Ok I have a question concerning angel food cakes. I have not really baked them much. can you bake them in a sheet pan and fill them as other cakes or no?
No, unfortunately. Angel food cakes need the tall sides and extra surface that an angel food pan provides to rise properly. You don't grease the pan, precisely so that the cake can climb up the sides to rise. You even have to let the cake cool in the pan upside down (that's why all those pans have those prongs coming out the top - to rest on while the cake cools) while the cake cools and sets. Otherwise it will lose all its air and turn into an angel food brick.
However, if you want to bake angel food in a bakers sheet pan, like a cookie sheet with a rolled rim, in a thin layer like you are baking a sponge for a jelly roll you CAN do that without a problem. Then you have a nice one inch thick cake to fill and stack, but you will need to bake the cake batter immediately, it won't sit around, so you need two baking sheets and I'm not sure how much batter for each so some experiments would be needed, but it does work!! I have seen the half sheet pans at Wal-Mart these days.
Tami
Aha! Thanks for that information, Tami. An angel food cake roll sounds really delicious and my family's been begging me for an angel food cake lately - not my favorite, actually, but with a really yummy filling, who knows?
You can tort and fill an angel food cake baked in a tube pan. You just need to be careful how you cut it -- a cake comb or a pair of forks can work better than an actual knife, which will tend to "squish" the cake. Or, instead of torting, you can just pile the filling (esp if it is mostly fresh fruit) in the center hole.
And baking angel food batter as cupcakes works pretty well too.
Holly
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