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Gluten Free Cake Flour Recipe

If you’re like me you love to bake cakes!

Here’s my flour formula for when I make gluten free cakes for clients, friends and family. It’s really easy to put together and you can make a big batch and store it in a bag or container in the cupboard.

You’ll need to sift the gluten free flour before adding it to a recipe to help aerate the batter and make the cake rise nice and fluffy.

I’ve given you both imperial and metric measurements. As I’ve said in my previous post Baking Cookware: Top 10 Must Haves for Professional Results you really should invest in a digital scale for best results in measuring ingredients for baking. But if you’re not there yet then go ahead and use cups and teaspoons. Just be sure to sift the flours before using.

You’ll notice that the following recipe replaces 1 cup of wheat cake flour with only 3/4 cups of gluten free cake flour mix. It’s okay, you’re not measuring wrong,  it just works out that way when I convert from metric to imperial.

Gluten Free Cake Flour Mix

makes 3/4 cups, equal to 1 cup of wheat cake flour

1/4 cup tapioca starch 43 g

1/4 cup cornstarch 45 g

1/4 cup white rice flour 42 g

1/4 teaspoon guar gum or xanthan gum 1.25 g

Happy Cake Baking!

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Top 5 Ingredients to Bake a Better Cake

Are you looking for ways to increase your success at baking a cake? I want to share with you my top 5 ingredients to bake a better cake. I’ve been using these tips of the trade for over 20 years. Now it’s time you get the kudos you deserve. Let’s get started!

Cake Flour

I insist that you use cake flour for baking a cake. Cake flour comes from a different type of wheat than all purpose or bread flour. Cake flour is milled from soft winter wheat with a low protein content and it has soft velvety feel.

Cake flour needs to be sifted before adding it to your cake batter. Use a standard kitchen mesh strainer or a hand held flour sifter. In the bakery we use a large flat barrel sifter for sifting large batches of cake flour.

Unsalted Butter

Always use unsalted butter, sometimes referred to as sweet butter. Butter lends the best flavour to cakes and has good creaming qualities.

For long term storage keep your unsalted butter in the freezer. Take out only what you need for the week and store it in the fridge covered in plastic or wax wrap. Other flavours can easily transfer around the fridge to the butter so store the butter in the butter or cheese compartment of the fridge.

Bring butter to room temperature for best baking results.

Sea Salt

I recommend sea salt for baking as it will impart a pure taste to your cakes. Sea salt also has micro nutrients such as copper, magnesium, silicone, boron and iron that are removed during the refining process. Use sea salt as you would table salt.

Pure Vanilla Extract

You must use pure vanilla extract in your cakes for an intense flavour that can’t compare with the artificial kind. Pure vanilla is extracted from the seed pods (beans) of the vanilla variety of orchid that grows in humid tropical environments. The beans are macerated in an alcohol solution to extract the delicate and unmistakable flavour.

Eggs

Farm fresh eggs direct from the grower or from the grocery store offer the best results for baking cakes. Frozen eggs are a cheaper substitute but don’t offer the leavening power that fresh eggs do. Buy large size eggs for baking as they are a consistent 55 grams per egg, including the shell.  Shelled whole eggs are 50 grams. The egg white is 30 grams and the yolk 20 grams. Bring eggs to room temperature before adding to the cake batter.

Use these tried and true methods for baking your next cake and see the results for yourself.

I’d love to hear from you! Tell me how your next cake turns out. And if you like what you’ve read here please share this article on your social network.

Here’s to your success.

Happy baking!

Love April

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Eggnog Cheesecake

Everything for this recipe can be done in a food processor, which makes things really easy. This cheesecake is so yummy with a shortbread crust and a tipple of rum! Try serving it with caramel sauce for a real treat!

Yield: 1-9” Cake
Crust:
160 g flour
65 g icing sugar
114 g butter

Filling:
750 g cream cheese
200 g sugar
4 eggs
250 ml eggnog, full fat is best
1 tbsp vanilla extract
I tbsp rum
1 teaspoon nutmeg

Method:
In a food processor fitted with a blade blend flour and icing sugar. Drop in the butter and blend until it comes together. Press into the bottom of a 9” spring form pan. Bake at 375’F until golden, about 15 minutes.

Next, blend the cream cheese and sugar until smooth. Add eggs one at a time, scraping the sides of the bowl after each addition. Blend in the eggnog, vanilla, rum and nutmeg.

Pour the filling into the spring form pan and bake at 300’F for 45-60 minutes. The edges will be done but the centre will be a bit wobbly. Remove from the oven and cool to room temperature and then refrigerate. Once set, remove from the pan and serve!
Enjoy!

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Mont Blanc Cake

I got a call from a friend and fellow chef, Hiro. He wanted a Mont Blanc cake for his wife’s birthday. Hiro and Saori are from Japan where the cake has a popular following but they had never had one in Canada. Of course I said “Yes”!

I did some research on the web and there seemed to be two styles of Mont Blanc. One is a cake made with sponge and the other a meringue. I decided on the sponge variety.

Next is the chestnut filling. Most use a sweetened whip cream enriched with chestnut puree. I decided I wanted something more deluxe so I went with a vanilla pastry cream filling with chestnut puree folded in. I then topped it with the sweetened cream in the classic spaghetti tube look.

Some recipes call for grated chocolate on top. I opted for icing sugar for the snow-dusted mountain top look.

I’m happy with the results! Next time I’ll try the meringue variety just for a chance to do them both.

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