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Old June 5th, 2009, 03:32 PM
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Question My cake has fallen!

We have a recipe we used a lot in Michigan for Kitchenette Cake. The ingredients are, baking powder, flour, milk, salt, shortening, sugar and whatever flavoring you like. We moved to South Carolina and when we make the cake it fall. I am sure it has to do with differing altitudes but I do not know how to adjust the recipe. Can anyone help?
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Old June 5th, 2009, 06:42 PM
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Default Re: My cake has fallen!

Are you living in a high altitude area? Or did you live in a high altitude area?

from my notes:

If a homemade cake has a coarse texture, the following problems may have occurred:

* Too much baking soda or baking powder may have been used.
* Not enough liquid may have been used.
* The butter and sugar may not have been beaten together long enough. If the recipe calls for creaming butter and sugar, or beating until light and fluffy, this should take at least three to four minutes of beating.
* The oven temperature was too low.

If a homemade cake is too dry, the following problems may have occurred:

* Too much flour or leavening (baking soda/baking powder) was used.
* Not enough shortening or sugar was used.
* The cake was over-baked - the oven temperature was too high and/or the baking time was too long.

If a homemade cake fell (the center of the cake sinks), the following problems may have occurred:

* The cake was under-baked - the oven temperature was too low and/or the baking time was too short.
* The liquid was over or under measured.
* The pan was too small - the batter was too deep.
* The cake was moved or jarred before it was sufficiently baked.
* Old or expired baking powder was used.
* A wooden pick or cake tester was inserted into the cake before it was sufficiently set.

If a homemade cake has low volume or is too flat, the following problems may have occurred:

* The liquid was over- or under-measured.
* The batter was under-mixed or extremely over-mixed.
* Too large a pan was used.
* The oven temperature was too low or too high.

If a homemade cake has a peaked center, the following problems may have occurred:

* The batter was over-mixed.
* The oven temperature was too hot.

If a homemade cake shrinks excessively around the edges, the following problems may have occurred:

* The baking pans were greased too heavily.
* The baking pans were placed too close together in the oven.
* There was too little batter in the baking pan.
* The batter was extremely over-mixed.
* There was too little liquid in the batter.
* The cake was over-baked - either too long a time or at too high a temperature.

If a homemade cake is soggy, the following problems may have occurred:

* The cake was moved or jarred before it was sufficiently baked.
* The cake was under-baked - the oven temperature was too low and/or the baking time was too short.
* Old or expired baking powder was used.

If a homemade cake has a spotted crust, the batter was probably under-mixed.

If a homemade cake has a sticky top crust, the following problems may have occurred:

* The cake was stored while still warm.
* The liquid was over measured.
* The cake was under-baked - the oven temperature was too low and/or the baking time was too short.
* The air humidity was too high.

If a homemade cake has tunnels throughout the layer, the following problems may have occurred:

* The oven temperature was too high.
* The batter was under-mixed or extremely over-mixed.

If a homemade cake has uneven browning, the following problems may have occurred:

* There was uneven heat circulation in the oven.
* The baking pans were placed too close together in the oven.

If a homemade cake has uneven layers, the following problems may have occurred:

* The oven rack was not level.
* The cake pans were warped or bent.


Also - invest in an oven thermometer. Ovens need to be calibrated from time to time due to moving, using constantly, etc.

I hope this helps.

KW
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