Read Cooking for Geeks: Real Science, Great Hacks, and Good Food Online
Authors: Jeff Potter
Tags: #COOKING / Methods / General
I have a thing against cake mixes. Sure, commercial mixes produce very consistent results — they use food additives and stabilizers exactly calibrated for the other ingredients in the cake mix — but even for a quick birthday cake, you can make a truly homemade one that actually tastes like chocolate without much more work.
Cakes are commonly made using a
two-stage method
, in which dry ingredients are weighed out and whisked in one bowl, wet ingredients are whisked in a second bowl, and then the two are combined. In the
streamline
method
, all ingredients are mixed in the same bowl: first dry (to make sure the baking powder is thoroughly blended), then wet, then eggs.
In a
large
bowl or the
large
bowl of a mixer, measure out:
Whisk together the dry ingredients, then add to the same bowl and whisk to combine thoroughly (about a minute):
Add eggs and whisk to combine:
Prepare two 9” / 22 cm or three 8” / 20 cm round cake pans by lining the bottom with parchment paper. Yes, you really need to do this; otherwise, the cakes will stick and tear when you try to remove them. Spray the paper and pan sides with nonstick spray or coat with butter, and then dust with either flour or cocoa powder.
The parchment paper doesn’t need to cover every last square millimeter of the bottom of the cake pan. Cut a square of parchment paper, and fold it in half, then in quarters, and then in eighths. Snip the top off the folded paper, unfold your octagon, and place it in the pan.
Divide the batter into the cake pans. Try using a scale to keep the weights of the pans the same; this way the cakes will all be roughly the same height.
Bake in an oven preheated to 350°F / 175°C until a toothpick comes out clean, about 30 minutes. Allow to cool before turning out and frosting. If your cakes sink in the middle, your oven is probably too cold. Check that it is calibrated correctly; see
Approaching the Kitchen
in
Chapter 2
for details.
Even professional bakers use toothpicks to check doneness. For brownies, check that a toothpick inserted 1” / 2.5 cm deep comes out clean; for cakes, push the toothpick in all the way.
Notes
Simple Chocolate Ganache Frosting
In a saucepan over medium heat, heat 1 cup (240g) of heavy cream until it just begins to boil. Remove from heat and add 2 tablespoons (30g) of butter and 11½ oz (325g) of finely chopped bittersweet chocolate. (You can use semi-sweet chocolate if you prefer your cakes on the sweeter side. Most chocolate chips are semi-sweet; try using those.) Allow to rest until the chocolate and butter have melted, about five minutes. Add a pinch of salt and whisk to thoroughly combine.
To frost the cake, you can just pour the still-warm ganache over the top, allowing it to run down the sides. (This can get messy — which can serve as an excuse for eating half the ganache while frosting.) Or, to create a more traditional frosting, allow the ganache to set in the fridge, about 30 minutes, and then use an electric beater or mixer to beat it until it’s light and fluffy. Coat the top of each layer of the cake with the whipped ganache and stack them, leaving the sides exposed.
Notes
PHOTO USED BY PERMISSION OF MEGHAN HOURIHAN
Meg Hourihan co-founded the company that created Blogger.com, one of the Internet’s first blogging platforms.
Tell me about yourself and what you do with food.
I started cooking, mostly baking, making very elaborate cakes, when I was eight or nine. I always liked cooking and technology, and went back and forth for a while. I had been working on the Web and doing the startup thing for a long time. I got burned out and decided to take some time off of the Internet, so I got a job working at a restaurant in a kitchen. It was a nice change of pace.
What similarities and differences between developing software and working in the restaurant did you find?
The kitchen has a very specific life cycle, just like a software project does, but it’s incredibly compressed. Every morning you come in and do your prep work, almost like your requirements phase. You figure out what you’re going to need to make it through the dinner service. You then get in the moment of cooking and then after the last order has gone out you break down your kitchen and clean up your station. The whole life cycle comes to an end and you have a chance to say, “What did we do well? What can we improve on?” You get to learn from your mistakes, and the next day the whole process starts again. It reminds me of web-based stuff: once your product has launched, you can push an update every single day and respond to customer feedback rather than a packaged software cycle where you’re disconnected from end users. When you’re working in a restaurant, your end users will tell you in five minutes if that dish is no good and it’s going to come right back to the kitchen. You find out pretty quickly if you’re doing it right and who you’re doing it for because they’re right on the other side of the wall.
Have there been any real surprises in the learning process of becoming a better cook?
It’s one of those things that takes a lot of work. I’m lucky that I like doing it and have been doing it so long; I have this knowledge base to fall back on. My husband was making a soup the other day. The recipe said to cook the vegetables on medium heat for 45 minutes. He sent me a text message: “We’re not having the soup tonight, the vegetables are burned to a crisp.” I looked in the pot when I got home. The vegetables were just carbonized. I said, “Oh my god, you can’t cook these tiny little vegetables for 45 minutes on medium heat. This is exactly what’s going to happen!” He was so mad. He said, “But this is what the instructions told me. I was following the recipe!” If I had been making it, I would have known that that couldn’t possibly be right; I have enough experience. If you don’t have the confidence, the recipe becomes your crutch and you forget to back up and rely on common sense.
Is there a dish that you are particularly fond of?
When I was doing my blog I had asked people for chocolate chip cookie recipes. I was tired of the one I was using and I said, “If you send me your recipe, I’ll cook it to discover the best chocolate chip cookie recipe.” I probably got 30 or 40 different recipes and I realized, “Holy cow! There’s no way I’m going to be able to make and evaluate all these cookie recipes in any reasonable amount of time.” In talking with my husband, we decided that we were going to average all of the recipes and then make that cookie, whatever the result was. The recipe is crazy. Heat the oven to 354.17°F / 178.98°C. Use 1⅓ eggs. It’s all these impossible measurements because I just averaged across all the ingredients. You think this is going to be a really gross cookie because you just cobbled together all of these things and you can’t possibly average together 40 cookie recipes or whatever it was, but it turned out pretty good.
Preheat oven to 354.17°F / 178.98°C, or as close as you can get.
In a medium bowl, sift or thoroughly whisk together:
Set dry ingredients aside.
In another bowl, using a hand or stand mixer, cream until incorporated and smooth:
Add and mix until all ingredients are combined:
Add dry ingredients and blend until fully incorporated.
Cover and chill dough in the refrigerator for 25 minutes.
Place parchment paper on one-third of cookie sheet, drop dough by rounded tablespoons onto sheet. Some cookies will be on parchment, others off. Cook for 13.04 minutes.
RECIPE USED BY PERMISSION OF MEGHAN HOURIHAN