Quick question for you lovely CC bakers. If you want a taller cake, like 3-4inches, do you get better results if you bake one big cake for a long time and then split it into 2-3 layers? Or is it better to bake the layers separatly, for a shorter time and then stack?
Sorry, I'm sure it's pretty obvious, but I'm new!!
Jo
Hi,
I would just bake them seperately to get the height that you want. I would bake either 2" cakes and start there and build to the height you want or even bake 3" cakes and fill.
HTH
It Depends on the pans you own. Mine are 3" so I always have tall cakes. If I had bought the two inch ones I would be stacking. I think 2" inch pans are more versatile. You can have tall or not so tall cakes with them.
Thanks for the reply. I have deep tins and I usually just bake one large cake and then split it, but I find it problematic at times. Firstly, it can take up to 3 hours for some of my cakes and secondly, it's not fool proof - open the door too soon and the cakes fall. I also have a gas oven and the heat comes from the top down, so, although I cover the cakes to protect them, the long cooking means I always have a crusty top.
I would much rather only half fill them and then stack to make a taller cake. I suppose I wondered because some cakes suit being baked low and slow. If I start to bake them for a shorter time, in thinner batches, I was just worried I might sacrifice on quality?
Joaneeland, I bake in 2" high pans and always split my cakes in half. Which means I have 1" high layers. I stack 4 of them with filling in between each layer and end up with a cake that is about 4-1/2 tall. If I want a taller cake, I bake more 2" high cakes, split them and add layers accordingly, an inch at a time. If I want shorter cakes, I bake less and make fewer layers. I also have 3" pans and when I use them, I don't fill them up because I still want my cakes to bake properly. I might fill them a bit more, but not enough to require a substantially longer cook time, which as you know, has the potential to ruin your cake by falling or crusting, both of which affect the quality. IMHO.
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