my lemons, but can anyone tell me what the hell I did wrong? I was so sure I'd figured it out and fixed it, and I would REALLY like to try again and make him a proper birthday cake. The box does say to let them cool in the pans - is that wrong? I've even contemplated trying next time in the springform pans I have for cheesecake, but I don't think I have two the same size.
no subject
Date: 2006-08-25 02:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-25 03:30 pm (UTC)Well, in your defense, the guitar wasn't a layer cake! It was actually made from 4 sheet cakes, which I extracted from pans using the method I described and then froze on cookie sheets. Once frozen, I just slipped them into large freezer bags. They were easy to store and handle as frozen slabs until the day of the con. Then I arranged them on the foil-covered cardboard, laid the large guitar template over the cake and cut and arranged the pieces, sticking it all together with frosting. Lots of frosting! Would you believe that I had *never* decorated a cake like that before? Total improvisation on my part.
Good luck! I've honestly *never* had a problem with this, in dozens of cakes. Tho I think part of your prior issue was probably letting the pans get completely cold. There's a really big difference between cake sticking/structural integrity at hot/warm/cold. (When hot, it's not sticking but the cake is too fragile to come out in one piece. When cold, the cake is stronger, but it's also sticking harder than the cake will survive to get it out. When it's just warm, cake strength exceeds the bond to the pan... excuse me, I just lapsed into engineer-think there for a moment!)
When you've got this down, if you want to try baking cake from scratch, I've got a couple of easy recipes I can recommend. :)
~R
no subject
Date: 2006-08-25 06:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-08-25 08:15 pm (UTC)And that's right.. I remember you guys came over and helped transport all that er..stuff..to the con. You typed up all the recipes for me while I was doing battle with decorations. You'll laugh- I distributed those to a bunch of folks after the con, and just a few months ago, Alan Thiesen emailed to ask if he could get another copy- apparently someone out west has been using them to do con suite baking, but lost them, and needed them back!
*g* The remnants of those candy legos took forever to get eaten, too. Talk about playing with your food.. JT certainly found them more fun as toys. I hadn't known about them either.. I found them in a candy store while looking for cake decorating inspiration. *Usually* I stay out of candy stores, on the theory that what I don't see, I won't eat!
Speaking of which, I need to head home.. do a bit more painting, then head down to Clinton to help JT finish packing..moving day tomorrow!
Tell ACat I wish him a happy belated Cake Day! Hugs to you both-
~R