Sponge cake batter too runny
I followed a new recipe for a sponge cake (Sour Cream Sponge Cake) by James Peterson.
The only tweak I made was to include some lemon zest in with the sour cream. When I combined the yolk mixture with the whites, I attempted to pipe the batter into ring as he suggested. However, the batter was too runny and I ended up baking it in a pie round, and the rise wasn't what I had hoped for (assuming because the batter was runny).
Has anyone made this type of cake which was runny, and found a solution? Would the minimal moisture from the zest make the cake runny?
Best Answer
Making stiff not dry egg whites is very important in any chiffon/angel food cake that is counting on the expanding hot air to give lift to the cake. I worked as a professional baker for 18 years. When making egg whites for chiffon and other such cakes we used a combination of salt sugar and cream of tarter using a planetary mixer. At home now I use 1/8 tsp cream of tarter 2tsp sugar and 1/4 tsp salt per two egg whites but do not exceed 1tsp salt at any time unless you cut back in the batter so as not have a too salty cake. Be very careful that the bowl is perfectly clean. Any type of oils will prevent your egg whites from whipping satisfactory Using a cold bowl and allowing your egg whites to be very cold also helps as the natural friction will break them down (like whipped cream). Also be careful with how aggressive you are with the folding. If you knock it down to much it will not come back. Hope this was of some help.
Pictures about "Sponge cake batter too runny"
Quick Answer about "Sponge cake batter too runny"
To repair an already runny batter, add more flour by the tablespoon until the batter is correct. Only 1 or 2 should do it. Note that most cake batters should be fluid, not stiff like bread dough.What do you do if your cake batter is too runny?
How to Fix Too Much Water in a Cake MixWhy is my sponge cake batter runny?
Oil-based batter reliably makes the result moist because oil doesn't solidify as butter does. But because of the lack of butter, you will end up with a runny and wet batter.Cake Batter Consistency | How Cake Batter Should Be? | Baking Tips for Cakes | Ribbon Stage | Cakes
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.