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Recipes

Magic vanilla cake - three cakes in one

A show-stopping bake

October 1, 2015 11:56
01102015 Vanille 1 copy

By

Christelle Huet Gomez

2 min read

Magic cakes are simply eggs, sugar, flour, butter and milk. The magic happens in the baking. The liquid batter divides into three layers: a dense, moist base; a delicate creamy middle and the top layer of light sponge. The yolks, beaten with sugar, butter, flour and milk, form the base and cream. The beaten egg whites form the Genoise sponge layer. Slow cooking at 150°C cooks the bottom like a cake without cooking the upper part. It is best to use a conventional rather than fan-assisted oven.

The golden rules of a magic cake are: use the only the specified tin size and ideally a silicone cake tin which is easier to turn out; gently incorporate the egg whites into the mixture with a whisk so they don't dissolve into the batter - lumps will remain and the whites floating on the surface should be smoothed with the blade of a knife before baking; the baked cake should still have a slight wobble, which will set when chilled. The upper layer will be well baked and golden. Cooking time given is for conventional ovens - reduce temperatures by 10°C for fan-assisted; wait for the cake to set before turning it out – chill for at least 2 hours.

Magic cakes taste better after a few hours, or even overnight, in the fridge - so be patient!

It is very important to beat the yolks and sugar together well, until the mixture whitens; and then to incorporate the egg whites gently using the whisk, without mixing too much. You should still have large lumps.