Why did my Chiffon Cake collapse?

Why did my Chiffon Cake collapse? - Clear Drinking Glass Filled With Liquid

Recipe used:

  • 75g flour
  • 1/2 tsp baking powder
  • 80g sugar + 15g sugar (for the meringue)
  • 2 eggs (60g each)
  • 35g oil
  • 60g water

Instructions:

  1. Place all ingredients except egg whites and 15g sugar in a bowl.
  2. Beat egg whites until soft peaks. Slowly add the sugar while continuing beating to firm peaks.
  3. Using the same beaters, mix the egg yolk mixture until just combined.
  4. Fold the meringue into the egg yolk mixture in 3 batches.
  5. Pour into the prepared cake pans then bake in a preheated 160°C oven for 55-60 minutes.

  • I've noticed that the cake sets up on the sides very early into the bake. It then continues to rise in the middle to create a dome.
  • Around the 40 minute mark the dome flattens.
  • It further flattens once cooled and un-molded. When I flip the deflated cake upside down it looks like the cake sunk in the middle.

Does anyone know what I did wrong? Could it possibly the recipe that is failing me?



Best Answer

Chiffon cake, like it's cousin angel food cake, is mostly air. A big pile of protein bubbles stiffened with a little starch.

One very important step is not reflected in your recipe:

When the cake is completely baked the proteins have set and the starches have gelatinized but the starches are still very soft. The cake won't have its firm structure until the starches have been able to cool and set.

All recipes call for inverting the cake immediately when it comes out of the oven. The cake is allowed to cool, inverted and still in the pan, for a good hour to ensure the starches have set.

Special pans with legs or a long tube center are used for this:

enter image description here

Notice that in addition to the feet that it is a tube pan. This is important because the interior of these cakes is very insulated and won't be able to cook completely before the outside is overcooked.

When my angel food cake pans were packed I had good success using a pot with a mason jar in the middle. I was surprised it came out perfectly.

TL;DR -
Use a cake pan with a tube,
Invert the cake right when it comes out of the oven and let it cool completely.

*Note
Catija is correct that these amounts look way too small for a full cake. If you are trying to bake that in a full sized cake pan it could possibly be over rising and not have enough structure to support itself when it comes out.




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Quick Answer about "Why did my Chiffon Cake collapse?"

Beat egg whites correctly: Under-beating egg whites will cause the cake structure to collapse, while over-beating can cause the mixture to break down when you fold it into the batter, creating a heavy batter. Therefore, always keep an eye out for the egg whites as they thicken.

Why did my chiffon cake deflate?

Chiffon cake can shrink and deflate for several reasons. First, the pan had a non-stick coating or if it was greased. The best pan to use for a voluminous cake is an aluminum, un-greased chiffon pan without a non-stick coating. Second, the cake can shrink and deflate if not completely cooled immediately after baking.

How do you keep a cake from collapsing?

How to Keep a Cake From Falling After Baking
  • Follow the Recipe Closely.
  • Check Your Leavening Agent.
  • Use Room Temperature Eggs and Butter for Creaming.
  • Don't Overmix.
  • Always Preheat the Oven.
  • Bake at the Right Temperature.
  • Bake Long Enough.


  • Why did my cake rise then collapse?

    Too much leavening agent like baking soda or powder can cause a cake to rise too high too quickly. The gas from the leavening agents builds up and escapes before the cake bakes through in the center. This causes the center to collapse and makes your cake layers sink in the middle.

    What factors may cause cake to collapse?

    If the oven temperature is too low, the structure of the cake may not set sufficiently, even though it may have been in the oven for the recommended amount of time. Thus, it collapses once it's removed from the oven.



    The Best Chiffon Cake Recipe| Give out examples of the Cause of Crack and Collapse |Goodcookingideas




    More answers regarding why did my Chiffon Cake collapse?

    Answer 2

    It's very normal for a chiffon cake to contract some after baking, sometimes this leads people to think something is wrong. What's happening is that the trapped air is cooling and takes up less volume. However, if you are ending up with a very dense cake then something is definitely going wrong.

    • You may be underbaking it: if the cake's structure is not cooked enough to trap the air in it then the air escapes and the cake collapses. Recipe times are often wrong, so I use them as a guide and I use my ears to tell when a chiffon is done - when a chiffon is baking it sounds a bit like rice crispies in milk, lots of pops. Once the popping slows to 1-2 per second it's perfect and I get it out
    • Temperature too low: you say the cake starts to collapse in the oven, to me that means that the air escaped because the cake's structure was not formed quickly enough to trap it. Try turning the oven up by 10-15 degrees
    • Lining the pan and inverting: the point of inverting the pan is to get gravity to work for you by stretching the cake out while the starches cool and the structure fully crystallizes. This relies on the cake adhering to the bottom and sides of the pan - if you line the pan the cake will simply drop out. I have baked decent chiffon cakes this way when I didn't have a springform pan available but if you want a truly light cake you have to invert it. So use a springform pan and invert the cake if you want to get the benefits of inverting it

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

    Images: Cats Coming, Mumma Oyens, Karolina Grabowska, Karolina Grabowska