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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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I'm interested in baking cakes in pans quite a bit
bigger than the 9" round ones I have now. I'm thinking 14" round. I was shopping for them online and it noted that above a certain size they recom- mend some kind of metal heat transfer cone, I think to sit in the middle of the pan and aid even baking of the cake. Huh? Is that right? I don't want a big darned hole in the middle of my cake! Am I confused about what this extra heat thing is and what it does? Can I do without it and still get an evenly baked cake? Do you need information on how high the cake will be? I don't really know, but I notice the bigger pans move up to 3" deep, so I might be baking something that came out close to that height. My oven is generic electric. Thank you, Michael |
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That heating core is huge, eh? It's also a PITA to use.
Get a flower nail.....number 9 will be fine. Brush on pan grease or whatever it is you use to keep cakes from sticking. Lay the flat part of the nail in the pan, centered then fill your pan. Once the cake bakes, flip out and remove the nail. The hole is so small you barely know it's there. Good Luck -D "Michael" > wrote in message oups.com... > I'm interested in baking cakes in pans quite a bit > bigger than the 9" round ones I have now. I'm > thinking 14" round. I was shopping for them online > and it noted that above a certain size they recom- > mend some kind of metal heat transfer cone, I think > to sit in the middle of the pan and aid even baking > of the cake. Huh? Is that right? I don't want a > big darned hole in the middle of my cake! Am I > confused about what this extra heat thing is and > what it does? Can I do without it and still get an > evenly baked cake? Do you need information on how > high the cake will be? I don't really know, but I > notice the bigger pans move up to 3" deep, so I > might be baking something that came out close to > that height. My oven is generic electric. > > Thank you, Michael > |
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That heating core is huge, eh? It's also a PITA to use.
Get a flower nail.....number 9 will be fine. Brush on pan grease or whatever it is you use to keep cakes from sticking. Lay the flat part of the nail in the pan, centered then fill your pan. Once the cake bakes, flip out and remove the nail. The hole is so small you barely know it's there. Good Luck -D "Michael" > wrote in message oups.com... > I'm interested in baking cakes in pans quite a bit > bigger than the 9" round ones I have now. I'm > thinking 14" round. I was shopping for them online > and it noted that above a certain size they recom- > mend some kind of metal heat transfer cone, I think > to sit in the middle of the pan and aid even baking > of the cake. Huh? Is that right? I don't want a > big darned hole in the middle of my cake! Am I > confused about what this extra heat thing is and > what it does? Can I do without it and still get an > evenly baked cake? Do you need information on how > high the cake will be? I don't really know, but I > notice the bigger pans move up to 3" deep, so I > might be baking something that came out close to > that height. My oven is generic electric. > > Thank you, Michael > |
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>I'm interested in baking cakes in pans quite a bit
>bigger than the 9" round ones I have now. I'm >thinking 14" round. I was shopping for them online >and it noted that above a certain size they recom- >mend some kind of metal heat transfer cone, I think >to sit in the middle of the pan and aid even baking >of the cake. Huh? Is that right? I don't want a >big darned hole in the middle of my cake! Am I >confused about what this extra heat thing is and >what it does? Can I do without it and still get an >evenly baked cake? Do you need information on how >high the cake will be? I don't really know, but I >notice the bigger pans move up to 3" deep, so I >might be baking something that came out close to >that height. My oven is generic electric. > >Thank you, Michael > Well from the description of what I read on those heating cores you're suppose to stick the thing in the middle of your cake pan and fill both the cake pan and the inside of the heating core with the cake batter. Imagine sticking an empty tin can in the middle of your cake pan and filling both the cake pan and the tin can with cake batter. After the cake is baked you're suppose to remove the heating core and remove the small portion of cake from inside the heating core and use that to plug up the hole in your cake. It sounds stupid to me. Usually when I bake large cakes I just lower the temperature on the oven and bake the cake more slowly. |
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