Correct way to join two halves of sponge cake?

Correct way to join two halves of sponge cake? - Two Lovely Women Sitting Outdoors with Birthday Cake and Sparkler

When you join two halves of sponge cake (as in this photo) which way round are you supposed to do it? The instructions I've used seem to assume what comes out of your two cake tins are two fairly even, level cakes.

In my case I always get quite domed results.

Am I supposed to

a) squish the top one down on top of the bottom and disguise the poor join with filling

OR

b) turn the bottom one over, for a good join, but a wobbly cake, but sort of works if you firm the bottom one down

OR

c) cheat and slice off the dome of the bottom cake

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Best Answer

I've actually done some cake decorating (non-professional, but I did take a few classes), and I'll go with an option you didn't give:

  • Only bake one cake and split it in half (reduce the temperature of the oven, longer time, and if necessary, use cooling strips).You'll likely need taller pans for this -- you'll want light colored aluminum, 3" high for most general purposes. (dark pans absorb heat too quickly, so the sides set before it's risen properly). Level the cake (trim the domed-ness of the cake off), and stack the cake upside down, so you have the nice cake-pan edge on the top layer.

If the cake is too far domed, trimed it down some and save the removed bit. Stack the cakes (again, upside down), crumb coat it, and take the removed cake, crumble it up into some icing, and then pipe that as a sort of filler around the bottom of the cake. to make up the gap.

If you're going to be filling the cake with something like a pudding or custard, stack the first layer like your answer C, pipe a ring of icing around the edge to hold it in, fill the custard in, then stack what had originally been the bottom of the cake (again, upsde down). But make sure to make it thick enough in consistency, and thin enough in height -- I had an incident once where it formed a slip-plane, and the cake started ejecting the top layer off of slices.

To level the cake, you have two options -- they make special devices for doing it, which is basically a wire cutter on adjustable legs, that you can pull through the cake at a fixed height. (also works for splitting the cake so you can then fill and stack it), but if you have a good long knife, a fairly steady hand, and a turn-table, you can:

  • put the cake on the turn table.
  • holding the knife steady, spin the cake and move the knife slowly in towards the center.

I find that a plastic cutting mat works pretty well to help get in there and take the layers of cake off after you've split them.

If you're going to be stacking cakes very tall, you'll want to use a pound cake recipe, or augment a boxed cake mix -- add in a box of instant pudding to firm up the resultant cake.




Pictures about "Correct way to join two halves of sponge cake?"

Correct way to join two halves of sponge cake? - Crop ethnic parent with child decorating cake with icing sugar
Correct way to join two halves of sponge cake? - Crop unrecognizable woman helping ethnic daughter decorating sweet sponge cake with chocolate glaze while preparing for New Year holiday
Correct way to join two halves of sponge cake? - From above of crop anonymous parent with black kid pouring powdered sugar on Christmas sponge cake with chocolate glaze



How do you put two halves of a cake together?

4 Answers
  • put the cake on the turn table.
  • holding the knife steady, spin the cake and move the knife slowly in towards the center.





  • More answers regarding correct way to join two halves of sponge cake?

    Answer 2

    Most cake decoraters I know use option three. I don't know why you would consider paring a cake down into the size and shape you want to be cheating, as that's how all those awesomely accurate occasion cakes are done.

    You can also cut down on the doming by using a silicon spatula and pressing the batter up the sides a bit and leaving an indentation in the middle.

    Answer 3

    I use option b but with two slight differences. To get less domed cakes in the first place I spread the mixture out in the tin and create a slight dip in the mixture before it goes in. I then cool my cakes dome down on the cake rack which seems to make the dome less pronounced.

    Answer 4

    I have baked a lot of cakes for birthdays, weddings etc. Early on this happened to me a lot.

    I always multiply up the recipe to be one inch bigger than the size tin I'm using. I then cut the domes off the cake. Do this for each cake.

    The reason why I make slightly more mixture than I would otherwise need is to get a completely flat cake you cut off quite a bit of the cake and it can sometimes end up a bit short - this method ensures the cake is still of sufficient height, especially if you're covering the cake with fondant and want a flat base.

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    Images: Reem Mansour, Any Lane, Any Lane, Any Lane