Kitchen Hints and Tips

Uneven Cakes

You are baking a cake and when you check on it you see that the top of the cake is very uneven.

One side is much taller than the other. There are several reasons that can cause these results. Here are just a few:

If you are baking more than one pan in the oven, you may not have adequate air circulation. If the side of the pans are touching or too close you can get results like this.

When you poured the batter into the pan, did you tap it down or spread it out to make sure that it was evenly distributed across the bottom?

Your oven may be heating unevenly. You will need to test this by placing pieces of bread across every inch of rack space with your oven set at 300º. After a few minutes start keeping a close eye on the bread. Are any pieces browning faster than others? Once your test is complete (before the bread starts burning) turn off the heat of your oven and open the door to let cool a bit. Using a pair of tongs remove the bread and save for breadcrumbs.

Your oven may not be level. While the oven is cool grab a common level to check and see if your oven is truly level. It may be your oven or just the racks. Check both (oven first, then rack)


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Posted by Teresa Worth on September 25, 2007 | TrackBack (0)
Comments

The most common problem is the raised center of a cake. Avoid this by tearing strips about 3" wide of an old terry towel. Soak the strip(s) in water while you prepare the cake mix. When it is poured, wrap the towel strip around the pans, using a straight pin to connect the ends. This keeps the outer edge from cooking to fast.
Can be done with 9x13 pans also, same method.

Posted by: Daryleann at December 25, 2007 09:04 AM
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Kitchen Hints and Tips