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stage. If it springs back, the center is done, the cake is baked. Another useful sign is when the side  
shrinks back from the pan as it is beginning to dry out.  
If you really must open the oven door at a critical stage, do it very gently to avoid the  
slightest jarring. Whatever you do, don't touch the cake until it is close to being fully set. Even  
heavy steps on a bouncy kitchen floor can disrupt the process. Cancel any dance steps practice  
session in the kitchen while the cake is in the oven. Coffee cakes, which are baking powder  
leavened and contain less egg, don't collapse as easily. They don't rely on egg white foam structure  
but on the starch in the flour, giving a framework less sensitive to shaking. Also, they have a high  
amount of flour relative to moist ingredients, thus a thicker batter giving them more stability before  
setting in the oven.  
Cake and torte recipes generally call for a moderate oven temperature so the batter will  
expand slowly. Are any of the following symptoms familiar? In too hot an oven the outside surface  
solidifies into a crust that prevents the cake to expand any more. In too cool an oven the cake  
expands but no crust forms, and the entire cake dries out too much—a good reason to have an  
accurate oven before you endeavor to bake the perfect cake.  
Cake mixes  
Cake mixes are nothing more than the combination of ingredients that you always have on  
hand and can mix together in two minutes flat—flour, salt, baking powder (or baking soda), sugar,  
dehydrated hydrogenated vegetable shortening (you would use real shortening), possibly powdered  
milk and dehydrated eggs (you would use fresh milk and fresh eggs). Commercial mixes do have  
other ingredients like emulsifiers, foaming agents and gums that you cannot add yourself as these  
are only commercially available. An emulsifier is the only one useful—it helps to make high-  
volume, very tender cakes by preventing the coalescence of bubbles in the fat-liquid emulsion.  
Sifting together your own ingredients, emulsifier or not, gives you more satisfaction than  
using a prepackaged commercial product and it is more economical. And you eliminate a dozen  
chemicals from your cake that packaged mixes sport to extend their shelf life and prevent clumping.  
Unless you are really short of time, or totally intimidated by baking (in either case you are not likely  
to read this section), mix your own.  
There are cakes and then there are cakes  
There are two basic types of cakes: butter cake and sponge cake. This list does not include  
simple coffee cakes and high-flour cakes such as the popular carrot cake. Those cakes are related to  
quick breads much more than to cakes, using similar batter, and will not produce the tender, light,  
fluffy texture of a low-flour, high-egg cake. An example for a butter cake is a standard chocolate  
cake, while angel food cake is a good example for the family of sponge cakes. Their methods of  
preparation are completely different, and so are the precautions you take for best results. Neither  
butter cake nor sponge cake is particularly difficult to prepare. They are excellent basic cakes to  
learn to bake. Once you have experience to bake those two types, you can undertake just about any  
elaborate cakes.  
Butter cakes  
As the name suggests, in butter cakes the original fat was butter. This is an old name that  
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