What went wrong with this bundt cake?
I've tried making Baked's Ultra Lemony Lemon Bundt Cake four times (recipe here: http://bakedsundaymornings.com/2015/04/27/in-the-oven-ultralemony-lemon-bundt-cake-with-almond-glaze/). Four times because the first time it came out pretty well - a bit too moist with a dense crumb but overall good enough to make again. The 2nd and 3rd times though, it looked ok but when I cut it open, it was undercooked even though the toothpick had come out clean and the crust was dark brown and dry.
This fourth time, I tried baking it longer. Instead of 50-60 minutes, I took it out after 85 minutes. It was better --not undercooked-- but still fell apart a bit. Here's a picture.
If you Google that recipe, many people's results look almost like a beautifully textured pound cake. I'm open to my technique being wrong even though I thought I followed things to the letter. Any thoughts? My oven is calibrated and my baking powder was very fresh (as was all of my other ingredients). I tapped out any air bubbles and smoothed the batter in the pan.
FWIW, it looks like the cake rose, fell a bit, then when I inverted it the innards separated from the crust?
Best Answer
I did some googling as you suggested and found a few things:
One blog made the exact recipe and the top shows a deep "trench" between the outer rim and the middle chimney. As if the cake didn't rise well in the middle areas. Invert this, and the top may sink down on the platter, leaving a cavity like in your cake unless the cake is properly set.
Another blog shows beautiful pictures, but admits to have adjusted the recipe - less sugar, fewer egg yolks and cream. This brings it to standard pound cake ratios.
A pound cake is called pound cake for a reason: all main ingredients (sugar, fat, eggs, flour) come in equal parts, originally a pound (for very large cakes!).
The original one from the blog uses way more sugar and skimps a bit on the eggs, when looking at ca. 340g of flour and fat. Also, using butter and oil may be a problem - some pound cakes deal well with oil, others get a bit "mushy" in my experience. Replacing some eggs with cream (again, 180 ml is too much, as your too wet results show) can be done, but "weakens" the inner structure a bit, combined with extra sugar and oil it may be just too much. Looks like the baking powder either couldn't lift enough or the texture couldn't stabilize during baking and cooling.
You probably won't like this, but I suggest using ratios closer to a standard pound cake (less sugar, use only as much cream as needed to get the correct texture), then work from there towards the original until you find your personal threshold.
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How do you fix a messed up bundt cake?
Heat an oven to 300\xb0F and line a large rimmed baking sheet with parchment. Crumble or cube the cake and spread in a single layer on the prepared baking sheet. Toast until the cake crumbles or croutons are dry and crisp. Let them cool completely and store in an airtight container for a few days.How do you save a failed bundt cake?
In this article, we'll look at a few steps to attempt to fix that broken Bundt and salvage your hard work....Why did my bundt cake not rise?
Not using enough baking soda or baking powder will keep the cake from rising normally. You need to make sure that you use the right amount of baking soda or baking powder (or an alternative).Why did my bundt cake deflate?
This can happen in one of two ways: either some of the cake sticks inside the pan, or even if it removes cleanly from the pan, the action of unmolding can cause the cake to collapse or fall apart a little bit. Allowing it to cool for a few minutes inside the pan allows the cake's structure set.How to Prevent Bundt Cake from Sticking
More answers regarding what went wrong with this bundt cake?
Answer 2
Bundt cakes are prone to heating transfer problems. The whole purpose of the bundt pan is to give you a chimney which heats the cake from the middle, because this type of dough will stay underbaked if poured into a more compact pan.
The cake seems to have some underbaking and setting problems. The first place I would tweak would be the ratios. Specifically, I would try upping the baking powder slightly (maybe 10 to 15% - note that more baking powder does not always lead to better leavening) and reducing the cream somewhat at the same time. Both should lead to a less stickily underbaked interior. You'll have to play with the amount of cream to use.
Also, adding more yolks is the last thing you want to do to a clumping wet dough. Try using 4 whole eggs and one yolk, or even 4 whole eggs and 1 white instead of 3 whole + 3 yolks. This should dry out the dough nicely.
If it still needs a bit more tweaking afterwards, temperature is the second place to look at. Try a slightly lower temperature and baking even longer. Seeing that the longer bake wasn't sufficient on its own, I would only use this after playing with the ratios.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Pavel Danilyuk, Ethem Görey, Ethem Görey, Ethem Görey