Rose Chiffon Cake
Chiffon cakes are light and airy, they are delectable without feeling sinful. The process involves creaming up the egg yolk and whipping up the egg whites separately so that maximum amount of air can be introduced to the cake to allow it to rise to its full potential >.<
Rose chiffon cakes are the most whimsical of the lot and here I found a perfect recipe.
It's easier if you have two mixing bowls to start out with. One for the whites and one for the yolks.
http://www.keyingredient.com/recipes/13930064/rose-chiffon-cake/
70 ml rose water (mix rose syrup with water)
4 egg yolks
70 ml canola oil
1 tsp rose essence
20 g sugar
½ tsp double acting baking powder
100 g cake flour
4 egg whites
100 g sugar
If you wish, you could frost the cake with a rose creme chantilly.
Rose Creme Chantilly :
100 ml dairy whipping cream
rose syrup and sifted icing sugar, to taste
Sift together baking powder and cake flour. set aside.
In a bowl whisk together rose water, essence, egg yolks, oil and 20g sugar until light and fluffy, then fold in the flour mixture until well combined.
In another bowl whisk egg whites until foamy, then gradually add in the 100g sugar and whisk until stiff glossy peaks.
Fold 1/4 of the egg whites into the yolk mixture to temper it, then followed by the rest of the egg whites.
Pour into an ungreased 22cm chiffon tin or tube pan and bake in a preheated oven of 170C for about 40 mins.
Immediately invert the pan and leave to cool completely before unmolding.
To make the rose creme chantilly, whisk together whipping cream, icing sugar and rose syrup until soft peaks, then use a palette knife to frost onto cooled cake.
Recipe #2
http://cakesbakesandcookies.com/2013/06/17/rose-chiffon-cake-recipe/
- 6 large eggs
- 225 plain flour (sieved)
- 300 g caster sugar (sieved)
- 1 tbsp baking powder (yes tablespoon!)
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 120 ml sunflower oil
- 180 ml rose water (Measure 1 tablespoon of Rose essence and make up the rest of the volume with water)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla essence
- Icing sugar to decorate
Method:
- Pre-heat your oven to 170ºC (150ºC Fan) Oil and line a 9” cake tin or a ring shaped tin. This cake rises very high so make sure that your baking paper is taller than the side of the tin.
- Separate the egg whites and yolks.
- Place all the dry ingredients in a bowl (keeping 50g sugar to one side)
- Add the oil, egg yolks, rose water and vanilla essence to the flour and beat until combined.
- In a separate bowl whisk the egg whites until you have soft peaks (that means that when you lift out the whisk the peak of egg whites just flops over and doesn’t stand to attention. Then whisk in the last 50g of sugar.
- Using a metal spoon carefully fold the egg whites into the cake batter. Do this in three stages so that the cake will remain light and fluffy. Be careful not to over mix as you will bash out all the air in the eggs which is what makes the cake’s texture so yummy.
- Pour the batter into your prepared tin and bake for 45-60 minutes or until the cake comes away from the side of the tin.
- Remove from the oven and allow to cool whilst in the tin. The cake will be very puffy when it comes out and will deflate and wrinkle back into the tin as it cools. Don’t worry- it will still be light as a feather.
- Remove from the tin and sprinkle with sieved icing sugar.
- Enjoy with some fresh fruit and a drizzle of cream
TROUBLESHOOTING
Sometimes all doesn't go well with Chiffon Cakes- just like macarons, they are divas in their own rights too.....
First they rose very nicely and all of a sudden, they just plopped and sunk in. I was horrified! In the end, they came out bottoms burnt and sunken in. They tasted lovely, a little wet but still light and fluffy.
I found a website which was rather helpful in pin-pointing the faults.
http://allthatmatters2rei.blogspot.sg/2008/07/chiffon-cake-tips-and-trouble-ii.html?m=1
According to the website, here's the math (formula) for success.
"the amount of flour used is 120g. The amount of liquid used, including oil is 180g. Therefore, the flour over liquid ratio is 120 : 180. That is 2 parts to 3 parts or 66.67%, if you prefer. The higher percentage you have, will result in a more stable cake but it will have a drier texture. If the flour versus liquid ratio is lower then 60%, say, 50%, the chances of the cake collapsing is high. Reason being; there is too much liquid in the cake and the structure is not strong enough to hold it. In this case, usually after removing from the pan, or after slicing the cake, the cake will start to shrink. A good chiffon cake, as my mom taught me, should be able to hold its shape after cutting. The cake will spring back after you press it."
🍰 4 April 2015
No comments:
Post a Comment