Weird air pockets/bubbles on bottom of cake
I've been baking this recipe for over a year now, flavour and texture are wonderful, the guests love it but half of the time I get these air pockets on the bottom of the cake.
The air pockets appear at the center of the bottom and also at the sides. Sometimes they're barely there, sometimes they're big enough that I'm unsure if i'll serve it to guests (for exemple when they're 3cm height).
Recipe is as follows:
- 150g cashew nuts (roasted, unsalted) chopped in a food processor
- 30g white flour
- 125g sugar
- pinch of salt
- 4 egg whites, lightly beaten with a fork
- 150g butter, heated untill brown
- 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
Everything at room temperature.
Preparation is staightfoward: mix dry ingredients, add egg whites, add butter and vanilla. Cooks at 160~180C for 45~50m untill golden brown. Lower temperatures do not make the bubbles disappear.
What causes these air pockets? Has anyone faced a similar issue before?
Best Answer
That happened to me as well. Luckily it doesn't change the taste, but it is annoying! It comes from air pockets which formed because you whisked/mixed your cake batter too intensely, and/or for too long, which creates air bubbles. So first, it is best to mix your ingredients delicately, try to avoid incorporating too much air (easier said than done), and stop whisking once your batter reached the desired homogeneous consistency (overwhisking is a common mistake). Then, when you pour your cake batter in the pan, it's better to avoid pouring it all at once in the center, it will also create air bubbles. It's better to pour it delicately from one corner and let it spread by itself in the dish. Finally, before putting in the oven, tap (delicately) the bottom of your pan on the counter to free the remaining air bubbles and let them reach the surface before cooking. I hope that will help, let me know!
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Quick Answer about "Weird air pockets/bubbles on bottom of cake"
It comes from air pockets which formed because you whisked/mixed your cake batter too intensely, and/or for too long, which creates air bubbles.Why does my cake have so many air bubbles?
The bubbles are created by overbeating the batter, failing to let some batters settle before baking and letting others settle for too long before going into the oven. Placing the cake in a cool oven is another cause of bubbling on the surface.How do you get rid of air bubbles in a cake mix?
After you've poured the batter in to the cake tin, drop the tin on the kitchen counter a couple of times to force the air in the mixture to come to the surface. Make sure you pop the cake in the oven straight away as letting it sit will cause the ingredients to interact differently than they should.Why is there bumps on my cake?
As the oven heats up, a few things happen. First, the air inside the balloons heat, which causes the balloons to expand, because hotter air likes to spread out more than colder air. Hot air is full of energy and bounces around a lot, and cold air just sits like a lump.Lawn Bubble
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