Strawberry Glazed Angel Food Cake (serves 12)
Angel Food Cake
Strawberry glaze
Strawberry Glazed Angel Food Cake
Copyright Michael Chu 2004
Angel Food Cake
Preheat oven to 375°F (190°C) | |||||
1-1/2 cup (205 g) cake flour | sift | sift and fold | bake 375°F (190°C) 35 min. | ||
1/3 cup (67 g) granulated sugar | |||||
1-1/2 cup (12 large; 360 g) egg whites | whip until frothy | whip until stiff peaks | whip | ||
1-1/2 tsp. cream of tartar | |||||
1/4 (1.5 g) tsp. salt | |||||
1-1/3 cup (267 g) sugar | |||||
1-1/2 tsp. (7 mL) vanilla extract |
Strawberry glaze
8 oz. (225 g) frozen strawberries | boil | simmer 10 min. | strain | reserve | |
1/3 cup (67 g) sugar | bring to simmer | whisk & boil until thickened | |||
1/2 cup (120 mL) water | |||||
1 Tbs. (15 mL) lemon juice | |||||
1 Tbs. (15 mL) cornstarch | whisk | ||||
3 Tbs. (45 mL) water |
Strawberry Glazed Angel Food Cake
1 angel food cake | cut | stuff | glaze | slice | frost |
reserved cooked strawberries | |||||
strawberry glaze | |||||
1-1/3 cup (315 mL) heavy cream | whisk past stiff peaks | ||||
1 Tbs. (15 mL) granulated sugar | |||||
1 tsp. (5 mL) vanilla extract |
the only problem will be about what to do with the 12 left over egg yolks ;)
The angel cake looks delicious!
I haven't tried it, but I doubt baking half the angel food cake and then placing strawberries ontop and pouring the other half will work. Unlike butter or pound cakes, an angel food cake is quite delicate while warm and can't even sustain its own weight while cooling (which is why we must cool them upside down). Baking the egg white foam and then placing strawberries on top without fully cooling will collapse the foam. Pouring the remaining batter ontop will probably have the same result.
Any plans for a Tunnel of Fudge Cake?
I haven't tried the silicone baking "pans" yet. I don't bake enough cakes to justify buying more specialized equipment... maybe if someone sent me a sample... :)
should the cake be completly cooled off before putting strawberries in/on it?
i am planning on serving this in the morning, and wondering how much i can prepare the night before.
It's safest to wait until the cake is completely cooled or the weight of the strawberries may collapse the delicate structure.
Couple of comments on the quantities:
* The reserved strawberry solids just didn't look enough for the filling, so without checking I just added another bunch of strawberrys to my mix. Turned out this wasn't needed.
* But, 1 1/2 cup of whipping cream was *way* more than what I needed to frost the cake with.
Thanks again for the recipe.
and i'm kinda liking the idea of lots of little angel cakes with strawberry/icing glaze....:)
just an idea
You can use either all-purpose or cake flour for this recipe. Be sure to lightly fold the flour into the mixture or else gluten may form causing your cake to lose the light (angelic) quality that sets this cake apart. Using cake flour can produce a lighter cake because of its relatively low protein content.
I'll also keep my receipe which has never let me down.I've added pecans,chocolate,raspberries and anything that hits my fancy that particular day and I'm not an expert.BUT, keep trying, you may make it yet.
Signed,
An Engineer
Nope, I use granulated in this recipe.
I did have some difficulty with the glaze, though. It may have ended up too runny but it made quite a mess at the base of the plate. Everything tasted great though!
Make sure that the cake is fully cooled before applying the whipped cream. A little bit of heat is enough to soften the whipped cream and cause it to flow.
could you please tell me the dimensions for the pan that you used? i cant wait to try this recipe!
thanks!
could you please tell me the dimensions for the pan that you used? i cant wait to try this recipe!
thanks!
I used an angel food cake pan that measured 10-in. with 1-1/4-in center post from the top and 8-1/2-in. with 3-1/4-in center hole at the base.
Angel food cakes need a speecial pan for two reasons - the pan should never have touched oil - ever. If there is some oil on the pan, the foam won't hold up as well and there's always a little residue left. The other reason is that you need the central tower to help distribute heat evenly and provide a "Gripping" surface for the cake to climb up as teh foam expands. Without it, the cake won't be able to sustain it's own weight and will probably result in an odd looking, half risen cake.
I like the idea of adding fruit. We always had it with vanilla ice cream and strawberries.
i've lurked on your site for a couple of years now, and really appreciate your approach. i'm always confident that a recipe i find here will work exactly the way you say it will, even if i make my own minor adjustments :).
thanks for a job (consistently) well done, and for sharing with the rest of us!
:unsure:
it should have read "creme brulee" with the appropriate diacriticals :P.
I am going to make your New York style cheesecake for Thanksgiving using the strawberry glaze recipe from this cake. I have one stupid question though...why do you list 1/2 cup of water, but only use 3 tablespoons? Thanks for all you do here, I love to bake!!
Not a stupid question at all. Maybe I wasn't clear in my explanation - but you use both 1/2 cup water while boiling down the strawberries as well as an additional 3 Tbs. water when you mix in the corn starch. Total amount of water used: 1/2 cup + 3 Tbs. (or a total of 11 Tbs. water). Because I prefer to list ingredients separately when they aren't used at the same time or for the same purpose - water is listed twice. 1/2 cup is used earlier in the glaze recipe and 3 Tbs. is used when thickening. (The 3 Tbs. is there simply to provide some liquid from which to make a corn starch slurry.)
Christal
Christal
In my experience, it is fine to frost and glaze in the morning for service that evening.
Regards
Carol
Have you tried a different cake pan? It's unusual for the cake to peel away while inverted and just fall out. It is possible the sides could have been contaminated with oil at some point and it's nearly impossible to completely wash it clean. Also, you haven't moved to a new location, right?
Thanks for your help.
Carol
Not really. If it's brand new, then you avoid the "residual oil destroying the egg white foam" problem, but the foam is still very delicate and may not successfully climb the ridges in the bundt pan. Also, unmolding it might be a challenge.
But about the coincidence.. my birthday is this weekend and my wife asked me what kind of cake I wanted. I said Angel Food cake. And that since it had been so long I wanted to make it (I'm also the baker in the family). But I told her I wanted a strawberry glaze on it and that she could make that. I've never had it that way but thought it sounded good. I finally got around to looking for a recipe by searching google and to my suprise I found one not only for strawberry glazed Angel Food cake but on a website called Cooking For Engineers. See, I'm an engineer, too. And I love cooking! Sometimes. ;) Very cool.
I will definately use your recipe. And thanks!
Thought that Wilton must surely know what they were doing when they made a non-stick angel food cake pan -- since I know you are not supposed to greese an angel food cake pan in any way. Evidently, they don't!
We also have experienced angel food collapsing in the oven after 30 to 35 minutes. In our experience it is the egg whites which have had one of the constituents damaged during pasteurization. This does not affect the whipping properties, just the gel network of the proteins which prevent collapse during the heat of baking. We have extensively troubleshooted for over 9 months with to avail.
Carol's problem would not be the same as ours if she is not using commercial egg whites.
Jim K.
I can taste this already.
Lesley :)
It might be okay. I would guess that that would be borderline, there's a good chance it'll be soggy, but if you're lucky it won't be bad. I always put the strawberries in the day that I'm serving the cake.
need to define "canned"
fresh, know about them
frozen, know about them
"canned" is strawberry jam, to me.
well, jam - preserves - conserves .... whatever floats your boat
frozen will work.
no need to apologize - we'll get it worked out <g>
fruit put up as preserves, conserves, etc., is usually cooked - or at least heated in the canning / preserving process. that breaks down the physical structure of a whole strawberry - gets soft, etc.
if that's all you can get - certainly it will "work" but the texture will obviously be different than fresh, same for frozen berries. depending on how thick the syrup is, that could run a bit or make for a gooey mass rather than a crisp fresh tasty morsel on the cake.
good luck and let us know how it works out if you go that direction!
What is this comment in response to? I believe it is, by definition, impossible for me to misunderstand the directions... considering I wrote it (as well as photographed each step of the process). I checked and I don't think I made a mistake in the recipe (at least not about the baking part - I checked - it says bake first!).
I am terribly sorry! That message was meant for "Angie" who asked the question about putting strawberries on the cake BEFORE it was baked. It was also clear BACK in 2006--I apologize! I was trying to quickly find a great recipe of this kind (and I did--YOURS!) ...but was skimming through so fast that I missed many details in the comments.
I am truly sorry and I LOVE your site! I have NEVER seen such a well explained, well photographed recipe site ANYWHERE before! You have done a wonderful job and I will be back. (Not to criticize, either!) I just felt so badly for whoever it was that had asked that question to have not understood your very great directions. I will NEVER again be so hasty! Sorry! Please keep up this excellent work!
No need to apologize... I thought it was funny!
I wipe the mixing bowl, whisk and cake pan with a tissue soaked in vinegar. This means you can hand whisk the egg whites in minutes, and the de-greasing effect of the vinegar means you can use any old cake pan - doesn't have to be a tube tin.
Hope that helps!
ST (Mrs)
two days in advance max - allow to cool _thoroughly_ and then keep covered.
less time if you're in high humidity. angel food has a fair amount of sugar which will absorb humidity out of the air and develop a wet surface.
Just exchange the wheat flour against an equal amount [cups] of sweet rice flour and the result is a fantastic gluten free angel food cake. Some liked it even better than the wheat version.
[Thank you Michael, for adding all you explanations to the recipes, that makes it so much easier to convert them for people with celiac :D]
the top falls into the bottom :)