9 Cake Baking Tips Pastry Chefs Learned in Culinary School

By Ghuman

Introduction

Baking a cake can be a daunting task, especially if you’re a beginner. But with the right tips and tricks, you can make a delicious cake that will impress your friends and family. Here are 9 cake baking tips pastry chefs learned in culinary school that will help you make the perfect cake. From prepping the ingredients to the final touches, these tips will help you create a delicious cake that will be the star of the show.

9 Cake Baking Tips Pastry Chefs Learned in Culinary School

Cake baking is an art form that requires skill, patience, and practice. Pastry chefs who have attended culinary school have learned a few tips and tricks that can help make your cake baking experience a success. Here are 9 cake baking tips pastry chefs learned in culinary school.

1. Use Room Temperature Ingredients

Using room temperature ingredients is essential for a successful cake. Room temperature ingredients mix together more easily and evenly, resulting in a better texture and flavor. Make sure to take your eggs, butter, and milk out of the refrigerator at least an hour before you start baking.

2. Measure Accurately

Accurate measurements are key to a successful cake. Make sure to use the right measuring cups and spoons for dry and wet ingredients. For dry ingredients, use measuring cups and spoons that are level with the top of the cup or spoon. For wet ingredients, use measuring cups and spoons that are filled to the top.

3. Preheat the Oven

Preheating the oven is essential for a successful cake. Make sure to preheat the oven to the correct temperature before you start baking. This will ensure that your cake bakes evenly and rises properly.

4. Grease the Pan

Greasing the pan is an important step in cake baking. Make sure to use a non-stick cooking spray or butter to grease the pan before you pour in the batter. This will help the cake come out of the pan easily and prevent it from sticking.

5. Don’t Overmix the Batter

Overmixing the batter can cause the cake to be dense and heavy. Make sure to mix the ingredients together until they are just combined. This will help the cake rise properly and have a light and fluffy texture.

6. Don’t Open the Oven Door

Opening the oven door while the cake is baking can cause the cake to sink or collapse. Make sure to wait until the cake is done baking before you open the oven door. This will help the cake rise properly and have a light and fluffy texture.

7. Test for Doneness

Testing for doneness is an important step in cake baking. Make sure to use a toothpick or cake tester to check if the cake is done. If the toothpick or cake tester comes out clean, the cake is done baking.

8. Cool the Cake

Cooling the cake is an important step in cake baking. Make sure to let the cake cool completely before you remove it from the pan. This will help the cake come out of the pan easily and prevent it from sticking.

9. Decorate the Cake

Decorating the cake is the final step in cake baking. Make sure to use the right tools and techniques to decorate the cake. This will help the cake look beautiful and professional.

These are 9 cake baking tips pastry chefs learned in culinary school. With these tips, you can create beautiful and delicious cakes that will impress your friends and family. So, get baking and enjoy the delicious results!

Whether it’s for a birthday, a holiday, or just because you feel like eating a cake, there are plenty of reasons for baking a cake. But that doesn’t always mean that it’s going to turn out well. From cakes sticking to pans, to opening up the oven to find a dry, crumbly cake, to the decorations looking worse—way worse—than you intended, there’s a whole host of things that can go wrong, as baking a homemade cake can really be a tricky process.

This isn’t to discourage anyone, as there are ways that you can be better prepared to make the best cake ever. Maybe you’re an expert home baker who’s looking to give your cake the final touches that make it professional bakery quality, or you’re a beginner looking for some tips to help you fix common baking problems, here are some of the best cake baking tips that only pastry chefs know. Read on, and for more, don’t miss 9 Secrets for Baking the Best Cookies That Only Pastry Chefs Know.

frosting cake decorating
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Baking a cake can be tricky enough—making sure you have the proper ingredients, the batter is mixed enough, it’s baked for the perfect amount of time, and it’s properly cooled—but decorating a cake is a whole other story. Not only does decorating require a baker’s skill to ensure that the decorations work well with the cake, but it also needs an artistic touch, so the cake looks good, and that’s where a lot of bakers can run into problems.

One of the worst mistakes you can make when baking a cake is putting the frosting and other decorations on when the cake is still hot. A way to be certain that your cake isn’t too warm to decorate is by freezing it.

“Frozen cakes are much easier to decorate than ones at room temperature,” says Carolyn Truett, a former pastry chef, cake decorator and founder of the cooking blog Caramel and Cashews. “If you want the cake to look professionally done, freeze the layers before you assemble them. The crumbs won’t be so loose and get in the frosting as you spread it.”

putting parchment paper into cake pan
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There’s nothing worse than baking a perfect, delicious cake, only to not have it come out of the pan. Don’t count on butter or cooking spray to help your cake ease its way out of its cooking vessel, just use parchment paper instead so there’s no doubt that the cake will emerge cleanly. While it’s sometimes a pain to cut parchment paper to fit perfectly in the pan, that whole process can be avoided by buying round parchment paper in advance.

“You can buy parchment rounds in different sizes, so you don’t have to cut them out individually,” Truett says. “Doing so ensures the cakes come out of the pan effortlessly.”

opening oven
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Comparing a home baker’s work to a professional baker’s is unfair on a few levels. Yes, professional bakers obviously have more education, training, and experience baking beautiful cakes and other baked goods, so there’s a fair chance that their products will turn out far better than an amateur baker’s.

But they’re also using better ovens, which makes a big difference. Many professional bakers use commercial ovens, which promote more even baking. Home ovens don’t bake as evenly, and many residential ovens have hot spots where they get warmer, and stay warmer faster.

“A quick way to find your oven’s hot spots is to lay slices of inexpensive bread side by side and front to back, covering the entire rack,” says pastry chef Maria Short, the owner of Short n Sweet Bakery & Cafe. “Then turn on your oven light and then turn your oven on. Watch where the bread starts to brown first, those are your hot spots. Typically, the back of ovens are hotter than the front.”

butter cubes in flour
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Typically in baking, a recipe will call for butter to be creamed, which means that room-temperature butter will be mixed together with sugar until it’s well-blended and that typically forms a base to which other ingredients are added.

To make a better cake, you should reverse this step, according to Short, who recommends reverse creaming, or creaming the room temperature butter together with flour instead of sugar.

“By coating the flour with butter you are ensuring that gluten development is kept to a minimum,” Short says, which will lead to the cake becoming less bread-like.

baking ingredients
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One of the most important steps in baking or cooking something takes place before any food even starts to be baked or cooked—it’s preparing a mise en place, a French term for setting out all ingredients and preparing everything so when it comes time to actually put the food together, it’s seamless and easy.

“Mise en place means everything in its place and keeps bakers from forgetting to add an ingredient or adding an ingredient twice,” Short says. “Baking, especially cakes, requires precision and mise en place ensures that happens.”

RELATED: 10 Cooking Secrets Only French Chefs Know

pouring oil into bowl of flour and eggs
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Butter is a crucial ingredient when baking, and it can be found in so many recipes, but oil works just as well as butter in many cases, and helps to retain more moisture in the cake, as oil is already liquid at room temperature. So when you’re putting together a cake that doesn’t get enhanced with the flavor of butter, like chocolate, try replacing it with oil for a more moist cake.

“If you cut back the butter by as little as a quarter and replace it with oil you will see a significant difference in moisture,” says pastry chef Justin Ellen, of Everything Just Baked. “This is because oil remains liquid at room temperature, unlike butter. Now for something like vanilla cake we don’t want to replace all of the butter with oil as the butter has that delicious flavor that we want. But if it’s a chocolate cake, use all the oil. The cocoa powder will overpower the butter anyway.”

person wrapping chocolate sponge cake with plastic wrap
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One key to having a really delicious cake is making sure that it’s moist. Cakes can become dry through a number of different mistakes that can be made during the baking process, but there are a few ways to help add moisture back into cakes.

One of them is wrapping the finished cakes in plastic wrap not long after they’ve been taken out of the oven. Doing this helps to trap steam inside of the cake, instead of letting it evaporate, making the cake moister.

“Right after you bake your cakes you want to let them cool for about 10 minutes or until you can touch the pan,” Ellen says. “Then you want to flip the cakes out of the pan and plastic wrap them. The steam coming off the cakes will be immediately trapped by the plastic wrap resulting in the steam going back inside the cake. No more dry cakes ever.”

person mixing cake batter
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It’s awful to bite into a finished cake and find that it wasn’t mixed well enough and there’s a pocket of dry flour still in there, so it can be tempting to keep mixing the batter until it’s beyond perfectly smooth. Rather than resulting in a perfectly smooth cake, overmixing a batter can damage the end result, so while it’s important to make sure that all of the ingredients are well incorporated into the batter, it’s also important to not go crazy mixing it to the point where you end up with a crumbly, cracked, glutinous cake that resembles bread.

“The amount and size of air bubbles incorporated in the batter during the mixing process directly affect the volume and grain of a cake,” says Eleonora Lahud, a corporate chef at C & H Sugar. “Overmixing a batter can result in an excessively fragile cake with a crumbly structure, also peaked tops and possible cracks.”

woman taking cake out of the oven
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Baking a cake can oftentimes be intimidating, and amateur bakers tend to be gentle with their cakes, especially after they’re done baking and while they’re cooking, out of fear that they’ll mess up the finished product. Lahud says that you shouldn’t be gentle with your cake, though. Don’t throw it across the room or anything, but tap on it, or lightly bounce it on a surface like your kitchen counter to help set the cake’s crumb.

“Immediately after removing the cake from the oven, tap your cake or ‘bounce’ it on a surface,” Lahud says. “This movement will set the crumb and prevent shrinkage.”