Can one bake a cake with a cooked egg instead of a raw one?

Can one bake a cake with a cooked egg instead of a raw one? - Unrecognizable female kneading soft fresh egg dough on cutting board with flour in kitchen

This recent question about a person who wanted to bake a cake but only had a cooked egg left suggested me an even stupider one: is it possible to bake a cake with a cooked egg instead of a raw one? After all, the egg is going to end up cooked inside the cake anyway.

I imagine that it's going to be tricky to mix it with the dough, but with a hand mixer and a sufficient amount of violence everything is possible.

Or are the chemical processes of boiling an egg and cooking it inside the dough fundamentally different?



Best Answer

I would say no. The function of the egg in the cake is to go in raw, mix with the other stuff, and once the raw egg has penetrated and coated the other ingredients thoroughly, bind it all together with that bouncy, sticky solidified eggy property which comes into existence as the egg cooks.

Cooking the egg first all by itself, then adding to a cake would be like drying some crazy glue, then grinding up that hardened crust and putting the resulting powder between two things you want to stick together. The gluing action is all over when the glue has dried.




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Can one bake a cake with a cooked egg instead of a raw one? - Unrecognizable woman kneading soft egg dough on table covered with flour in kitchen
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How do eggs affect cake recipe?

How does the number of eggs affect a cake? If you add too many eggs to a cake, you'll get a much thinner consistency of cake batter and, while it will be a stunning golden colour, you'll end up with a cake tasting and textured more like a baked custard. If you add too few (or none at all!)

What difference does egg make in baking?

Eggs play an important role in everything from cakes and cookies to meringues and pastry cream \u2014 they create structure and stability within a batter, they help thicken and emulsify sauces and custards, they add moisture to cakes and other baked goods, and can even act as glue or glaze.

What happens if you bake and egg?

Making your eggs in the oven will result in a similar texture to hard boiled eggs, but you can make the egg yolks a LITTLE bit softer. However, they will never be as runny as a fried egg. But, the beauty of baked eggs is that there is no shell to deal with! Simply slide the eggs out of the pan and you are ready to eat!

What happens if you bake a cake with 2 eggs instead of 3?

Too few eggs will yield a cake that is overly compact and doesn't hold together will. Too many eggs can leave you with a spongy or rubbery mess. But egg volumes can be manipulated to lighten the texture of a cake or add strength to a cake that needs to be carved.



How to Replace the Eggs in a Box Cake Mix




More answers regarding can one bake a cake with a cooked egg instead of a raw one?

Answer 2

It is possible, but only if you do not want it to act as glue.

are the chemical processes of boiling an egg and cooking it inside the dough fundamentally different?

As mentioned in earlier answers - no, but the point is that you need these processes during baking.

One notable exception is shortcrust pastry

You can use boiled egg to bake it. It is meant to be crusty, fragile. That's why you mix flour with fat first - to prevent gluing. When you use a boiled egg yolk instead of raw one, you have one less factor for gluing. It's easy to make pastry too delicate that way, but it is doable. I did it with success.

Answer 3

While I tend to somewhat agree with the previous answer, raw eggs have more properties than just taste or binding. They have a binding effect, a rising effect, thickening effect, etc. Additionally they are part of the liquid ingredients in a cake.

You can't replicate the effects with only a cooked egg in place of a raw egg. Now, that doesn't mean that you can't replicate the effects. It only means that you can't do it with just a cooked egg.

I'm sure that with the addition of the right liquids and the additional ingredients required to create the desired result, a cooked egg could be used.

Answer 4

If shortcakes count as a cake, then I'd say yes. I've made James Beard's shortcake recipe several times, and it calls for two hard-boiled eggs (none raw), and the results are deliciously flaky. As mentioned above, this might better fit into the pastry category, though.

Answer 5

No you can’t: chemical reactions do happen to the egg (not necessarily with the other ingredients) as the proteins in the egg are changed during the cooking process.

As a metaphor you can’t make a wall with pre-set cement as it can’t bind with the sand and bricks. When baking a cake, the egg acts like cement in concrete.

Answer 6

In Italy we go as far as cooking salty cakes with boiled eggs, they are decorative but can be peeled and eaten. We indeed put them in the oven with all the shell.

The recipe is from Naples, and is called Casatiello Napoletano Salato (Casatiello stays for little house, don't ask me why, the other two words mean neapolitan and salty).

Cfr.: http://www.lucianopignataro.it/a/ricetta-casatiello-napoli/70835

Answer 7

The cooked egg will work as a filler/texturing/flavoring ingredient, it will not have the baking (leavening, binding..) properties of the raw egg, so a recipe that is really dependent on these properties (some are, some are not really and will come out with a different but acceptable texture) will fail.

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Images: Klaus Nielsen, Flora Westbrook, Klaus Nielsen, Klaus Nielsen