Showing posts with label Baby shower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baby shower. Show all posts

Sunday, 28 July 2024

Baby Shower Macarons

 Our friends welcomed a baby girl into their lives recently so these were made for them!


I used my default Swiss meringue method recipe to make the macaron shells. Here are some pictures of the piped batter:



I decorated the macaron shells with edible marker and royal icing. I filled the macarons with either Hojicha chocolate ganache or mixed berry ganache. Both of which are dairy-free to facilitate gifting people in hot tropical Singapore's weather.



You may refer to this post for the mixed berry ganache recipe. I can't share the hojicha chocolate ganache recipe as it's used for my hedgehog macaron class.

You may have a look at the reel for the tutorial of the process:

https://www.instagram.com/reel/C9Rzyqby3-F/?igsh=MW5hdTl2Z2RpZmxucw==


with love,

Phay Shing

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Monday, 17 April 2017

Ondeh-Ondeh and Pulut Hitam Sheep Macarons (New recipe!)

I have the privilege of baking for Victoria's little girl's first month celebration. I am a fan of Victoria's bakes and am really happy and excited for this chance to bake for her! She requested for sheep macarons as the little one is her little lamb given by God, and her name is Love :)

Ondeh-Ondeh and Pulut Hitam flavours!

Victoria challenged me to make macarons with these two unique Asian flavours and I think I rose up to the challenge :p. I have made Ondeh-Ondeh macarons before but using the French method, and it was delicious! For a larger batch, Italian method would be better so this is the first time I adapted my original recipe for this method. Pulut Hitam (black glutinous rice) on the other hand was totally new. But I am so glad the experiment turned out fine!

In order to create macarons with these flavours, it is only fitting that I use some coconut to replace some almond meal in the macaron shells. The resulting shells are not as smooth looking as my regular macarons but they are so fragrant with a slightly chewy coconuty bite! The ratio of dessicated coconut: almond meal could do with some refinement but it's more for cosmetic purposes because the taste and texture is still awesome with my current recipe!

Note
Do scale the recipe accordingly as I was catering for a large batch of macarons. During this macaron mania, I catered for a few other smaller requests concurrently. My recipe is reduced sugar as well so if you don't want the hassle of using rice flour and corn flour, simply replace those items with icing sugar.

The sheep templates can be found in my Creative Baking: Macarons book.

Recipe for coconut macaron shells
Ingredients (makes about 65-75 macarons, 130-150 shells):
Mass
170g superfine almond meal
70g dessicated coconut, sifted (I would reduce to 60g next time)
10g coconut cream powder (you may replace with dessicated coconut. I added to enhance flavour)
4g cornflour
13g rice flour
233g icing sugar
1/8 tsp fine sea salt
100g egg whites, preferably aged
A few drops of colourless Pandan flavouring (optional)
1/2 tsp Dutch processed cocoa powder

Meringue
240g caster sugar
96g egg whites, preferably aged
88g water
1/4 tsp cream of tartar (optional)

Steps:
1. Prepare baking tray with template and baking paper over the template.

2. Prepare the mass. Sift almond, dessicated coconut, coconut cream powder, corn flour, rice flour, icing sugar and salt. You may choose not to use some of the dessicated coconut bits that are coarser or grind the dessicated coconut before sifting. Add egg whites and Pandan flavouring (if using). Mix well to form a thick paste.

3. Prepare the meringue. Place caster sugar and water in a small saucepan. Stir a little to wet the sugar thoroughly. Heat the sugar and water until 115℃ on the candy thermometer. In the meantime, beat the egg whites with cream of tartar until soft peaks form. Reduce mixer speed if necessary. Once the temperature is reached, increase the mixer speed to high and carefully pour the syrup into the egg whites in a thin stream. Keep beating on high speed for another 15 minutes or until cool (about body temperature).

4. Fold the meringue into the mass in two additions until the batter flows in a slow-moving lava-like way. You may refer to this post for video tutorials on how to fold the batter and how to test the consistency of the batter. Scoop out about 2-3 tbs of batter and add sifted cocoa powder. Mix well.

5. Transfer batter into piping bags and pipe away! Bang the tray on the table to release trapped air.

Piped shells

6. Dry the shells in air con room or under the fan until you are able to slide a finger across the shells without feeling any stickiness.

7. Bake in preheated oven at 140℃ on lowest rack for 10 minutes. Reduce temperature to 115℃ and bake for another 10-12 minutes or until the feet does not appear wet. Cool completely before carefully removing the baking paper away from the shells.

Freshly baked!

Checkout the awesome feet!

Fluffy, soft and chewy interior!

Victoria requested for no artificial colouring to be used at all so I coloured the pink parts of royal icing with a natural source of food colouring from PME.


The heart-shaped pendants were made by piping royal icing on baking paper with heart template under it. I dried the icing overnight and gently peel it off the baking sheet.


Charcoal powder was used to colour the icing black for the eyes. I used edible marker for the nose.

Decorated shells!

I made the black glutinous rice porridge and froze it earlier on ahead of this macaron mania. Do note that I omitted coconut milk (so as not to have an overpowering coconut flavour as the macaron shells already have coconut, and to improve the shelf life of the filled macarons) and reduced the amount of gula melaka in the porridge to cater for macarons.

Recipe for black glutinous rice porridge
Ingredients:
150g black glutinous rice
750g water
3 Pandan leaves, knotted or cut into big pieces
75g gula melaka, chopped
1/2 tsp salt
1/8 tsp coconut flavouring (optional)

Steps:
1. Wash the rice and soak for 2hours. Drain the water and wash and drain again.
2. Place rice, water and Pandan leaves in a saucepan. Bring to boil and simmer for 15 minutes, stirring now and then. Remove Pandan leaves.
3. Add gula melaka , salt and coconut flavouring (if using). Stir until sugar dissolves.
4. Continue to simmer and stir until the porridge is thick.
5. Remove from heat and blend until as finely as you can. You may cool and freeze this porridge. Simply thaw when you want to use it.


I use a less sweet whipped white chocolate ganache as the base for these macarons. The ganache will taste weird on its own but paired with the sweet shells, it will be just right. The Ondeh-Ondeh filling is flavoured with extra Pandan paste and the pulut hitam filling has a substantial portion of the porridge added in.

Less-sweet whipped white chocolate ganache recipe
Ingredients:
168g White chocolate, chopped
84g Unsalted butter
84g Vegetable shortening
105g Heavy cream
3/4 tsp Fine sea salt
1.5 tsp Caramel flavouring (or vanilla extract if you prefer)
1 tsp lemon juice (to counter the sweetness)
1/2 tsp coconut flavouring

Steps:
1. Place white chocolate, shortening and butter in a microwave-safe bowl. Heat on medium power for 20 seconds and mix well. Repeat until mixture is smooth and melted.

2. Heat cream, lemon juice and flavourings in a small saucepan on low heat until it starts to bubble. Pour over melted chocolate. Mix well with spatula.

3. Add salt and mix well.

4. Freeze the mixing bowl with the ganache for 2 minutes. Mix well with spatula. Repeat until mixture starts firming up. You may switch to electric mixer and beat until creamy.

Whipped white chocolate ganache

Pandan caramel ganache
Add 1/2-1 tsp Pandan paste for every 200g or whipped white chocolate ganache

Pulut Hitam ganache
Use a ratio of 1:1 for whipped ganache : black glutinous rice porridge. I used a ratio of 2:1 for this batch and feel that the flavour is a little understated so you may want to increase the proportion of pulut hitam. Gradually add the porridge into the ganache and mix well.

Whipped Pulut Hitam ganache

Assembly
Pulut Hitam:
Pipe a ring of pulut hitam ganache. Fill the center with the porridge. Place top shell on.

Ondeh-Ondeh:
Pipe a ring of Pandan caramel ganache. Pipe a thin layer of ganache in the middle of the ring to coat the base shell. Fill the "well" with gula melaka syrup. Pipe some ganache over the syrup. Place top shell on.


These Asian flavoured macarons are truly yummy and fragrant! So give it a try if you are fans of Ondeh-Ondeh or pulut hitam!

Here's a sneak peek of the inside of the Ondeh-Ondeh macaron. Forgot to take photo of the pulut hitam one 😅.

Yummy!


With lots of love,
Phay Shing


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Sunday, 16 April 2017

Sweet ‘Lamb’ Cloud pasture-Rainbow Chiffon Cake


I’m very privileged to make this cake for my dear friend Victoria’s baby’s full month celebration. Super happy for her! While making this cake (and such a coincidence as this was Good Friday and Easter week), I was also greatly ministered to and reminded of God’s love for us in giving his only Son Jesus (who died on the cross and rose again) so that we could be reconciled to God.

There was much love in making this cake too. The top tier is a new creation: cloud sky chiffon cake with green pasture! I have shared the recipe for the cloud sky chiffon cake previously. This has added complexity of adding green waves under the cloud-dotted sky. The base tier is a Rainbow chiffon cake, but with 4 colours to fit the 'sunny' colour scheme of the cake. And lastly the 'lamb' figurine on top of a ‘hill’ assembled from small chiffon cake pops.

Cloud-Sky with wavy green pasture

Cloud-Sky with Wavy Green pasture Chiffon Cake (8-inch tube pan)
Egg yolk batter
6 egg yolks
40 g castor sugar
79 g vegetable/corn oil
76 + 5 + 5 g water
10 vanilla extract
120 g Prima cake flour, sifted
1 tsp blue pea flower extract (40 blue pea flowers in 10g hot water)
Blue gel food colouring
½ tsp pandan paste

Meringue
8 egg whites
1/2 tsp cream of tartar
90 g castor sugar

1. Preheat oven to 160°C. Prepare a tray of water under the lowest rack for steambaking. *Optional but helps to increase moisture and control oven temperature for ogura-like texture.

2. Beat egg yolks with sugar with whisk till pale and light before stirring in oil, water, and vanilla extract.

3. Add in sieved flour and whisk till no trace of flour found. Divide the batter ½ (for blue), ¼ (for cloud), ¼ (for green pasture). To the 1/2 portion, add blue pea flower extract and a dip of blue gel food colouring (optional but brightens up the colour). To the first ¼ portion, add 5 g water. To the second ¼ portion, add 5 g water + pandan paste.

4. Meringue: Using an electric mixer, beat the egg whites with ¼ tsp cream of tartar till frothy. Add in half the castor sugar for meringue and whip till soft peaks. Add in all the castor sugar and whip till firm peaks form or just to the point of reaching stiff peak.
*Firm peaks give finer, softer texture, especially with steam baking.

5. Divide the meringue ½ and ¼ and ¼ for each coloured batter. Gently quickly fold in the meringue into respective batter in 3 additions.

6. Spoon the plain batter in cloud-like blobs at the base and sides of the pan, then fill the surrounding spaces with blue pea flower batter. Repeat till the pan is half full. Then deposit mounds of blue batter to make waves (picture tutorial for waves in Creative baking: Chiffon Cakes). Fill the rest of the pan with pandan batter till 2-cm from the brim.

7. Bake the chiffon cake for 15 min at 160°C, then 150°C for 10 min and then 140°C for 25+ min, or until skewer inserted into centre of cake comes out clean.

8. Invert the chiffon cake once removed from oven and allow to cool completely.

9. Unmould the chiffon cake by hand (‘Hand Unmoulding Chiffon Cake for a Clean Finishing’ video tutorial).


4-colour Rainbow Chiffon Cake

I used recipe for my Tri-colour chiffon cake from here. Picture tutorial spooning the batter is found in Creative baking: Chiffon Cakes.


Lamb Chiffon Cake Pop

I baked plain chiffon cake in an egg shell for the body. For the ‘curly’ hair, I used a flower cutter to cut out the shape from chiffon cake from cake pop molds, and assembled together using melted marshmallows. Picture tutorial of sheep chiffon cake pops also found in Deco Chiffon Cakes (2nd chiffon book).


The hill is from baking pandan chiffon cake in a small glass bowl. Other details eg flowers and letters were cut from chiffon sheet cake and pasted on using melted marshmallows.


Thankful everything was well-received! Blessed Easter to all!!

With lots of love,
Susanne

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Monday, 4 May 2015

'Rainbow over Lake' Rainbow Tiers Chiffon Cake


This is a very special cake for a dear friend’s Rainbow Baby's manyue. The baby is the beautiful Rainbow after the rain and God’s special gift because God Heard. As I knew her personally, the Rainbow Baby and the cake has special meaning to me and all of her family and friends who love her.

The top is inspired by a Rainbow arching over a Lake after the rain. I made the center hole of the chiffon cake into a lake with blue cake. Too bad it can't be clearly seen from this picture angle.

The tiers making up the chiffon cake are made from Rainbow colors from the top to the bottom. The different tiers have different flavors as I prefer to use natural food coloring to reduce the amount of coloring used. I also thought that it would be nice to have a multi-flavored cake so that there’s a flavor for everyone and also the multi-flavored Lego chiffon cakes were well-liked.

The top tier is made from Strawberry chiffon cake, the orange layer is made from Orange chiffon cake. The second tier is Lemon chiffon cake with zest, and the green layer is Pandan chiffon cake. The bottom tier is Vanilla chiffon cake with Blue pea flowers. The flowers themselves are not vibrant enough so I had to top up with gel food colouring, and lastly the purple layer is made from Blueberry chiffon cake (remember to filter the juice). I had to bake many rounds of different chiffon cakes and it’s my first time baking so many different types on a big scale, so needless to say, after a while I was trying hard not to get confused and it took one tiring day just to bake finish everything.

I hope it will be a special memory for them. Super thankful she shared everyone loved the cake! There was lots of love seen at the party too. 

Happy full month to Rainbow Baby Samantha!! You are dearly loved.

The recipe for a smaller cute version of the Rainbow Tiers Chiffon Cake is now in Creative baking: Chiffon Cakes. You can find a detailed recipe with picture guide on how to make it there.


With lots of love,
Susanne

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Monday, 17 November 2014

Girly Baby Shower Themed Orange Chiffon Cupcakes

This is part of a big project with Susanne that we took on together. She made a bigger cake with some cupcakes and I made the bulk of the cupcakes. Presenting my batch of girly chiffon cupcakes for a baby shower!

Girly pram, romper and sippy cup!

You only see 3 cuppies here but I made 59 of these. Why the odd number? Hmm not enough cake for decoration. Haha. But 59 was already pretty involved work for me! The cupcakes are orange flavoured with vanilla layer cakes for the girly decorations.

Recipe for orange cupcakes
Ingredients (makes 22-24 small cupcakes):
4 egg yolks
20g caster sugar
56g canola oil (or vegetable oil)
56g fresh orange juice
11g orange zest
1/4 tsp orange emulco (optional)
80g cake flour
1/8 tsp salt

5 egg whites
1/4 tsp cream of tartar
60g caster sugar

Steps:
1. Preheat the oven to 150°C. Place the paper cups on a tray.

2. Prepare the egg yolk batter. Whisk the egg yolks and sugar until pale and all the sugar has dissolved. Take a few minutes to do this. Add oil and whisk until thick like mayonnaise. Add orange juice and whisk until well combined. Gradually whisk in sifted flour and salt until no trace of flour is seen. Add orange zest and emulco. Whisk until well combined.

3. Prepare the meringue. In a clean metal bowl, beat the egg whites until foamy with electric mixer. Add cream of tartar and beat until soft peaks form. Gradually add sugar and beat until stiff peaks form.

4. Fold the meringue into the egg yolk batter in three additions. Be careful not to deflate the egg whites. Transfer batter into a batter dispenser or piping bag. Fill the cups till about less than 1cm away from the rim. I used a jumbo ziplock bag fitted with a piping tip adapter to help with filling many cups quickly. If you have a batter dispenser it will be helpful but not necessary. Scooping the batter in would take too much time to fill the cups if you are baking more than 20 cupcakes in each batch.

5. Bake at second lower rack for 17-20 minutes or until skewer comes out clean.

My dad sampled an orange cuppy and said it reminds him of cakes he ate when he was young! I think it's because natural ingredients are used and it's so full of natural orange goodness. Don't skimp on the orange zest for really good flavour and added moisture!

Recipe for vanilla layer cakes*
Ingredients (makes one 10" & one 6" square tray):
2 egg yolks
10g caster sugar
28g oil
28g water
1/8 tsp vanilla extract
40g cake flour
A pinch of salt
Gel food colouring
Charcoal powder

3 egg whites
1/5 tsp cream of tartar
33g caster sugar

* I had to bake many rounds of layer cake.
Light pink: two 10" square and four 6" square cakes
White: two 10" and one 6" cakes
Dark pink: one 10" cake
Black: one 6" cake

Steps:
1. Preheat oven to 160°C. Line the trays eith baking sheet.

2. Follow the above steps to prepare the batter, adding the appropriate gel coloring/ charcoal after the flour is whisked in.

3. Bake at 160°C for 13-14 minutes. Immediately remove from pan and cool with baking sheet covering it. You may freeze the cakes after double wrapping with cling wrap and stored in ziplock bag.

Assembly
I used cookie cutters and a small fruit knife to cut out the various shapes from the layer cakes. I used marshmellow creme to glue the pieces on.

Works in progress!

As the cakes have to be left out in the open for a couple of hours, I brushed the surface with simple syrup (1:1 ratio of sugar and water) flavoured with orange zest before storing them in airtight container.

Here's our big project on a tiered cake stand :).



With love,
Phay Shing



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Queen's Crown Chiffon Cake (and Cupcakes) for Baby Shower


This Queen crown is a chiffon cake made especially for a very dear friend's baby's manyue. The baby's name is Queena, so the cake was to be a sweet sweet crown fit for the baby Queen! The right shows the tiered set-up with the crown on top and chiffon cupcakes with various sweet designs and 'Happy 1st Month Queena'. I wasn't confident coping with the quantities in the big project so thankfully I had Phay Shing's help with a lot of the cuppies!

The sweet crown with stars above!


Close-up of the pretty tiered set-up!


The crown chiffon cake was vanilla-flavored and made by dividing a pink vanilla chiffon cake (3 egg yolk recipe) into a 15 cm chiffon tin and a 10-inch layer cake. I intentionally made the chiffon cake shorter so that its proportion would look like a crown. For your convenience, I have pasted the scaled-up ingredients and baking times below :).

Vanilla chiffon cake
3 egg yolks
20g sugar
39g vegetable oil
36 ml boiled water
5 ml vanilla extract

Meringue:
4 egg whites
45g sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar

15 cm chiffon tin, filled to slightly less than 2/3: 15 min at 160°C, then 16 min at 140°C.
10-inch layer tray (lined with baking paper): 15 min at 160°C.

I baked an additional purple and blue vanilla chiffon layer cakes (2 egg yolk recipe each in 10-inch tray) to cut out gems and stars to decorate the crown. I brushed on some melted marshmallows to help them adhere to the crown.

The cuppies were orange chiffon cupcakes (scaled to 4 egg yolks) with vanilla chiffon layer cakes replacing fondant for letters and decorations. I did the letters and Phay Shing the girly designs. Similar to the crown, I baked another three 10-inch vanilla layer chiffon cakes, 2 pink and 1 purple (2 egg yolk recipe each) to cover the cupcakes and to cut out the designs on top.

Freshly-baked cuppies wishing Queena a Happy 1st Month!


With lots of love,
Susanne


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Sunday, 15 June 2014

Pastel Rainbow Chiffon Cake



The recipe for this Rainbow Chiffon Cake is now in Creative baking: Chiffon Cakes and makes the cover! Very happy that my Rainbow Chiffon has now been popularized all over Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia and many other countries though the cookbook



My Rainbow Chiffon Cake has also been featured in Motherhood magazine Feb 2016 issue (below) and Smartparents.sg (formerly Mother & Baby) (Mar 2016). Even Polar has started to introduce this into their range (June 2016). Why don't you try it too? :)

At the time I made this cake (in 2014), it was thought not possible to make 6 neat rainbow layers in a chiffon cake!

Presenting my first Rainbow chiffon cake with 6 colours!


This Rainbow chiffon was made for one of my besties from MGS for her daughter's "manyue"-cum-Daddy's birthday.

Hope you will enjoy it too! 

With lots of love,
Susanne


Creative baking: Chiffon Cakes: step-by-step pictures for each step, available in all major bookstores, and on AmazonBook Depository and Kinokuniya online. The cookbook made Straits times best seller's list in Feb 2016!



Motherhood magazine (Feb 2016)





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Sunday, 30 March 2014

Hidden Rainbow Strawberry Chiffon Cake for Baby Shower


I like to pattern chiffons because my family do not like fattening cream or fondant (they call sugar paste!). Since I love rainbows, I decided I would decorate my baby shower chiffon with rainbows. I had the sudden inspiration to do "hidden rainbows" in the cake from a dream I had during the second week of my confinement (I am forever dreaming of chiffons!). 

Be prepared to spend 6 hours for this cake! In between taking care of baby and the kids, I took 2 days just to bake this cake! It was truly a labour of love, but I'm happy with how it turned out! ^_^. 

I used the recipe from my earlier post Valentine's Day Hearts-in-all-directions Strawberry Chiffon Cake for the letters and chiffon cake (requires 3 hrs). This cake requires an additional step of making chiffon rainbows (another 3 hrs). I made them vanilla-flavoured for an extra flavour to be embedded in the cake. 

Chiffon rainbows (makes three 4-inch round bowls)
3 egg yolks
20g sugar
35g vegetable oil
45ml boiled water
60g cake flour
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
Wilton colours for rainbow

4 egg whites
45g sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar

Method:
1. Preheat oven to 160°C.
2. Beat egg yolks with sugar with whisk till foamy before stirring in oil, water and vanilla extract. Next add in sieved flour and whisk till no trace of flour found.
3. Divide egg yolk batter into 6. Add in a tiny dip of wilton colour and mix thoroughly.
4. Meringue: Beat the egg whites with ¼ tsp cream of tartar till stiff peak, mixing in caster sugar in 2 additions.
5. Divide the meringue into 6 and scoop into the egg yolk batter.
6. Gently but quickly fold in egg whites into the 6 egg yolk batters till well combined and scoop the cake batter into the round glass bowls (in the sequence of rainbow colours).
*For steps 5 and 6, must work quickly before meringue breaks down.
7. Bake the cakes in the preheated 160°C oven for 30-35 min.
8. Unmould as soon as the cakes are cool. 
9. Shape the cakes into rainbow arc shape using a baking sheet (roll it slightly) and slice it into rainbows.

Aren't the rainbows pretty? :)

After this, bake the layer cake and chiffon cake according to the recipe from my earlier post Valentine's Day Hearts-in-all-directions Strawberry Chiffon Cake. Lastly, the clouds are made by sifting icing sugar (or dessicated coconut if you prefer) onto the cake with a "cloud" template.

Isn't a slice pretty? :)

Thank God the experiment turned out well. The chiffon cake was extremely soft and light, and family commented it was very pretty on the outside! The best part was that the hidden rainbows came out really pretty when we sliced the cake open!

Happy 1 month to my little sweet baby Charissa :)

With loads of love,
Susanne




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Sunday, 23 February 2014

Hello Kitty Baby shower-themed Vanilla/Lemon Chiffon Cake


My daughter and myself (oops..secret revealed!) love hello kitty, so when I saw Sharron's hello kitty cake mould, I couldn't wait to try out a hello kitty cake with 3D patterns. The colour scheme is light blue and pink because I had in mind a hello kitty themed-baby shower for baby "whale" (nickname for baby in my tummy :)). Thanks Sharron for so generously lending me the cake mould!

I combined both the patterning technique, hello kitty moulds and hearts cookie cutters to create a cake with hello kitty and hearts patterns on the top, side and insides of the cake. This cake is by far the most time consuming cake I have done. So do be prepared to allocate at least 3 hours for the preparation of the cake!

Recipe as follows:
Cake batter for patterns, hello kitty silicone cakes and layer cake (for 8 x 8 inch tray)
3 egg yolks
20g sugar
35g vegetable oil
45ml (water + lemon juice and zest)
60g cake flour
Black, red and pink wilton colours

4 egg whites
45g sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar

Chiffon cake
3 egg yolks
20g sugar
35g vegetable oil
45ml boiled water
60g cake flour
1 tsp vanilla essence

4 egg whites
45g sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar

Method:
Patterns, hello kitty silicone cakes and layer cake (for 8 x 8 inch tray)
1. Preheat oven to 160°C.
2. Beat egg yolks with sugar with whisk till pale yellow before stirring in oil and juice.
3. Add in sieved flour and whisk till no trace of flour found.
4. Scoop out 2 tsp of egg yolk batter into 2 separate bowls each. Add in a tiny dip of red/black colours to each bowl. Add 1/3 tsp of cake flour to each bowl and mix well.
5. Beat the egg whites with cream of tartar till stiff peak, mixing in caster sugar in 2 additions.
6. Scoop over 4 tbsp of meringue into the red and black egg yolk batter. Quickly but gently fold it in till well-combined.
7. Use a wilton 230 tip to pipe in the red hearts and ribbons, and black letters and features in the main cake mould as well as the small hello kitty silicone moulds (see top left pic above).
8. Bake the patterns for 1.5 min at 160°C.
9. Add a tiny dip of pink colouring to the rest of the egg yolk batter. Gently fold in the rest meringue into the egg yolk batter in 3 additions.
10. Pour into the hello kitty small moulds and 8 inch tray. Tap on table top to release bubbles and bake for 14 mins at 160°C.
11. After the layer cake cools, flip over the cake onto a clean baking sheet. Use hearts cookie cutters to cut out the hearts and letters. Pop out the small hello kitty cakes (see picture above).
Chiffon cake
12. Beat egg yolks with sugar with whisk till pale yellow before stirring in oil, water and strawberry paste.
13. Add in sieved flour and whisk till no trace of flour found. Mix in a tiny dip of blue wilton colour.
14. Beat the egg whites with cream of tartar till stiff peak, mixing in caster sugar in 2 additions. Gently fold in the meringue into the egg yolk batter in 3 additions.
15. Gently pour cake batter over the designs. Then arrange the cut-outs on the sides and middle of the tin and gently pipe/pour cake batter over the designs.
16. Bake the cake in preheated 160°C oven for 50 minutes.
17. Invert when cake is removed from oven and unmould when cake is cool.

I love patterning chiffon cakes as they are light and not too sweet. I thought that the combination of vanilla and lemon was pretty refreshing!

With love,
Susanne








  

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