A friend is getting married this summer and I wasn't able to attend her shower, so instead my sister and I had her over for dessert.
The overabundance of eggs makes angel food cake a no-brainer. I have a great angel food cake recipe, but no cake flour. You know how I love making things from scratch... 😉 A quick Google search pulled up much of the same info- take out 2T of flour for 2T of cornstarch. Easy peasy. But then I noticed a YouTube video with a very gripping title: "
the cake flour trick everyone uses (but mine is softer and fluffier)". Basically, it says use potato starch instead of corn starch for a better overall texture (not as gritty).
I was about to start baking when my friend messaged that she's gluten free. Cue another Google search!
I found two very highly rated recipes that are quite similar in ingredients (including amounts), but very different in technique. This one from
Meaningful Eats called for gluten free flour but had a substitute for it that included a variety of flours/starches that I already had on hand. This one from
Let Them Eat Gluten Free Cake had a super easy technique but seemed pretty firm on the gluten free flour mix. I spent way too long deciding between the two recipes. 😬 In the end, I went with the Meaningful Eats recipe (with their gluten free substitute for gluten free flour) and the technique of the LTEGFC recipe.
Here's my kitchen setup:
ingredients recipe on left, instructions on right
Gotta keep the baby entertained! The mobile is hanging from the handle of an open drawer.
The super easy technique to make this angel food cake is to put all of the sugar in your mixing bowl, then add cold egg whites directly from the fridge and whip to make soft peaks, then fold in sifted flour. Even easier, the recipe only calls for granulated sugar and it instructs you to only sift your flour once (as opposed to other recipes' instructions to do it seven times!).
I was a little nervous about combining these two recipes because after I had already gotten started, I noticed that my ingredients recipe called for the powdered sugar to be mixed with the flour blend. I had already done that step before I decided to use the method of the second recipe, so only half of my sugar was getting whipped with the eggs. It was too late to turn back, so I just kept going.
Here's how my whipped eggs and granulated sugar turned out:
The technique recipe also says to stop whipping when they have soft peaks and not stiff peaks. The reason for that is it will allow the eggs to rise more in the oven and reach their full potential there, resulting in an even softer and fluffier cake texture.
Jaron wanted to eat after I put the cake in the oven, so we sat on the floor in front of the oven and watched it bake. I felt like I was on the Great British Baking Show! But, it was interesting to watch the cake rise and fall. At one point the batter was two inches above the edge of the pan!
It turned out pretty good, although the texture is grainier than I would like.
Could be from the rice bran flour or, as I poured the batter in the pan to bake, I discovered that not all of the granulated sugar had been whipped into the egg whites. I folded it in, but maybe that would make it grainy?