Eggy cake with less egg is dry: what next?

Eggy cake with less egg is dry: what next? - Small tasty desserts with bright decorative eggs and leaves in whipped meringue cream during Easter holiday

I'm working to a pretty standard recipe for cake (s.r. flour, butter, sugar, egg, flavours, etc), and it comes out too eggy.

I can usually make a sponge without faff but to do that I use a different recipe. But for this cake, for non-baking reasons I need to use this recipe with minimal tweaks.

I initially thought it was a cooking time/temperature thing but after a few trials it seems like it just has way too much egg in it. Assuming that it was originally written for smaller eggs, I just reduced the amount of egg and it's now too dry. Not remarkably dry, par for the course for, say, a cherry loaf cake, but this one is supposed to be moister than that.

Is there a way I can add the moisture in a less eggy way? I was thinking of just adding milk or water (say 150ml per replaced egg). Is that too naive? I've heard about tricks involving cornstarch but I can't get my head around them. Would such a trick work?

Current base recipe is (I've tried lots of variants around this and various additional flavour ingredients): 1/2lb each: c. sugar, s.r. flour, butter, 4 eggs. Seived and mixed at each step. Flour in last (which is new to me). 160C (fan) until skewer comes out clean. 4 eggs is v eggy; 3 eggs is dry. Running short of half-chickens to try in between!



Best Answer

Substitute oil for some of the butter.

Here is a trick to reduce dryness that I just learned from The Perfect Cookie. Omit a tablespoon or 2 of butter and swap in vegetable oil. I used safflower last but any mild liquid vegetable oil would do.

It is awesome for chocolate chip cookies and oatmeal cookies. I have gone 50/50 butter and oil in the banana bread that I made lately and the texture was good.




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Quick Answer about "Eggy cake with less egg is dry: what next?"

For your recipe start with an extra 1/2 cup vegetable oil. You can make the batter more soft/"airy" while also reducing egg content by adding Xanthan gum, which acts as an emulsifier and thickener. It will thicken your batter when it gets runny from all that extra oil you added to make the cake even "moister".

What happens if you put less egg in a cake?

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.

Do eggs make cakes dry?

When it comes to adding eggs, egg whites can be the culprit ingredient that dries up a cake. As whites are drying agents and adding them often reduces the moisture content within a cake. \u201cBut\u201d we hear you say \u201cegg whites are needed for rise!\u201d And you're absolutely right.

How do you fix a eggy cake?

15 Easy Ways to Fix an Eggy Cake
  • 1 Apply an extra layer of frosting after baking.
  • 2 Add vanilla extract to the cake mix.
  • 3 Add a spice like cloves or cinnamon to the cake.
  • 4 Replace the water in the cake with coffee.
  • 5 Give your cake a tart kick by adding lemon.
  • 6 Remove the eye of the egg.


  • Do eggs add moisture to cake?

    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.



    VANILLA SPONGE CAKE RECIPE! NO EGGY TASTE, MOIST AND DOESN'T DRY OUT FOR DAYS! │ CAKES BY MK




    More answers regarding eggy cake with less egg is dry: what next?

    Answer 2

    The "too eggy" taste shouldn't be from the amount of eggs, since a standard pound cake is 1:1:1:1, and that means that you would need 4.5 eggs for 1/2 lb of the other ingredients. So the first thing to consider would be whether your cake is overcooked, or somehow not well enough beaten. I would try it with a creaming step, and really make a very smooth beginning before adding the dry ingredients - cream sugar and butter really well until very fluffy, then add eggs one at a time while keeping everything creamy, like making buttercream. When the egg is incorporated that way, it shouldn't produce off tastes. As for the potentially overcooked cake, just test it more frequently before taking out.

    If you are sure you are mixing and baking it well and still want to reduce the egg taste, it is a bit difficult, because it is indeed the egg yolk which makes it moist. If you can say that the eggy taste comes from the egg whites, then you can replace one of the three eggs with two yolks, or use three whole eggs and one yolk. But if you find it too yolky tasting, do not replace with more egg white, since egg whites dry out the cake.

    If you have to have less yolks and still moist cake, do not add liquid. If anything, it makes for a drier cake. The cornstarch also won't help, this is for making softer cakes. You can try instead pure lecithine (make sure it doesn't taste slightly eggy with that too), a spoonful of commercial mayonnaise (homemade won't give you anything different from what the yolk already gives you), more sugar, or something with pectin content. A couple of tablespoons of applesauce or quince jelly can help here.

    Answer 3

    Adding "moistness" to cake is easily done by just dumping in extra vegetable oil. For your recipe start with an extra 1/2 cup vegetable oil.

    You can make the batter more soft/"airy" while also reducing egg content by adding Xanthan gum, which acts as an emulsifier and thickener. It will thicken your batter when it gets runny from all that extra oil you added to make the cake even "moister".

    Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

    Images: Julia Filirovska, Julia Filirovska, Viktoria Lunyakova, Julia Filirovska