cake undercooked or too wet?
I recently tried this recipe: http://www.chef-in-training.com/2012/09/easy-pumpkin-bread/ with the following modifications:
- I didn't have any butter, so I substituted 1/3c olive oil and 2 pureed apples
- I cut the sugar down to 1.5c
After cooking for 50 minutes at 165°C (preheated), the insides (everything more than a few cm from the edge) were still kind of moist. Why is this? Is there a problem with my oven? Was the batter too "wet" or something? I've had this with other stuff, too (muffins).
Best Answer
Your cake did not rise properly because of the substitution you made.
Oil and apple mousse are only an acceptable substitution for butter under some circumstances. When a recipe directs you to cream the butter with the sugar, you cannot use a non-solid fat substitute. The creaming creates a bubbly, airy structure, and these mini-bubbles get expanded by the baking powder. If you dump a liquid fat in, this won't happen, and your cake will stay un-aired. It will be doughy, which you perceived as a moistness.
By the way, the sugar also plays an important structural role. I would advice you to not reduce it in cake recipes, as you will get a worse texture (although the results won't be as problematic as with the butter substitution).
If you want to make cake that requires creaming and don't have butter, you can get decent results with shortening, margarine, lard (caution: the taste will be noticeable, will not do for fine tortes), coconut fat, and other solid fats. If you don't have any of these, you have to choose a recipe which uses a different method for combining the ingredients.
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Quick Answer about "cake undercooked or too wet?"
So how do you fix undercooked cake? If the cake is undercooked overall, put it back in the oven for 10-15 minutes. If the middle part is still wet, cover the cake with foil and bake for up to 15 minutes. If the bottom is moist, turn off the upper heat or cover with foil, and cook for a few minutes.What happens if cake batter is too wet?
The biggest and most common problem you will run into is that your cake will not be able to hold its structure together and it will end up falling apart when you begin cutting into it, or even when you take it out of the oven.Why does my cake feel wet?
The ratio of wet to dry ingredients determines a cake's moisture level. If there's simply too much flour and not enough butter, a cake will taste dry. On the other hand, if there's too much milk and not enough flour, a cake will taste too wet.What happens if a cake is undercooked in the middle?
Middle Undercooked Is it just the middle of your cake that is undercooked? This is the most common problem, so don't feel too bad. To fix it, cover the cake with foil (be careful \u2013 the pan will be hot!) and stick it back into the oven for 10 to 15 minutes.Why Is My Cake Wet In The Middle?
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Answer 2
Substituting oil for butter in a quick bread would be fine, but you only used 1/2 the amount of oil, and further added two pureed apples. These are about 84% water, substantially increasing the amount of liquid in the recipe.
The thing is, the method for this pumpkin bread relied on the creaming method, which requires a solid fat; changing to a liquid fat and apples) would dramatically change the outcome. It would make the bread denser (no leavening from creaming) and more wet from the increased liquid.
Then, by cutting the sugar almost in half, you reduced the ability of the bread to hold water, as sugar is hydrophylic. So it would seem more wet.
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