I am a firm
believer that you can have cake at any time, at any place, and at any
occasion. The flavor of the cake and
frosting may need to be tweaked for the event (a celebration cake with confetti
and balloons may not be appropriate for a funeral), but cake is always welcome. This includes just because cake, which is
cake that is made just because a recipe looked good or better yet, you just
want some cake.
The problem
with just because cake is that you have a whole cake. Usually after one or two slices, just because
cake has hit the spot, but there is still an entire cake left to go. A friend emailed me this cake months
ago. I was thinking awesome cake and
wanted to make it that weekend. My
friend told me that she did not want a whole cake at her house and to wait for
a special occasion, basically ensuring the cake would be shared and not
consumed by one person.
That same
friend just finished her chemotherapy treatment and decided to have a
celebration to mark the end of the most difficult part of her cancer
treatment/recovery to health. When my
friend announced this celebration, I instantly thought of this cake. This would be the perfect time to unveil a
cake my friend had been wanting for a while.
The original
cake was gradient shades of purple. I
know my friend loves purple, but I thought pink was more fitting for breast
cancer. The cake was flavored simple
enough, vanilla cake layers with a little bit of lemon curd smeared between the
layers to hold the cake together. The
cake was cover in a Swiss Meringue Buttercream and topped with SPRINKLES. Sprinkles always make everything better.
The cake
went over well and came out amazing.
Moreover, my friend forgot that she loved this cake and I promised to
make it at some point. She was pleasantly
surprised when she cute the cake, pulled out the first piece and saw all the
shades of pink. That is what this cake
is—a show stopper. It will surprise and
amaze, and is even better when made not just because, but made for and shared
with an amazing person who inspires and amazes, just like my friend.
Pink Ombre
Cake
Adapted from
raspberri cupcakes
*Notes: The
original recipe divides the cake into five layers, I did six. I also increased the original recipe by half
(as provided below) to create six nice height layers with an eight inch
diameter pan. Lastly, it was easiest to
multiple this recipe using the weight measurements, so those are provided
below.
535.5g
All-purpose Flour
1 ½ TBS
Baking Powder
1 tsp Salt
337.5ml Milk
(~ 1 ½ cups), room temperature
4 tsp
Vanilla Extract
600g Caster
(Extra Fine) Sugar
337.5g Butter
(3 sticks), room temperature
5 Large
Eggs, room temperature
Lemon Curd,
homemade or store bought is fine
Swiss
Meringue Buttercream—ratio 5 oz. egg whites; 10 oz. granulated sugar; and 15
oz. butter (nearly 4 sticks) (instructions,
kinda sorta but not really)
Method
1. Preheat
oven to 350F.
2. Prepare
appropriate number of 8-inch circle pans.
Cut out a parchment circle for the bottom, and flour/shortening the
sides. I used three pans, cleaned them
out, and used them again to bake six layers.
3. Combine
flour, baking powder, and salt in a medium bowl, and set aside. Mix together milk and vanilla in a measuring
cup, and set aside as well.
4. Weigh
bowl in which you will do your mixing and write down this number. Beat together butter and sugar until well
blended, creamy, and pale. Beat in eggs
one at a time.
5. Alternate
adding flour and milk mixtures in 2-3 parts, beginning and ending with
flour.
6. Weigh
full bowl. Subtract the empty bowl weight
from the new bowl weight. Take the
resulting number and divide by six. This
new number is the amount of batter to be placed in each of six bowls.
7. Divide
batter evenly into six containers (or five if you keep the white in the bowl
you are already using) using a scale to weigh each container to ensure it is
even.
8. To create the gradient colors, keep one bowl
white. Then using gel food colors (I
used Ameri-gel), add 1 drop to bowl 2, 2 drops to bowl 3, 3 drops to bowl 4, 5
drops to bowl 5, and 7 drops to bowl 6. Gently
mix until there are no more streaks of color.
Be careful not to over mix.
9. Pour the batter in to the pans and bake for
about 20 minutes, until a cake tester comes out clean.
10. Let cake
cool in pan for 5-10 minutes. To get
flat, even layers without trimming cake, try this method: Flip cake onto
parchment paper and cooling rack. Cover
cake with another piece of parchment.
Place cookie sheet on top of cake with a bag or two of powdered sugar on
top to apply gentle pressure and flatten the cake. Leave the cake this way for 20 minutes. Remove cookie sheet, weight (bag of powdered
sugar) and top piece of parchment and allow cake to cool completely.
11. Once
cakes are completely cool, layer from darkest to lightest, separating the
layers with a thin smear of lemon curd.
This Cake looks fantastic. Beautiful pictures, too!
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