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    Cakes are sweetly baked goods, made from a basic mixture of flour, eggs, sugar, fat and a raising agent (not yeast)

    Some cakes have additional ingredients, like fruit or chocolate, and many are decorated with icing sugar. They are often served as a treat at special occasions, but are also great to have with tea or as a dessert

     




     

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  • Uses of cakes
    • as a dessert
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    • as a dessert
    • included in afternoon tea service or at a tea party
    • as a special treat at a birthday, engagement, wedding, baby shower or other ceremonial occasion
    • as a traditional food item served during Christmas, Passover and other religious festivals
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  • What are cakes made from?

    Flour is used to give mass to cakes. They can be made with plain white flour, all-purpose flour or whole-wheat flour with the general understanding that the finer the flour used, the lighter the cake will be.  

    Eggs are used to bind a cake’s ingredients and help set the cake in its shape as it bakes. Eggs are also used to provide nutrition, and enhance the cake’s flavour.

    Not only does sugar provide the sweetness that cakes are so well known for, but can also act as an agent in the creaming process and help to make the cake’s crust a golden colour. Many cakes use sugar alternatives – from sweeteners to honey, maple syrup and molasses.

    Cake mixtures require a certain amount of moisture in order to bake successfully. In most cases, a small amount of water is used, but full-cream milk (which is high in fat and therefore contributes to the cake’s shortening) can be added, if the eggs and fat do not provide enough moisture by themselves.

    Fat or oil – usually butter or a good quality margarine - used in baking is commonly referred to as shortening. Shortening provides the cake mixture with moisture and contributes to a fuller flavour. It also helps keep the cake fresh for a longer period after it has been baked.

    Cakes, unlike bread products which rely on yeast (a biological raising agent) for providing volume, are usually made with either a chemical raising agent (like baking powder or soda, which releases carbon dioxide) or a physical raising agent (where steam is produced from the moisture in the mixture being heated; or air is incorporated into the mixture through the act of sifting flour, creaming fats and sugars, whisking eggs or folding-in ingredients).

  • Quality characteristics

    • a good, sweet flavour
    • golden brown in colour
    • well-shaped (i.e. not lop-sided or sunken in the middle)
    • cakes with shortening will be soft and tender from the moisture that the fat or oil provides while cakes without shortening will be tender from the sugar content
    • cakes with shortening can keep for a significantly longer period after baking than cakes without any shortening 
  • Ensuring a good product

    • measurements of ingredients must be as accurate as possible
    • avoid a heavy texture by using the right amount of raising agent (adding too little or too much will cause the cake to sink in the middle)
    • ensure the oven temperature is correct (too low and it won’t bake, too high and it will bake unevenly and cause an undesirable shape)
    • place the cake in the middle of the oven to ensure that it has the best chance of keeping a good shape
    • never open the oven door while a cake is baking
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