A layered cake is difficult to conquer when it comes to a party, and this vanilla version frosted with buttercream is a perfect place to begin. The cake itself is based on a recipe using American baker and writer Rose Levy Beranbaum, to which I’ve added brown sugar for greater moisture. It’s an easy, fluffy cake. It is no longer meant to be served by me. However, it makes an extraordinary base for dressing up to something grander and might effortlessly be adapted with unique flavorings.
When I bake, I usually prepare the cake tins and weigh all of the components (and preheat the oven) earlier than I start. The cake tins want to be buttered all over, dusted with flour, and covered on the bottom with baking paper. Have all the elements at room temperature, so the batter comes collectively higher.
It’s nice to apply cake flour for baking a cake; its decrease in protein content offers a softer result. If you don’t have any, you can mix cornflour with all-purpose flour to soften it. Baking powder is the leavening agent right here. It can lose its strength if it’s not clean, so test it with the aid of including a teaspoonful to heat water – if it fizzes, it’s fine to apply. When it comes to sugar, caster sugar offers sweetness and a nice crumb – it dissolves easily – and, as I’ve stated, brown sugar adds moisture. And always add a terrific pinch of salt to the cake batter to deepen the flavor.
Tip 1: Mix the butter into the flour
For this cake, I blend the butter into the flour in preference to creaming it with the sugar; the fat coats the flour protein, which produces a finer, fluffy texture. I also whisk the eggs with milk before adding them to the batter to blend in more frivolously. When it involves shifting the batter to the organized tins if you want the layers to be flawlessly even, weigh the batter into thirds first.
Tip 2: Don’t overbake (and don’t peek in the oven too early)
Be careful not to overbake those desserts, or they may dry out, and do not open the oven till they have baked for a minimum of 20 minutes. Ideally, you would bake the desserts within the center of the oven; however, in case you can not match them all on one rack, use two racks, with one positioned a third of the way up and another at two-thirds, and rotate the cakes after 20 mins so that they cook dinner flippantly. They need to, on a path, be cooled earlier than you frost them, and everyone is halved to make six layers for a truly impressive layer cake. The desserts are excellent and fresh. However, they may be frozen.