Создатель: Claudia lamascolo
Cake Flour
Many recipes call for Cake Flour. I went to three food stores this morning and could only see all purpose and self rising. Are you supposed to substitute for the cake flour?
Please advise...and Thanks,
DaveMac
Ответы
I usually sift my flour twice with a sifter and use an all purpose flour, it always works fine. Soft as silk is the cake flour I purchase and use for souffles, I always worry this would be a flop without using that one and haven't taken a chance on souffles with regular flour...
So sifting the flour twice will make the all purpose flour into cake flour? Does this make the flour lighter and it will rise better? I just finished an Angel foiod cake and it satyed 1/2 inch below the cake tin. I expected it to rise above the cake pan side.
To Substitute true cake flour you mustsee here for the true differences between
Cake Flour vs All-purpose Flour
One flour may be used for the other if their difference is taken into consideration.
When using all-purpose flour, remove 2 tablespoons of flour from every cup called for in the recipe and add 1 tablespoon of cornstarch.
*Cake flour is made of soft wheat flours. All-purpose flour is made from a blend of hard and soft wheat flours, not as high in gluten as cake flour.
This is the EZ way:
Put 2 tbsp of cornstarch in the bottom of a 1-cup dry measure, then fill the cup with all-purpose flour.
Haha! Awesome, you geniuses!! Thanks for simplifying this for me.
However, seeing as how we are on the subject of "different" flours, got any quick fixes for pastry flour? Good luck finding that in our local stores!
Pastry flour is getting harder to find in stores. I have learned to ask if the store carries it, and where it might be (they group things differently today so flours may not all be together in one spot). Online is getting to be a better way to find things. But, if you are needing some pastry flour, most times you use regular whole wheat or unbleached flour, or a combo of the two (depending on what you are making), and sifting it.
I could not leave well enough alone, so I Googled it, so I quote OChef here:
If you can't find pastry flour, you can mix you own by combining cake flour and all-purpose flour in a ratio somewhere between two parts cake flour to one part all-purpose and one part cake flour to one part all-purpose.
I will have to try this out, though.
Thanks Jann!
Oh, I think that's another good way to do it. It's nice to have several options on how to do something. I can't remember the last time I needed a pastry flour, so it is not something I am likely to have here. Good discussion!
I know what you mean. It can be frustrating to not be able to find the ingredients that we seldom use. Often, when I saw a recipe calling for either cake or pastry flour, I would just skip it. Now I don't have to.
Thanks for all the info!
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